Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

7 things we want James Gunn to do in the DC Extended Universe

It’s official! James Gunn and Peter Safran are both the new co-heads of DC Films. With Gunn overseeing the creative part of the studio, fans are excited to see how the director of Guardians of the Galaxy and The Suicide Squad will run the entire DC Universe alongside Safran.

The studio still has a few movies it needs to go through before entering Gunn’s new DC Universe, but there are some intriguing things the public could see from it.

Recommended Videos

Create more tie-in video games

Batman overlooking city in Batman: Arkham Asylum.
WB Games

While some video games based on Marvel Cinematic Universe films have been released in the past, Marvel’s flow of tie-in games has died down in recent years. DC can now get the upper hand in this department since Gunn has revealed on Twitter that he plans to release games that will be linked to his new batch of superhero movies.

DC has produced some spectacular games over the years, such as the Batman: Arkham series and the Injustice duology, so the studio focusing on creating more games like this could help its cinematic universe stand apart from the MCU.

More lesser-known characters will get the spotlight

The cast of The Suicide Squad.
Warner Bros. / Warner Bros. Pictures

With films like Guardians of the Galaxy and The Suicide Squad, Gunn has garnered unprecedented success taking relatively unknown comic book characters and making them household names. Though DC has had plans to give many characters their own live-action projects, a lot of those plans fell through after spending time in development hell. More recently, films like Ava DuVernay’s New Gods and Batgirl were shelved, and the latter was in the middle of post-production.

However, Gunn will likely follow through on his plans to introduce less-popular characters to live-action. While one may argue that the obscure characters this director has adapted were only successful in team-up films, Gunn has proven otherwise by having Peacemaker helm a solo series, which only helped the antihero’s popularity soar to greater heights.

Zack Snyder will return

Zack Snyder at San Diego Comic-Con 2016.
Wikimedia Commons

This may sound like a longshot and an eye-roller to some, but James Gunn may actually want to bring Snyder back to expand the DC Universe, given their shared history. Snyder and Gunn have been friends since they worked together on 2004’s Dawn of the Dead. They’ve also shown support to each other in their cinematic pursuits online, so chances are they would both be open to working together again if Snyder isn’t too busy making his films for Netflix.

Snyder’s return wouldn’t necessarily #RestoretheSnyderVerse, as Gunn and his team may not follow all the same storylines that Snyder had helped plan before leaving the DC Universe. Nevertheless, bringing back the man who laid the groundwork for the franchise as a whole could be another step toward putting it back on track.

Directors will have greater control over their films

Bruce Wayne staring at a hologram of Superman in Zack Snyder's Justice League.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

DC films have long been the unfortunate victims of studio interference, with Batman v Superman, Suicide Squad, and Justice League being the most notable examples. But with an auteur superhero director calling the shots, Gunn may side with his fellow directors and give them enough freedom to practice their craft and make successful blockbusters.

Gunn proved how terrific director-driven films could be in the DC Universe with his critically-acclaimed passion project, The Suicide Squad, so giving more filmmakers that kind of creative power may very well help DC’s films be seen as more than just standard superhero blockbusters.

A more well-balanced tone

Warner Bros.

In an effort to compete with Marvel, DC steered away from producing dark and gritty stories like Man of Steel and Batman v Superman and tried to integrate lighthearted humor into their films. This has led to varying success over the ears, as it created a clash in tones for both Suicide Squad and Justice League. While the studio has gotten better at presenting more easygoing films, it has usually done so at the cost of presenting enough serious drama for the characters and the world around them.

Not every film in the DC Universe has to have the same tone, as each character’s project should be unique to best fit their story and to keep the cinematic universe feeling fresh to audiences. However, they should all have the right balance of lighthearted comedy and poignant drama to be successful. Gunn has proven himself to be a master of presenting both of these things at just the right amount in his superhero projects, allowing the audience to hold them in high regard without having to take them too seriously.

More original characters

Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn, screaming
Image via Warner Bros. Pictures

While most modern superhero movies used characters based on existing comic book characters, Gunn has proven himself adept at creating entirely original characters for the DC Universe. This was the case with Peacemaker since Gunn created the evil alien Butterflies and their giant Cows purely for the series.

DC Films may continue to create new characters for future projects, which could change the company’s comic book canon as Harley Quinn did following her popular debut in Batman: The Animated Series.

An actual plan

DC / DC

Ever since Justice League‘s critical and commercial failure in 2017, the DC Universe seems to have veered off in multiple directions. While the Marvel Cinematic Universe has the Infinity and Multiverse Sagas, the DC Universe was left without an overarching narrative. Plans for the Justice League to fight Darkseid were all but abandoned, and the studio spent most of its time trying to pull the franchise back together. At the same time, DC started producing standalone features like Joker and The Batman, both based on canceled projects and have no relation to the company’s ongoing cinematic universe.

Fortunately, according to The Hollywood Reporter, Gunn and Safran have been hard at work devising their 8-to-10-year-long plan for the DC Universe going forward. This means moviegoers will likely see more connections established between the heroes’ respective projects, as was recently seen with Peacemaker and Black Adam. Thus, audiences may finally see DC Universe build up to another crossover epic akin to Justice League in the near future, which can make it the blockbuster franchise it was meant to be.

Anthony Orlando
Anthony Orlando is a writer/director from Oradell, NJ. He spent four years at Lafayette College, graduating CUM LAUDE with a…
5 actors we hope will stay in James Gunn’s DC Universe
Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn, screaming while surrounded by flowers in the film The Suicide Squad.

Now that James Gunn has taken over DC Films and canceled many of its projects, many fans are left wondering which actors will remain in the franchise. Since Henry Cavill is no longer Superman and Jason Momoa will reportedly be recast as Lobo, it's clear that any actor can now lose their role in the DC Extended Universe under Gunn's new regime.

Fans are understandably bitter about Gunn's drastic changes to the franchise, and while there are more reports about other actors possibly leaving, it is still too soon to say who will stay and who will go. There are some casting choices in the DCEU that many audiences would rather forget, but there are still some actors that fans would like to see continue to play their parts in Gunn's upcoming films.
Dwayne Johnson as Black Adam

Read more
James Gunn teases Suicide Squad, Peacemaker, and GotG projects
The cast of "The Suicide Squad" standing in a forest.

Director James Gunn may be the busiest man in comic book movies and TV shows. After finishing The Suicide Squad, Gunn jumped to that film's HBO Max spinoff, Peacemaker, and he's now shooting Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 for Marvel.  But according to Gunn himself, he may have another HBO Max Suicide Squad spinoff in his future.

“We’re working on something else now, another TV show that’s connected to that universe,” said Gunn during an interview with Deadline's Hero Nation podcast.

Read more
This Oscar-winning Martin Scorsese movie doesn’t really hold up now
A man looks at a plane in The Aviator.

Twenty years ago, Martin Scorsese returned to the director's chair with The Aviator, a biopic based on the life of eccentric aviation pioneer, film producer, engineer, philanthropist, and business magnate Howard Hughes. With an ensemble cast led by Leonardo DiCaprio and including Cate Blanchett in an Oscar-winning performance, The Aviator, as is customary for Scorsese movies, received near-universal acclaim from critics, earned a very respectable $211 million at the box office and won five Oscars at the 77th Academy Awards from a leading 11 nominations.

On paper, The Aviator was a success story -- why, then, does it feel such an outlier in Scorsese's filmography? The revered director has produced some of his greatest and most acclaimed efforts in the 21st century, even winning his first and so far only Oscar during the 2000s, so where does The Aviator fit in his cinematic footprint? I'm not here to trash this movie because it's not the kind of movie you trash. However, on its 20th anniversary, it's the perfect time to discuss The Aviator's legacy or lack thereof, and why it's not as highly regarded as other movies in his filmography like The Departed, The Wolf of Wall Street, and Killers of the Flower Moon.
'Show me all the blueprints'

Read more