Skip to main content

James Gunn wants the DC Universe to avoid one of the MCU’s biggest mistakes

David Corenswet as Superman pulling up his red boot while wearing a costume.
James Gunn / Instagram

It’s still early days for the DC Universe. The highly anticipated, multimedia franchise hasn’t even released its first film yet (that’ll be 2025’s Superman) and is only now on the verge of rolling out its debut TV show, an animated Suicide Squad spin-off titled Creature Commandos. Nonetheless, DC Studios co-CEO James Gunn already has some very clear ideas about what he wants the DCU to be, as well as what he doesn’t want it to be.

In an interview with Collider, Gunn said that he doesn’t want the interconnectivity of the DCU to bog down the franchise or make viewers feel like they need to do “homework” in order to keep up with it. “A lot of what DC is, and the fun for me, really, is in the world-building, not just the story-building. I don’t think of DCU as being, ‘Oh, this is a story we’re telling over multiple films and TV shows about one big bad.’ I don’t want to have to do, as an audience member, the homework to have to see every single thing,” Gunn explained. “It is more of a connected universe that exists within one place, which is the DCU.”

Doctor Phosphorus, The Bride, and Nina Mazursky walk together in Creature Commandos.
Max

Gunn’s comments may come as a surprise to some comic book fans. Previously, the filmmaker has talked heavily about the planned cohesiveness of the DCU, even going so far as to promise that those who voice animated versions of certain characters will usually be the same actors who play whatever flesh-and-blood iterations of them appear in the franchise’s live-action projects. That said, while it sounds like Gunn wants to make sure there are very few continuity issues within the DCU (including in its casting choices), he has also now made it clear that he doesn’t want the franchise’s projects to be weighed down by issues of canon or crossover-style storytelling.

Recommended Videos

That should come as a bit of a relief, considering that other multimedia franchises — namely, the Marvel Cinematic Universe — have struggled in recent years to manage the increasingly unwieldy size of their multi-year stories and ever-growing in-universe histories. It sounds like that’s one problem that, despite its sizable lineup of forthcoming projects, the DC Universe is already being primed to avoid.

Alex Welch
Alex is a writer and critic who has been writing about and reviewing movies and TV at Digital Trends since 2022. He was…
Don Cheadle hints that one troubled Marvel movie could redeem Secret Invasion’s biggest twist
Don Cheadle stands with his arms folded in Secret Invasion.

It's been a long time since Marvel Cinematic Universe fans have seen the real James "Rhodey" Rhodes (Don Cheadle). Last year, Marvel Studios revealed in its poorly received miniseries Secret Invasion that a shape-shifting Skrull named Raava had been secretly posing as Rhodey for an indefinite amount of time. It was later confirmed by Secret Invasion director Ali Selim that Rhodey was originally kidnapped by Raava and her fellow Skrulls shortly after he experienced his spinal injury in 2016's Captain America: Civil War.

This twist proved to be extremely divisive among MCU fans. Many found it disconcerting to discover that — among other things — it isn't really Rhodey who is shown mourning the death of his best friend, Tony Stark, at the end of 2019's Avengers: Endgame. Don Cheadle, however, doesn't seem to mind the twist … so long as Marvel Studios actually follows through on its original plan for Rhodey.

Read more
MCU’s 5 biggest opening weekends ever, ranked
Ryan Reynolds in "Deadpool & Wolverine."

The Marvel Cinematic Universe has produced some of the most profitable movies of all time. Adapting many people's favorite comic book characters for the big screen has allowed Marvel Studios to dominate the box office for 15 years.

While the franchise has hit a rough patch during its ongoing Multiverse Saga, the profits gathered by some of its recent films show that the MCU has not lost its staggering appeal. And now that Deadpool & Wolverine has already slashed box office records, it's time to review the MCU's five biggest opening weekends so far.
5. The Avengers (2012) -- $207,438,708

Read more
Has Deadpool & Wolverine put the MCU back on the right track?
Deadpool and Wolverine stand near a metal cage in Marvel's Deadpool & Wolverine.

Warning: This article contains major spoilers for Deadpool & Wolverine (2024).

In case you haven't already heard: The Marvel Cinematic Universe has been on a bit of a decline these past few years. At this point, the once-dominant franchise's current state isn't just an open secret -- it's a well-known fact worthy of being referenced multiple times in Deadpool & Wolverine by the film's eponymous Merc with a Mouth. In its third act, Ryan Reynolds' Wade Wilson even openly pleads for Marvel to abandon multiversal storytelling altogether. He does that, of course, in a film that ends with his universe being saved from extinction and allowed to exist safely again in Marvel's multiverse. There's no point critiquing that contradiction. Making fun of things without fixing them has always been Deadpool's thing, after all.

Read more