Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice
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Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice is a 2016 American superhero film based on the DC Comics characters Batman and Superman. Distributed by Warner Bros., it is a follow-up to the 2013 film Man of Steel and the second film in the DC Extended Universe (DCEU). The film was directed by Zack Snyder, written by Chris Terrio and David S. Goyer, and features an ensemble cast that includes Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Amy Adams, Jesse Eisenberg, Diane Lane, Laurence Fishburne, Jeremy Irons, Holly Hunter, and Gal Gadot. Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice is the first live-action film to feature Batman and Superman together, as well as the first live-action cinematic portrayal of Wonder Woman. In the film, criminal mastermind Lex Luthor manipulates Batman into a preemptive battle with Superman, with whom Luthor is obsessed with destroying.

The film was announced at the 2013 San Diego Comic-Con after the release of Man of Steel. Snyder stated that the film would take inspiration from the Batman comic book series The Dark Knight Returns by Frank Miller but clarified that it would follow an original premise. The incarnation of Batman in the film is different from the character s previous portrayal by Christian Bale in The Dark Knight Trilogy, serving as a cinematic reboot of the character. The film is also inspired by narrative elements from the Death of Superman . Pre-production began at East Los Angeles College in October 2013 and principal photography started in May 2014 in Detroit. Additional filming also took place in Illinois and New Mexico, concluding that December.

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice premiered at the Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City on March 19, 2016, and was released in the United States on March 25, 2016. Following a strong debut that set new box office records, the film experienced a historic drop in its second weekend and never recovered. The film grossed $873.6 million worldwide at box office, and despite turning in a profit, it performed below expectations and received generally unfavorable reviews from critics. An extended cut, dubbed the Ultimate Edition , features 31 minutes of additional footage and was released to home media formats later in 2016.

Plot

In a flashback to his childhood, Bruce Wayne runs from the funeral of his parents, Thomas Wayne and Martha Wayne. He falls into a cave, where he is swarmed by a colony of bats. Back in the present, eighteen months after the battle between Superman and General Zod in Metropolis, Superman has become a controversial figure. Bruce is now a billionaire who has operated in Gotham City as the vigilante Batman for twenty years. Pessimistic from his tenure as Batman and having witnessed the chaos of the Metropolis battle in person, he sees Superman as an existential threat to humanity.

After learning of Batman s merciless form of justice, Clark Kent (Superman s secret civilian identity) seeks to expose him via Daily Planet articles. Wayne learns that Russian weapon trafficker Anatoli Knyazev has been contacting LexCorp mogul Lex Luthor. Meanwhile, Luthor attempts to persuade Senator June Finch to allow him to import kryptonite discovered after Zod s terraforming attempt so that it can be used as a deterrent against Superman and potential future metahuman threats. She declines, but Luthor makes alternative plans with Finch s subordinate, granting him access to Zod s body as well as the Kryptonian scout ship and its historical archive.

Bruce attends a gala at LexCorp to steal encrypted data from the company s mainframe, but antiquities dealer Diana Prince takes it from him; she returns it after failing to access the information. While decrypting the drive, Bruce has a nightmare of a postapocalyptic world where he leads rebels against an evil Superman. He is awakened by an unidentified person, appearing through a portal, who tells him that Lois Lane is the key and urges him to find the others before vanishing. The decrypted drive reveals the location in which Luthor s kryptonite will be illegally imported as well as Luthor s files on several metahumans across the globe . One is Diana, who appears in a photo from World War I. Wayne tells Alfred Pennyworth that he plans to steal and weaponize the kryptonite to go to war with Superman himself.

A widely publicized congressional hearing, led by Finch, is held to question Superman s actions against Zod. Luthor smuggles in a bomb amongst an unknowing witness, killing everyone present except Superman and frames it as a terror attack. Superman blames himself for not detecting it in time and self-imposes himself into exile out of shame and rejection. Batman breaks into a LexCorp research facility and steals the kryptonite. He builds a powered exoskeleton, a kryptonite grenade launcher, and a kryptonite-tipped spear. Luthor subsequently resorts to experimenting on Zod s body inside the scout s ship Genesis Chamber in hopes of creating a living weapon to kill Superman.

Luthor lures Superman out of exile by kidnapping Lois and Martha Kent, Clark s adoptive mother. He pushes Lois off the LexCorp building. Superman saves her and confronts Luthor, who reveals he has manipulated him and Batman by fueling their distrust. Luthor demands he kill Batman in exchange for Martha s life, which would permanently expose him as unvirtuous to humanity. Superman tries to explain this to Batman, who instead attacks him and eventually subdues him using a kryptonite gas. As Batman prepares to move in for the kill using the spear, Superman pleads with him instead to save Martha . Believing he is referring to his own mother, Batman hesitates in confusion long enough for Lois to arrive and explain what Superman meant. Recognizing Superman s previously unknown human heritage and innate potential for good via their shared connection, Batman sees the error of his ways and promises to rescue Martha. Superman regains his strength and confronts Luthor on the scout ship.

Luthor unleashes a monster genetically engineered from DNA from both Zod s body and his own. Diana arrives, joining Batman and Superman in their fight against the creature. Superman realizes its vulnerability to kryptonite and retrieves the spear, fatally impaling the creature with it. In its dying moments, the creature stabs Superman, who was weakened by kryptonite exposure, killing him.

Following Luthor s arrest, Batman confronts him in prison, warning him that he will always be watching. Luthor gloats that Superman s death has made the world vulnerable to powerful alien threats. A memorial is held for Superman in Metropolis. Clark is also declared dead, and Wayne and Prince both attend his funeral in Smallville. Martha gives Lois an envelope containing an engagement ring from Clark. Bruce tells Diana that he regrets having failed Superman in life. With renewed faith in humanity, he asks her help to form a team of metahumans, starting with those named in Luthor s files, to protect the world from extra-terrestrial threats in Superman s absence. As they depart, the dirt atop Clark s coffin levitates.

Cast

  • Ben Affleck as Bruce Wayne / Batman: A billionaire socialite and owner of Wayne Enterprises who dedicates himself to protecting Gotham City from its criminal underworld as a highly trained, masked vigilante. The Batsuit in this film is made of a form-fitting fabric as opposed to the armored suits in previous portrayals, and a mechanical suit is also featured which Batman uses in his fight against Superman. On Batman s suit, Zack Snyder commented I had a really strong idea about what I wanted to do – I really wanted to do sort of a fabric-based Batman; not what s become the more normal, armored Batman. That s how we evolved it. Unlike previous versions who spoke in a deeper voice as Batman, this version uses a voice modulator to distort his real voice. Affleck stated a well known billionaire would likely have his voice recognized. When asked what makes this Batman different from the previous portrayals, Affleck said this Batman is a little older, he s a little more world-weary. He s been around the block once or twice so he s a little wiser but he s definitely more cynical and a little darker and more jaded , adding that Batman has gotten more exposed to the violence and the criminal element of that world over time. The film s Batman was influenced by Frank Miller s The Dark Knight Returns, which shows Batman in his 50s. Snyder said, I definitely wanted an older Batman. I wanted a war-weary Batman. That s why, in a lot of ways, Ben was really perfect for me – we kind of aged him a little bit. It worked really great. I m really excited about the Batman we created. On Affleck s casting as Batman, Snyder said, Ben provides an interesting counterbalance to Henry s Superman. He has the acting chops to create a layered portrayal of a man who is older and wiser than Clark Kent and bears the scars of a seasoned crime fighter, but retain the charm that the world sees in billionaire Bruce Wayne. Affleck praised Snyder for tackling the impact of the destruction caused in Metropolis in the previous installment, saying, One of the things I liked was Zack s idea of showing accountability and the consequences of violence and seeing that there are real people in those buildings , adding, And in fact, one of those buildings was Bruce Wayne s building so he knew people who died in that Black Zero event . Brandon Spink portrays a young Bruce Wayne.
  • Henry Cavill as Clark Kent / Superman: A Metropolis-based Kryptonian survivor and a journalist for the Daily Planet who uses his extraterrestrial abilities to protect humanity. Superman s suit in Batman v Superman is somewhat similar to that in Man of Steel, but with enhanced, high-tech-style surface detail and a shinier, more metallic-looking cape. A quote written in Kryptonian was added into Superman s symbol which says Where we had thought to stand alone, we will be with all the world . The film addresses the destruction caused by Superman and Zod in Metropolis, a part of Man of Steel that was criticized for being too extensive for Superman, to which Snyder responded I was surprised because that s the thesis of Superman for me, that you can t just have superheroes knock around and have there be no consequences . On what the public perception of Superman is in the film, Cavill said In this movie, everyone has split into different directions as to how they feel about this alien , adding, Some people love him, some hate him. Other people fear him. Is he a tyrant? When asked how Superman has evolved since Man of Steel, Cavill said Superman himself isn t that different. He does, however, have to deal with a new set of problems because he s now been revealed to the world. This film is more about how the world in general – and Batman in particular – sees this alien, and less about the evolution of Superman. Cavill described Superman and Batman as being the two sides of the same coin. They have the same goal, but use very different methods to achieve it. Understandably, that leads them to clash with one another, and their conflict is a historic moment.
  • Amy Adams as Lois Lane: A reporter for the Daily Planet and love interest of Clark Kent. About her role, Adams stated that Lois is still sort of like the key to the information. She s the girl going out and getting it and figuring it out and putting it together and all of that, so she s very much involved. When asked on her thoughts on portraying Lois Lane in the film, Adams replied I love that she s fearless. I m not that way so it s really fun that she really is not afraid of the consequences. On Lois Lane and Clark Kent s relationship in the film, Adams said, What s great about this is that, as far as the relationship with Lois and Clark goes, when we meet them you can tell that they ve been in a relationship for while, further explaining, So it was great to get to develop that sort of intimacy and that sort of friendship that I ve developed with Henry, to get to bring that to the screen. She also described Clark Kent as being Lois Lane s connection to humanity and said, She may have some tunnel vision, but she s got a job and moral standards. we met her before, she would do anything to get the story – now Clark has instilled some faith in humanity in her. Her relationship with Clark is the closest thing she has to anything faith-based, you know? Although moving in with Clark brings issues.
  • Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor: An eccentric young businessman and hereditary CEO of LexCorp who is obsessed with defeating Superman. Luthor is usually depicted as bald in the comics while the film s version of Luthor depicts him with hair throughout the majority of the film. When speaking about his portrayal of Luthor compared to previous portrayals, Eisenberg said, When you re doing a movie like this and playing a character that s already been played, the further away it is from those previous incarnations the better , adding, Because chances are, especially with a guy like Gene Hackman or Kevin Spacey, you re not going to get favorably compared. Eisenberg explained his character s background as having a core of reality , saying, has a backstory that s tragic and an emotional inner life that s authentic. That s in the movie. It was my interest in playing the character with a real emotional core, and this writer, Chris Terrio s interest in creating a character that seemed viable in reality. On Luthor s behavior and attitude towards Superman, Eisenberg said, He is a narcissist of the first order but complicated in that way as well in that he is terribly troubled and competitive and vengeful. He looks at Superman not as somebody to destroy but as genuine threat to humanity. Eisenberg described his role as Lex Luthor as his most advantageous role yet, saying, In a lot of ways Luthor is more of a stretch than any character you would do in an independent movie, which is normally the place you stretch. So in that way it was not at all compromised. If anything it was the best, most advantageous role I ve ever been given. The opportunity to do an interesting character on a movie of that scale is incredibly rare. Eisenberg describes a theme in the film, saying, It raises the question of how one man can have so much power. These are the kind of things that we talk about authoritarian states. They re addressing geopolitics in this movie and not in a way that s pretentious or esoteric .
  • Diane Lane as Martha Kent: Clark s adoptive mother. On her role as Superman s mother, Lane stated, I always said if I had a son that would be the ultimate test. Raise a good man — there s something noble about that. When asked on her experience working with Zack Snyder on Batman v Superman, Lane said she was impressed by Snyder s imagination and added, Who gets offered the opportunity to bring such things to the screen for millions of people? That s tremendous. It s an honor and a burden, and I can t imagine shouldering that load. On Martha Kent s support for her son Superman, Lane stated, I think that she s reminding him he does have a choice , further explaining, He doesn t have to be yoked to this destiny. He can actually feel the pleasure of making the choice.
  • Laurence Fishburne as Perry White: The editor-in-chief of the Daily Planet and Clark and Lois boss. When asked about reprising his role in the film, Fishburne said, I was happy to come back to the character. I got really excited when I read it and I saw what was at the center at the movie, which was this huge fight between these two titans. On Perry White s role in the film, Fishburne said, He s dealing with the fact that his medium looks like it s going the way of the dinosaurs, so that s a difficult position to be in , adding, the good news is he s got a great reporter like Lois Lane and a new great reporter like Clark Kent who are interested and hungry to do the job. Describing Perry White s working relationship with Lois Lane, Fishburne stated, She s my favorite child and she s my problem child. On his experience filming and his character s interactions, Fishburne said, It was really just a couple of days in the beginning with Lois, Clark, and Perry. And the rest was just me with Lois, figuring out how to get her where she needed to go. But the relationships I think were established really well in Man of Steel.
  • Jeremy Irons as Alfred Pennyworth: Bruce Wayne s butler, chief of security and trusted confidant. Irons described his take on Alfred Pennyworth as being quite a different Alfred than we have seen so far. Zack Snyder had very clear views about what he wanted. I would just say he s more hands-on perhaps than just a butler. When asked what makes his Alfred different from previous portrayals, Irons said, Zack Snyder, the director, wanted to create a completely different Alfred. So I felt I didn t have to carry any baggage from previous ones. It s sort of a reincarnation, if you d like. I had a feeling I was creating my own Alfred, more of a man who can actually do anything if he has to. According to Irons, Alfred is a bit of a grease monkey, and he s very involved in the decisions Bruce makes. On how Alfred would be in the film, Irons stated, He has an interesting history. He s a very competent man. He s the sort of man I think anyone would like to be married to. He can sort of do everything: change light bulbs, blow up bridges if he has to.
  • Holly Hunter as June Finch: United States Senator from Kentucky who heads the political argument on Superman and his actions. Describing her experience on being in the film, Hunter said, It was really fun to be part of a giant, massive piece of machinery, headed up by Zack Snyder, who is thoroughly at home in that uber mega environment. Most people would have a nervous breakdown with that kind of pressure, and he s enthralled. When asked how she got involved in the film, Hunter said, Zack asked me. He came to me with an offer, and I was like, Yeah, that would be fun. It s fun to mix it up. I have scenes with Superman. He looks phenomenal. And to see Ben and Henry together is quite formidable. On acting in a superhero film, Hunter stated, Being somebody who s like a theater geek that I am, I can just go right back to Aeschylus and Euripides and Sophocles. They were writing about gods and goddesses versus humans, and how gods could distort, pervert or help people get what they want. And so, for me, this didn t feel foreign because that was the translation that it went through for me; that was my filter. On her character s views on Superman, Hunter stated, What is her problem with Superman? That absolute power corrupts absolutely. When power is acting autonomously, unilaterally with no legislation, with no boundaries, with no law, except for the ones that he deems in his own mind, that can be detrimental. Describing her character, Hunter said, I thought that, you know, as a senator, she brought her female-ness to the job in how she listened, in her curiosity, in her ability to evaluate , adding, felt very female to me.
  • Gal Gadot as Diana Prince / Wonder Woman: An immortal Amazonian warrior who is the crown princess of Themyscira. Wonder Woman s suit is made out of chrome-painted polyurethane, and she uses her hand wraps and sword harnesses. Gadot described her character as having many strengths and powers, but at the end of the day, she s a woman with a lot of emotional intelligence . Describing Wonder Woman s compassion, Gadot stated, It s all her heart—that s her strength. I think women are amazing for being able to show what they feel. I admire women who do. On her thoughts on portraying Wonder Woman, Gadot said, You know Wonder Woman; she s amazing. I love everything that she represents and everything that she stands for. She s all about love and compassion and truth and justice and equality, and she s a whole lot of woman. For me, it was important that people can relate to her. Describing her role in the film, Gadot said, In this movie you get a glimpse of who Wonder Woman is — she s being introduced into this DC Comics universe. But we were talking about her strengths, her façade, her attitude. Why is she acting the way she is? On Wonder Woman s battle scene with Doomsday, Gadot stated, I remember after we did that take, Zack came to me and he said, Did you just have a smirk? I said, Yeah. And he asked, Why? I think I like it, but why? Well, if he s gonna mess with her, then she s gonna mess with him. And she knows she s gonna win. At the end of the day, Wonder Woman is a peace seeker. But when fight arrives, she can fight. She s a warrior and she enjoys the adrenaline of the fight. Gadot also stated I don t want people to think she is perfect , further explaining, She can be naughty. On Gadot s casting as Wonder Woman, Snyder said Wonder Woman is arguably one of the most powerful female characters of all time and a fan favorite in the DC Universe. Not only is Gal an amazing actress, but she also has that magical quality that makes her perfect for the role. Gadot underwent a diet and training regimen, practiced different martial arts and gained 17 pounds of muscle for the role. Gadot was previously offered the role as Faora Hu-Ul in Man of Steel but declined because she was pregnant at that time; this allowed her to be later cast as Wonder Woman in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice.
  • Scoot McNairy as Wallace Keefe: An amputee employee of Wayne Enterprises who is crippled during the destruction of Metropolis and holds Superman responsible. McNairy describes his character as a type of character who he has never played before and stated getting into that thing was definitely something I had to wrap my head around emotionally in order to play that character. When asked if the character was being kept as a surprise until the film s release, McNairy said I don t know if I d call it necessarily a surprise. I would say it s a character that lends itself to the story being told. On his thoughts on being in the film, McNairy stated Playing in that world with comic books you ve been reading since you were a kid, being someone in that world, it s awesome.
  • Callan Mulvey as Anatoli Knyazev: A Russian terrorist who works for Luthor. On casting Mulvey in the film, Zack Snyder stated, I just had the good fortune to work with Callan on 300: Rise of an Empire and was very impressed with his incredible talent, further adding, He s a fantastic actor and I m looking forward to having the chance to work with him again. On working with Snyder again, Mulvey stated Zack is such a visionary, so I know it s going to be an amazing project. Talent as a director aside, people really love working for Zack and being on his sets, which says it all really.
  • Tao Okamoto as Mercy Graves: Assistant to Luthor. On her role in the film, Okamoto said It was so fascinating. I didn t have a big speaking role. I used to act as sassy girls all the time as a model so that wasn t so challenging to me. But I enjoyed it so much, being mean. I tried to be mean. On Okamoto s casting, Snyder said Tao is a striking presence whose beauty is aptly rivaled by her amazing abilities as an actress. I m really excited to have her joining us on this adventure.

Robin Atkin Downes performed the motion capture and voice work for the creature at the film s climax. Although the character is not named directly, it was revealed later to be that of Doomsday. The role was kept under such heavy secrecy that Downes did not know who he was playing until the second trailer was released. On his role, Downes stated that he was proud to be part of the film and expressed his admiration in helping bring Doomsday to life in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. Snyder has confirmed Doomsday will return in the DCEU, stating Well, you have Doomsday, right? He doesn t just crawl out of the ground. He has his own mythology, right? So that has to be explored. Downes has previously provided voice roles for various DC animated films and shows as well as DC video games.

Additionally, Jeffrey Dean Morgan portrays Thomas Wayne in an uncredited appearance and Lauren Cohan portrays Martha Wayne, Bruce Wayne s deceased parents, Patrick Wilson (who later portrayed Ocean Master in Aquaman and its sequel) portrays the President of the United States in a voice role, and Michael Cassidy portrays Jimmy Olsen, a CIA agent. Reprising their roles from Man of Steel are Harry Lennix as Secretary Calvin Swanwick, Christina Wren as Major Carrie Farris, Kevin Costner as Jonathan Kent, Rebecca Buller as Jenny Jurwich, Chad Krowchuk as Glen Woodburn, and Carla Gugino as the Kryptonian AI Kelor. The corpse of General Zod also appears in the film in a crucial role; however, Michael Shannon did not film any scenes for the film and the corpse was created using the physique of fitness model Greg Plitt and a head-shot of Shannon. Hugh Maguire portrays Jack O Dwyer, an executive of Wayne Enterprises.

Ezra Miller, Jason Momoa, and Ray Fisher appear as Barry Allen / Flash, Arthur Curry / Aquaman, and Victor Stone / Cyborg respectively in brief appearances, which led to their inclusion in the Justice League film. Joe Morton appears in a role as Silas Stone, Victor s father. U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy makes a cameo appearance as Senator Purrington, whilst U.S. Senator Debbie Stabenow also makes a cameo as the Governor of New Jersey. Neil deGrasse Tyson, Soledad O Brien, Anderson Cooper, Nancy Grace, Charlie Rose, Dana Bash, Andrew Sullivan, and Vikram Gandhi appear as themselves. Sammi Rotibi was cast as General Amajagh, while Wunmi Mosaku portrays Kahina Ziri, a woman from Nairomi who initially testifies to the U.S. Congress against Superman. Jena Malone was cast as S.T.A.R. Labs scientist Jenet Klyburn, but her scenes were cut from the theatrical release, along with Man of Steel characters Coburn Goss as Father Leone, Joseph Cranford as Pete Ross and Emily Peterson as Lana Lang; they were restored for the Ultimate Edition home media release. Talk show host Jon Stewart has a cameo in the extended cut. To further establish the interconnection between the films of the shared universe, Chris Pine, Saïd Taghmaoui, Ewen Bremner, and Eugene Brave Rock appear on Diana Prince s photo as Steve Trevor, Sameer, Charlie, and Chief Napi, all characters who would appear in the Wonder Woman film. Snyder himself also makes a cameo as one of Knyazev s goons holding a rifle at the warehouse standoff.

Themes and analysis

Batman v Superman has been interpreted as an allegory about contemporary American politics, particularly America s response to 9/11.

Writing for The Commercial Appeal, John Beifuss noted the similarities between the Metropolis battle at the beginning of the film and 9/11: The idea is that just as 9/11 had a transformative existential impact on the psyche of America, the battle of Metropolis – and the subsequent realization that an all-powerful alien could destroy his adopted planet with ease – has altered human consciousness, creating new standards of morality and levels of fear – the feeling of powerlessness that turns good men cruel, in the words of Wayne s butler, Alfred (Jeremy Irons). He says that Batman comes out of the Metropolis battle scene as a changed – and even more deranged – man.

Kofi Outlaw of ComicBook.com interpreted the allegory as Batman representing the right-wing hawk reaction to 9/11… an America that prefers security over civil liberties; the Bush-era mentality of stopping threats pro-actively before they can threaten close to home . Meanwhile, Superman, Outlaw writes, represents the more left-wing, liberal, American ideal , while Luthor represents insidious opportunists who exploited (and still exploit) the turmoil of a post-9/11, war-torn, world for personal gain. Outlaw suggests that the scene where Batman and Superman find common ground in their mothers is parallel to the notion that conflicting political ideologies still have similarities.

Writing for Screen Rant, Andrew Dyce wrote Bruce has, like so many political figures and nations, given up the moral high ground, rationalized his extreme methods as necessary, identified an enemy he does not seek to understand, and abandoned the spirit, if not the explicit values upon which his country – rather, upon which his mission was founded.

Writing for Vice, Kaleem Aftab wrote that the film was intended as an unpleasant lambast of the government and the popular reaction to 9/11. He compared Superman s character to the Muslim American experience, concluding that the film is a condemnation of what America is becoming, a place where immigrants, especially those unfairly tainted because of the mass destruction caused by a few, are no longer part of a viable American dream.

Writing for The New Yorker, Richard Brody analyzed the allegory differently: Batman, according to Brody, represents the Democratic Party, whereas Superman represents the Republican Party. Brody feels this notion is supported by the fact that Batman s eyes glow blue when he is wearing the exoskeleton and Superman s glow red when he uses his heat vision. Brody criticized this allegory as salacious for suggesting that the Democratic Party allies itself with evil, which he says has no relationship to contemporary politics . However, he called it a powerful metaphor for suggesting there d be much less of an urge to find a superhero—or to magnify demagogues who pretend to be one—if politicians merely did their jobs competently and sensitively.

Mark Hughes writing for Forbes notes that the film inverts the politics of The Dark Knight Returns by having Superman as the outsider character who is questioned by the government and media. He writes This is a reversal of sorts from the comic, where Superman represents the establishment perspective while Batman is the outcast under constant press, public, and government scrutiny. He also noted how Batman sees Superman as human for the first time during the Martha scene: he s never looked at Superman as a real person or as a man before. Then suddenly Superman is vulnerable, he has a regular guy s name and a woman who loves him crying over him, and a mom – his last words are basically save my mother. We see, very emotionally, how Batman realizes what he s doing and that he s the bad guy, a painful but very human revelatory moment.

Richard Newby writing for The Hollywood Reporter, wrote the Martha scene is Bruce s opportunity to reconnect with his own humanity and the humanity of Superman. Batman doesn’t end the fight because their mothers have the same name, but because he recognizes Superman as someone with a mother, and thus a human, despite his alien origins. The battle against Superman is ultimately Bruce’s realization that he can be better and reconnect with humanity again. It’s not a redemption, or a full change, as he does kill mercenaries at the warehouse in the following scene, but it is a start.

Ben Affleck said he liked the idea of showing accountability and the consequences of violence and seeing that there are real people in those buildings , with the scene of Bruce Wayne at the battle of Metropolis.

Production

Development

… after Man of Steel finished and we started talking about what would be in the next movie, I started subtly mentioning that it would be cool if he faced Batman… You re in a story meeting talking about, like, who should fight if he fought this giant alien threat Zod who was basically his equal physically, from his planet, fighting on our turf… You know, who to fight next?… But I m not gonna say at all that when I took the job to do Man of Steel that I did it in a subversive way to get to Batman. I really believe that only after contemplating who could face did Batman come into the picture.

— Snyder, on how Batman came into the film

In June 2013, Warner Bros. announced that director Zack Snyder and screenwriter David S. Goyer would return for a Man of Steel sequel, with the studio considering a 2015 release for the film. The following month, Snyder confirmed at San Diego Comic-Con International that the follow-up to Man of Steel would feature Superman and Batman meeting for the first time on film. Goyer and Snyder would co-write the story, and Goyer would write the script despite saying in 2006 that a Batman Vs. Superman film is where you go when you admit to yourself that you ve exhausted all possibilities … an admission that this franchise is on its last gasp . Christopher Nolan was involved in an advisory role as executive producer. According to Snyder, the film would take inspiration from the comic The Dark Knight Returns.

In November 2013, Snyder clarified his film would not be based upon the aforementioned graphic novel. If you were going to do that, you would need a different Superman. We re bringing Batman into the universe that now this Superman lives in. Batman v Superman marks the first appearance of Wonder Woman in a live-action, theatrical film, which Warner Bros. had been developing as far back as 1996. In December 2013, Chris Terrio was hired to rewrite the script, due to Goyer s commitments to other projects. Further commenting on the influences, Terrio revealed that the film would draw inspiration from Nolan s Batman trilogy, Italian semiotician Umberto Eco s 1972 essay The Myth of Superman , and the W.H. Auden poem Musée des Beaux Arts which contrasts the quotidian details of normal people s lives with the epic struggles of mythological figures. According to him, In superhero stories, Batman is Pluto, god of the underworld, and Superman is Apollo, god of the sky. That began to be really interesting to me — that their conflict is not just due to manipulation, but their very existence. The Joker and the Riddler were supposed to appear in the film, but Snyder ultimately decided to cut them from the final script.

The film s official title, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, was revealed in May 2014. Snyder stated that having the v in the title instead of vs. was a way to keep it from being a straight versus movie, even in the most subtle way . Henry Cavill later stated, I wouldn t call this a Superman sequel This is Batman versus Superman. It s a separate entity altogether. It s introducing the Batman character and expanding upon the universe, which was kicked off by Man of Steel. Forbes noted that although the film originated as a sequel to Man of Steel, it was revamped into a backdoor pilot for Justice League and/or an eventual stand-alone Batman movie. As part of a settlement with his heirs, this is the first Batman production that lists Bill Finger as a co-creator. In April 2021, Terrio revealed that his script was never titled Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, while Snyder indicated that the name of the film was decided by studio executives and that he fought for the abbreviation of the word versus in the title. Potential titles that the pair had initially wanted included Justice League: Foundations, Justice League: Rising, and Son of Sun and Knight of Night.

Casting

Henry Cavill, Amy Adams, Kevin Costner, Diane Lane, Laurence Fishburne, Harry Lennix and Christina Wren reprise their roles from Man of Steel. Joining the cast are Ben Affleck as Batman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor, Jeremy Irons as Alfred Pennyworth, Ray Fisher as Cyborg, Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Ezra Miller as The Flash and Tao Okamoto as Luthor s assistant Mercy Graves. Scoot McNairy and Callan Mulvey were cast as Wallace Keefe and Anatoli Knyazev, while Jena Malone was cast as Jenet Klyburn, a character that was featured exclusively in the Ultimate Edition home media release.

Dawn of Justice is Affleck s second film as a comic book superhero; he played Daredevil in the 2003 film of the same name, and was initially reluctant to accept playing Batman, citing that he felt didn t fit the traditional mold , but he became excited after Snyder showed him the concept and reassured him that the film would be different from Nolan s trilogy.

Snyder cast an older Batman to be a layered juxtaposition against a younger Superman; while bear the scars of a seasoned crime fighter, but retain the charm that the world sees in billionaire Bruce Wayne. Nolan was involved with the casting of Affleck and he was the first actor Snyder approached for the part. Ryan Gosling, Joe Manganiello, Richard Armitage, Max Martini and Matthew Goode were considered for the role. The director had also discussed the part with Josh Brolin. Christian Bale admitted he wanted to play Batman again after The Dark Knight Rises, though he stated that his Batman does not belong in any other film and he was never approached by Warner Bros. to play the role again. Jason Momoa auditioned for Batman, but was cast as Aquaman instead.

On casting Eisenberg as Lex Luthor, Snyder offered, Having Jesse in the role allows us to explore that interesting dynamic, and also take the character in some new and unexpected directions . Producer Charles Roven revealed that this incarnation of Wonder Woman would use the character s origins from 2011 s The New 52 reboot of the DC continuity, wherein the character would be a demigoddess, and the daughter of Zeus. This deviates from the character s original origins, where she was a clay figure brought to life by the gods . Olga Kurylenko, Jaimie Alexander and Élodie Yung were considered for the role of Wonder Woman before Gadot was cast. Dawn of Justice is Ray Fisher s feature film debut, and the first live-action film to feature Cyborg, whose role originally was to become more significant in future DC Comics films. It is also the live-action theatrical debut of Aquaman. Snyder almost cast Adam Driver as Dick Grayson/Nightwing and Carla Gugino as Catwoman.

The casting of Affleck, Gadot, and Eisenberg was criticized. Affleck s casting caused significant backlash from comic book fans, with multiple online petitions demanding his removal from the role; unlike previous Batman actors, he was not considered intimidating enough for the role by the protesters. Conversely, PopMatters journalist J.C. Maçek III supported Affleck s casting as Batman, stating, Way back when the news was new I wrote a PopMatters article defending the choice of Ben Affleck as Batman. I ll let that one speak for itself. Via social media, fans criticized Gadot s small frame in contrast to Wonder Woman s warrior-like build in the comics. Responding to this, Gadot stated that she had been participating in various training regimens to achieve a body that stays closer to the source material. Fans also criticized Eisenberg s casting, feeling that the then-30-year-old was too young for the role, and not physically imposing enough. Upon the film s release, both Affleck and Gadot received considerable praise for their performances, despite the overall negative reception of the film itself.

Design

Michael Wilkinson reprised his duties as costume designer. He updated the Superman suit from Man of Steel so that it feels fresh and right for this installment of Zack Snyder s comic-book universe . The first Batsuit featured in the film is influenced by The Dark Knight Returns; unlike the suits seen in previous live-action Batman films, it is made of cloth instead of armor and is a cast of the physique of fitness model Rossano Rea. An image of the Wonder Woman costume was revealed at the 2014 San Diego Comic-Con, in which the costume desaturates the red, blue, and gold colors that make up the costume of most versions of the character.

A second Batsuit was also unveiled at Comic-Con, and unlike the first, it is armored. Aquaman s look in this film shows him tattooed in Maori-like patterns , and wearing a suit decked out in shades of gold, black and silver armor . According to the Warner Bros. Studios lot, the next generation Batmobile combined inspiration from both the sleek, streamlined design of classic Batmobiles and the high-suspension, military build from the more recent Tumbler from The Dark Knight Trilogy. Designed by production designer Patrick Tatopoulos, the Batmobile is about 20 feet long and 12 feet wide. The glasses Cavill wears as Clark Kent are made by British spectacle designer Tom Davies.

Filming

In September 2013, Larry Fong joined the crew as cinematographer, having previously worked with Zack Snyder on 300, Watchmen, and Sucker Punch. Initial filming commenced on October 19, 2013, at East Los Angeles College, to shoot an American football game between Gotham City University and rival Metropolis State University. At the end of the month, construction began on the Kent farm seen in Man of Steel for the film. Principal photography involving the main cast of the film began on May 19, 2014, in Detroit, Michigan, with scenes featuring Gal Gadot as Diana Prince being filmed early on May 16. While filming in Michigan, the production spent a total of $199 million in the state. The scene of a state funeral at the Arlington National Cemetery, a tribute by the United States Army, was actually filmed in Michigan as well, using green screen.

Additional filming began in Chicago, Illinois in November 2014. Other locations included the Michigan Motion Picture Studios, the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University, Yorkville, Illinois, the South Pacific, and New Mexico. Sequences of the film, including a scene depicting the murder of Bruce Wayne s parents, were filmed using IMAX cameras. The planned shoot in Morocco was shifted to New Mexico due to incidents related to the 2014 Ebola outbreak. Principal photography wrapped on December 5, 2014.

Music and soundtrack

Hans Zimmer composed the film score, emphasizing a challenge not to reuse the themes he established with the Batman character from Christopher Nolan s trilogy. Junkie XL, who provided additional music in Man of Steel, also returned for this film, helping to compose the theme for Batman. Originally, Zimmer enlisted Junkie XL to compose the Batman material, with Zimmer planning to focus solely on the Superman side of the score, but the final Batman theme was written by both composers as a collaboration. Zimmer noted that he had significant trouble in finding a new angle from which to tell the story and after the release of the film, Zimmer announced that he was retired from superhero films, though he has since retracted this. The soundtrack album of the film was released on March 18, 2016 by WaterTower Music.

Songs featured in the film include: Kang Ling (An Instrument Made From A Human Thigh Bone) , a traditional song performed by the monks of the Dip Tse Chok Ling Monastery, Dharamshala; Night and Day and Ev ry Time We Say Goodbye written by Cole Porter and performed by Richard Cheese; Shostakovich: Waltz II (Jazz Suite No. 2) written by Dmitri Shostakovich performed by the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra conducted by Riccardo Chailly; and Amazing Grace arranged and performed by John Allan and again performed by the Canadian Scottish Regiment Pipes and Drums and the United States Third Marine Aircraft Wing Band.

Marketing

An estimated $165 million marketing effort helped promote Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. At the 2014 San Diego Comic-Con International, Snyder introduced the film s first footage intended to be exclusive to the event. A teaser trailer was scheduled to be screened in selected cinemas on April 20, 2015. However, on April 16, the trailer leaked online, and within a few hours Snyder officially released the trailer to Twitter. At the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con International, Snyder and the cast attended to present an initial trailer of the film. The trailer was, unlike the teaser, which received mixed response, positively received by attendees, who gave the trailer a standing ovation. Mark Hughes of Forbes said the trailers both set the stage for a story about the world s distrust and fear of Superman, Batman s rage at Superman and intention to duke it out with the Man of Steel, and Wonder Woman s participation in a big fight featuring the Trinity.

Warner Bros. Consumer Products partnered-up with a powerhouse slate of global licensees for a broad, multi-category licensing and merchandising program , including Mattel, Lego, Rubies, Funko, Thinkway Toys, Hot Toys, Junkfood, Bioworld, Pez, Seiko, Converse and among many other licensees to sell merchandise related to the film. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles was also a licensee for the film, offering a special edition Jeep Renegade in exchange for a near-exclusive product placement deal; aside from Bruce Wayne s Aston Martin, all vehicles in the film were either from Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram, or Iveco. Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice – Cross Fire, an original companion novel tied to the film, telling a tie-in story set before the events of the movie, was published by Scholastic Corporation.

Also, there are a series of four minicomics found in Batman v Superman-branded General Mills cereals. Additionally, those who purchased Batman v Superman-themed Doritos Family Fun Mix at Walmart received the comic book prequel Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice – Upstairs/Downstairs. Rocksteady Studios released downloadable content for the video game Batman: Arkham Knight that featured the Batmobile and Batsuit from the film.

The third trailer debuted on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on December 3, 2015. It received positive responses, with Scott Mendelson of Forbes calling the trailer a Saturday morning cartoon nerd s wildest dreams. Molly Driscoll of CS Monitor stated that it looks like the film will continue the trend of adapting comic book stories as timely tales. Graeme McMillan of The Hollywood Reporter noted that based on the trailer s content, the film might be the anti-Civil War, referring to Marvel s Captain America: Civil War as Superman and Batman complete the comic book trope by overcoming their differences to fight a common foe, alongside a third hero, who saves them both — that feels the most fresh, especially in light of the Civil War trailer. While that ended with a showdown between three heroes, this trailer moves beyond that to show three heroes standing united. However, it was criticized for revealing that, with Rob Tornoe of NewsWorks pointing out that this trailer was targeting the broadest audience rather than just fans, as studios try to maximize a film s opening day box office.

Warner Bros. did not buy a Super Bowl 50 commercial; instead, they worked with Turkish Airlines to put together a pair of Batman v Superman-themed airline commercials. McMillan of The Hollywood Reporter stated that the spots inform interested parties about the culture, geography and history of Batman and Superman s individual stomping grounds, each one filled with Easter eggs for the comic book faithful and newcomer alike. Jesse Eisenberg s part as Lex Luthor in these commercials was praised, as Dirk Libbey of CinemaBlend noted that he matches up well with Bruce Wayne by playing the welcoming billionaire business man. It s a far cry from the somewhat cartoonish villain we ve seen in the clips from the film.

The final trailer was released to the public on February 11, 2016, which was described as intense by Kwame Opam of The Verge. Mendelson of Forbes felt that Warner Bros. probably wouldn t have even dropped this one had the prior trailer back in December been received better. So now we have this fourth and final sell, and at least they are going out on a high note. Jonathon Dornbush of Entertainment Weekly said that the footage works to establish Batman as his own independent crime fighting force, while also providing a deeper look at his existential struggle against Superman.

In February 2016, Warner Bros. and Doritos formed a partnership, creating a website offering fans the opportunity to enter codes found on Doritos purchases branded with the film s logo, and enter to win movie tickets, tech toys, and a trip the premiere in New York City. Warner Bros also partnered with Omaze to give fans who donated a chance to win The Ultimate Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Experience , while benefiting three nonprofit organizations nominated by Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill and Jesse Eisenberg. The Ultimate Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice Experience offered a fan and their friend the chance to win tickets to the premiere of the film, as well as fly on a helicopter with Cavill or ride in the Batmobile with Affleck. Hendrick Motorsports drivers Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr.. drove cars based on Superman and Batman respectively, at Auto Club Speedway on March 20, 2016. A tie-in endless runner video game to the film, entitled Batman vs Superman – Who Will Win?, debuted March 16, 2016, released by Warner Bros. International Enterprises.

Release

In November 2013, Warner Bros. announced that Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice would be released on July 17, 2015. In January 2014, however, the studio announced that it was delayed from its original release date of July 17, 2015, and moved to May 6, 2016, in order to give the filmmakers time to realize fully their vision, given the complex visual nature of the story. The release date was moved once again in August 2014 from May 6, 2016, to March 25, 2016, with a Warner Bros. insider saying the studio was not flinching in regards to the previous opening date being on the same day as Marvel Studios Captain America: Civil War, but instead stating that March 2016 was a fantastic corridor for them. According to sources obtained by The Hollywood Reporter, Warner Bros. considered the possibility of having a 70mm release for the film, which was partially shot in the 65mm IMAX format.

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice premiered at Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City on March 19, 2016, followed by a New York City premiere on March 20 at Radio City Music Hall. Following the 2016 Brussels bombings, Warner Bros. originally cancelled the red carpet of the London premiere, but decided to carry on with the premiere for the fans. The film was released in the United States and the United Kingdom on March 25 in 3D. It opened simultaneously in North America, China and Japan, the world s three largest film markets, as well as additional international territories, with the exception of Poland, where theaters do not open on Good Friday. The film debuted simultaneously across 30,000 screens in nearly every major foreign territory across 61 markets, including China. In the United States, it opened across roughly 4,242 locations, of which 3,500 theaters (85%) were in 3D, 390 IMAX screens, 470 PLF locations, 150 D-Box theaters and ten 70 mm prints.

Reception

Box office

The film grossed $166 million in the United States and Canada in its opening weekend, the eighth-biggest opening of all time, ahead of The Dark Knight Rises $160.9 million. The film had a worldwide opening of $422.5 million, which stands as the second-biggest for Warner Bros. and the fifth-biggest of all time at the time of its release. It became the fourth film to have a global opening above $400 million. It also had an IMAX worldwide opening weekend total of $36 million from 945 IMAX screens, the third-biggest ever, behind Star Wars: The Force Awakens ($48 million) and Jurassic World ($44 million). However, both inside and outside of the United States, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice experienced a notable poor Friday-to-Sunday hold and set a new record for the worst Friday-to-Sunday drop for a superhero movie release in modern box office history with a 58% decline, which was previously held by 2015 s Fantastic Four.

In its second weekend, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice experienced a historic box-office drop, with an 81.2% decline on Friday that was one of the biggest Friday-to-Friday drops any blockbuster has ever seen , and an overall 68.4% drop for the weekend despite not facing any big competition at the box office , making it the second largest decline for a marquee superhero title, behind only 2003 s Hulk. Brad Brevet, writing for Box Office Mojo, reported that it appeared Batman v Superman was looking at a drop anywhere from 58–68% and it ended up settling in on the wrong side of those expectations. Scott Mendelson, writing for Forbes, said Whether or not the movie is any good, and whether or not audiences respond to the picture, is best measured by the second and third weekends…Yes, we re still talking about a $15.35 million second Friday and a $50m+ second weekend, but in terms of legs, this film sadly doesn t seem to have any. Continuing this trend, in its third weekend, the film dropped by 54.3% in which Brad Brevet concluded in a follow-up for Box Office Mojo that the legs on this one are proving quite short.

In the weeks leading up to the film s release, advance ticket sales outpaced The Dark Knight Rises, The Avengers, and Furious 7. Worldwide, it was estimated to gross between $300–340 million in over 35,000 screens in its opening weekend. It passed the $50 million mark in IMAX ticket sales on its second weekend, grossing a total of $53.4 million from 571 IMAX screens. Warner Bros. US distribution chief Jeff Goldstein described the film s box office performance as a fantastic result, by any measure . Box office analyst Jeff Bock said Still, outside of Christopher Nolan s two Dark Knight movies, and Tim Burton s Batman films when you adjust for inflation, this is the highest-grossing property in DC s bullpen thus far. It tops Man of Steel by more than $200 million, and that overall, BvS successfully relaunched DC s cinematic universe. The film needed to reach $800 million in revenue at the box office to recoup its investment according to financial analysts. Despite surpassing this amount, it was considered a disappointment for failing to reach $1 billion. This resulted in Warner Bros. creating DC Films in May 2016, giving a dedicated executive team responsibility for films based on DC Comics, similar to the dedicated Marvel Comics focus of Marvel Studios within the larger Walt Disney Studios group. Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice grossed $330.4 million in North America and $543.3 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $873.6 million, making it the seventh-highest-grossing film of 2016 behind Captain America: Civil War, Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Finding Dory, Zootopia, The Jungle Book, and The Secret Life of Pets. Deadline Hollywood calculated the net profit of the film to be $105.7 million, when factoring together all expenses and revenues for the film.

North America

Following reports of pre-tickets sales in both the United States and Canada on February 29, many insiders and analysts predicted an opening weekend haul between $120–140 million for Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, with projections as high as $185 million. However, Warner Bros. insiders were more conservative in their estimates projecting in the lower range of $110 million. According to Deadline Hollywood, an undisclosed rival studio box office analyst indicated that if the film is truly pacing in tandem with The Dark Knight Rises, then Dawn of Justice could possibly be looking at a $180 million+ debut. The film also became Fandango s top pre-selling superhero film ever, beating The Dark Knight Rises and Avengers: Age of Ultron, representing 90% of the site s weekend s ticket sales. A survey carried out showed that the introduction of Wonder Woman is a primary draw for moviegoers. It pre-sold around $20–25 million worth of advance tickets. Dawn of Justice made $27.7 million in Thursday previews from around 3,800 theaters which is the biggest of 2016, the biggest Easter weekend preview, the second-biggest for a superhero film (behind The Dark Knight Rises), and the seventh-biggest of all time of which $3.0 million came from IMAX showings, also a new record for Easter weekend.

On its opening day, it earned $81.59 million from 4,242 theaters, including previews, marking the biggest pre-summer opening day of all time, the second-biggest superhero Friday opening and the fourth-biggest opening-day and fourth-biggest single-day gross, with $9 million coming from IMAX showings. Excluding the Thursday previews, it earned $53.89 million on Friday which is the fifth-biggest ever. It fell 37.8% on Saturday, which is the second-worst superhero opening Friday-to-Saturday drop, only behind the 40% drop of The Dark Knight Rises. In total, it earned $166 million for its debut weekend, setting records for the biggest March and pre-summer openings, the biggest Easter opening, the second-biggest opening for Warner Bros., the biggest for a DC Comics property, and the eighth-biggest opening of all time. (Some of these records have since been broken by Beauty and the Beast.) Conversely, the film holds the record for the worst superhero Friday-to-Sunday drop with a 58% decline, eclipsing the previous 48% decline record held by Fantastic Four in 2015. IMAX comprised 11% or $18 million of the weekend s gross from 388 theaters which is the fifth-biggest of all time (a record it shares with Age of Ultron) and 3D represented 40% ($68 million) of the total ticket sales. RealD 3D comprised $47 million of the opening gross. Premium large formats generated $17.6 million (10%), with $3.6 million of that coming from Cinemark XD auditoriums from 475 theaters.

Following its record breaking opening weekend, it posted the biggest March Monday with $15.05 million, a drop of 55% from its Sunday gross. This broke The Hunger Games previous record of $10.8 million, and also the biggest March Tuesday with $12.2 million. It made $209 million in its first week full which stands at the eleventh-biggest opening week of all time and surpassed the lifetime total Batman Begins. Despite earning $15.35 million in its second Friday, the film dropped 81.2% and broke the record for the biggest Friday-to-Friday drop for a comic book adaptation film, not including $27.7 million worth of previews which represented an even larger decline. It fell precipitously by 69.1% in its second weekend, grossing $51.3 million from 4,256 theaters (an addition of 14 cinemas) due to poor reviews and mixed word of mouth, establishing itself an infamous record for the seventh steepest drop for a superhero/comic book adapted film and the steepest decline since the -69% posted by X-Men Origins: Wolverine in 2009, despite facing little to no competition or new wide-releases and having the added benefit of 30% K–12 schools off, and 9% of colleges on break, per ComScore. The steep drop also marks the fourth-biggest for a film that opened above $100 million (tied with The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2). In its third weekend it was overtaken by the comedy The Boss after falling 54% with $23.3 million.

Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice proved to be front-loaded, failing to generate significant revenue after its opening weekend/week release. It earned just 1.99 times ($330 million) its opening weekend numbers ($166 million), which is lower than Man of Steel s 2.28 multiplier. Like other DC films, such as Watchmen, Green Lantern and Man of Steel, it opened to record breaking numbers but then dropped the following weekend onward due largely to bad critical reception and mixed word of mouth from audiences. A similar result was followed by DC s third superhero film, Suicide Squad released in August 2016, although Suicide Squad became less front-loaded than Dawn of Justice.

Outside North America

Internationally, it was projected to open between $180–200 million; however, Deadline.com pointed out that these figures were only early predictions pegged to the performance of similar films in their respective territories. It opened in ten countries on Wednesday, March 23, 2016, earning $7 million and debuting at No. 1 in all markets on approximately 5,900 screens. The following day, the film was released in 38 additional countries, earning $33.1 million on 19,700 screens for a two-day total of $44 million. On March 25, it opened in the remaining 17 countries delivering $67.2 million in revenue, for a three-day total of $115.3 million in 62 countries on more than 30,000 screens. Through Sunday, March 27, it earned an opening-weekend total of $256.5 million from 66 countries on over 40,000 screens, making it the biggest superhero opening weekend of all time, the biggest overall March opening, the second-biggest opening ever for Warner Bros., and the fifth-biggest international opening on record. The film s accomplishments also included the second-biggest IMAX opening record of $18 million, behind only Jurassic World which tallied $23.5 million. 3D accounted 59% or $149.86 million of the weekend gross led by China (98%), Germany (88%), Brazil (81%), Russia (55%), and France (51%). As with North America, the film witnessed a steep decline in its second Friday internationally, falling 72% to $19.2 million, with the biggest decline in the U.K. (77%) and China (87%). Its second weekend earnings fell 66% overall to $85.25 million. Despite the decline, the film topped the box office for three consecutive weekends.

In Mexico, it had the biggest opening day for Warner Bros. and the second-biggest of all time with $5.8 million, including record-breaking midnight showings. It also scored the biggest opening day of all time in Brazil ($3.5 million) and the biggest opening day for a superhero film in Germany ($2.8 million). Elsewhere, it opened in the United Kingdom and Ireland ($9 million), Australia ($2.5 million), India ($2.54 million), Russia ($1.9 million), South Korea ($1.7 million), Japan ($1.2 million), the United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong ($1.1 million respectively). In China, it earned $21.22 million on its opening day, including around $1.34 million worth of previews, which is the biggest for Warner Bros. and the sixth-biggest Hollywood opening day of all time. However, other Chinese sources have the film open to around $20 million. In terms of opening weekends, the biggest openings were recorded in China ($57.2 million), the United Kingdom and Ireland ($20.7 million), Mexico ($18.2 million), Brazil ($12 million), South Korea ($10.2 million), Australia ($9.9 million), France ($8.6 million), Germany ($8.1 million), Russia ($7.7 million), India ($6.6 million), Spain ($6.1 million) and Japan ($4.5 million). It broke all-time opening record in Brazil and Warner Bros. opening records in Mexico, Hong Kong, India, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Puerto Rico and Venezuela. In the United Kingdom and Ireland, it benefited from the long Easter weekend holiday and despite a distinctly mixed bag of reviews in the U.K. press, it posted an opening £14.62 million or $20.7 million from 612 theaters, a record for 2016 so far and for a superhero title on straight Friday to Sunday, but fell short of The Avengers and Avengers: Age of Ultron, when accounting for previews.

In Japan, it opened in third place, behind two local films, Assassination Classroom: Graduation and Doraemon: Nobita and the Birth of Japan 2016. In South Korea, it scored the biggest March opening after opening on a Tuesday and dominating 68.3% of the market share with $10.2 million. In China, after scoring the biggest Hollywood opening Friday (behind Transformers: Age of Extinction), it earned an estimated $57.2 million from approximately 16,000 screens in its opening weekend, besting all other DC Comics adaption film just by its weekend haul except for Man of Steel and gave Warner Bros. its biggest three day opening there with $7 million coming from 557 IMAX screens. However, the opening figure fell below analysts projections of $70–80 million. It held the top spot for its first seven days only, after which it faced stiff competitions from local productions, and fell dramatically from then onwards in accruing revenue. As a result, it fell to third place in its second weekend after falling enormously by 78% to $12.7 million, a record for a superhero film.

It became the Warner Bros. highest-grossing film of all time in India, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam. It also crossed $100 million Latin American markets, making it Warner Bros. second highest-grossing film there. In total earnings, its biggest markets outside of North America are China ($95 million), followed by the UK ($52.1 million), Mexico ($36 million) and Brazil ($35.5 million).

Critical response

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 29% based on 436 reviews and an average rating of 5/10. The website s critical consensus reads: Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice smothers a potentially powe

Year 2016
ReleaseDate 2016-03-25
RuntimeMins 152
RuntimeStr 2h 32min
Plot Fearing that the actions of Superman are left unchecked, Batman takes on the Man of Steel, while the world wrestles with what kind of a hero it really needs.
Awards Awards, 14 wins & 31 nominations
Directors Zack Snyder
Writers Chris Terrio, David S. Goyer, Bob Kane
Stars Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Amy Adams
Produced by Trevor Christie,Wesley Coller,David S. Goyer,Geoff Johns,Wayne Johnson,Curt Kanemoto,Benjamin Melniker,Steven Mnuchin,Bruce Moriarty,Christopher Nolan,Charles Roven,Jim Rowe,Deborah Snyder,Emma Thomas,Michael E. Uslan,Andrea Wertheim,Gregor Wilson
Music by Junkie XL,Hans Zimmer
Cinematography by Larry Fong
Film Editing by David Brenner
Casting By Jo Edna Boldin,Kristy Carlson,Wesley Gainer,Lora Kennedy
Production Design by Patrick Tatopoulos
Art Direction by Ravi Bansal,Patricio M. Farrell,Lorin Flemming,Beat Frutiger,Gregory S. Hooper,Kevin Ishioka,Troy Sizemore
Set Decoration by Carolyn Cal Loucks
Costume Design by Michael Wilkinson
Makeup Department Kate Biscoe,Debbie Djardkian,Victoria Down,Alejandra Ford,Pepper J. Gallegos,Chase Heard,Jules Holdren,Rosalind Jones-Crosby,Lauren Kress,Deida K. Massey,Suzi Ostos,Richard Redlefsen,Reyna Robinson,Lillian Sakamaki,Cindy Shute,Willow Snyder,Sarah Strong,Frieda Valenzuela,Brian Wade,Kristin Wahl,Anna Zenner,Stephanie Arble,Ellen Arden,Eleyna M. Brandt,Clifton Chippewa,Kevin J Edwards,Rocky Faulkner,Thomas Floutz,Lee Gren,Christin Hanson,Jessica Y. Hernandez,Louise Holoday,Miranda Knott,Minnie Krishnan,Dominic Mango,Rebecca Switzer,Martina Sykes,John Tarro,Vincent Van Dyke,Tanya Walker,Tom Woodruff Jr.,Linda Zirkus
Production Management Sean Cooney,Jyoti Bhalchandra Deshpande,William Doyle,Vinay Gautam,Matthew Hirsch,Seon Kwon Hwang,Karen Jarnecke,Ashish Kukian,Jason Pomerantz,Donovan Roberts-Baxter,Page Rosenberg-Marvin,Jim Rowe,Prashant Sharan,Sainath Shinde,Charuhas Sonar,Andrea Wertheim,Gregor Wilson,Mark Scoon
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director Michael Donald Bryant,Misha Bukowski,Rob Burgess,Maggie Callis,Damon Caro,Cédric Gentil,Brandon Lambdin,Joe Landry,Stephen W. Moore,Bruce Moriarty,R. Ben Parker,Ryan J. Pezdirc,Jason Roberts,Brett Robinson,Stuart Valberg,Julian Wall,Clay Staub
Art Department H. Barclay Aaris,Jory Alvarado,Justin Ayers,K.C. Bartos,Andy Bays,Derek Berk,Jeanne Bijkerk,Jack Blanchard,Rob Bliss,Tony Bohorquez,Mike Bomar,Erik Boring,Boyd Bossler,Silas Brandon,David Brayman,Ben Brenner,Kenneth Bryant,Bryan Buckler,Fritz Buckley,Sean Richard Budde,Jonathan Burdeshaw,Jakob Burgos,Jon J. Bush,Frank Casaceli,Tom Castronovo,Godofredo Catolico,Katie Childs,David Chow,Po Sing Chu,Robert Clark,Celeste Cole,Sage Emmett Connell,Kelton Cram,Neil D Monte,Gerald D Onofrio,Jonas De Ro,Avril Dishaw,Daren Dochterman,Erick Donaldson,Val Drake,Kenneth j Dudley,Timothy M. Earls,Brad Elliott,Kimberly A. Fleming,Josue Clotaire Fleurimond,Chad Fontaine,David French,Jeff Frost,Rob Garlow,Stefan Gelt,Annette Gianino,Veloz Gomez,Bradley Good,Linda R. Gore,Jeremy Hanna,James Hardy,Doug Harlocker,Kemper Harris,Kurt Hartwig,Christopher Hayes,Jason Helton,Kelly Hemenway,Danny Hirmaz,Joseph Hiura,J. Bryan Holloway,Mark Hudson,Judith Ivanyi,Sarah Ivey,David James,Nancy Janosi,Robert Andrew Johnson,Jaime Jones,Deborah Jurvis,Bria Kinter,Jonas Kirk,Steven Kissick,Allison Klein,Vance Kovacs,Nadezda Kuzmina,Cynthia La Jeunesse,Leandre Lagrange,Justin N. Lang,Eric Luling,Calvin Magnum,Christine Mahuna,Jeff Markwith,Victor James Martinez,Robert McKinnon,Sergio Medina,Toni Messervey,Gary Metzen,Michael Meyers,John Millard,Dan Milligan,Josh Moceri,Ken Moldovan,Chelsea Mondelli,Libby Morris,Ed Natividad,Jay Oliva,Samuel Pactol,Michael Papac,Darren Patnode,Justin Paul,Mike Piccirillo,Frank Piercy,Anshuman Prasad,Jared Purrington,Rick Radomski,Mike Randazzo,Shari Ratliff,Bradley Reyes,Raleigh Richter,Liz Ritenour,John Rivoli,Grant Samson,Nikki Sass,Joe a Scarcelli,Jordu Schell,Christian Scheurer,Scott Schneider,Scott Schutzki,Mark Sejnowski,Christopher M. Settanni,Kristen Sherwin,Carl F. Shuffett,Peter Sikkelee,Edward Skade,Daniel Soltis,Michelle Stadler,David Stasiak,Lane Stewart,Jason Sweers,Kim Thrasher,Tim Timmington,Tina Tottis,Michael Trosper,Michael D. Valdes,Gena Vazquez,German Velasco,Cuitlahuac Morales Velazquez,David Venezky,Amy Vinson,Austin Wagner,James Walton,Michael A. Watt,Mark Weber,Godfred c Webster,Jerome Wilga,Dale Wilmarth,Alexi Wilson,Liloa Wong,Michael Zambiski,John Allen,Heidi Nahser Fink
Sound Department Ron Ayers,Phil Barrie,Gail Carroll-Coe,Curt Cash,Iwan de Kuijper,Jay Fisher,Sam François,Jeffrey Gates,Nerses Gezalyan,David Grimaldi,Gary A. Hecker,Scott Hecker,Justin Herman,Chris Jenkins,Jason Johnston,Michael Keller,Daniel Lepervanche,Donnie Little,Scott Loudon,Michael McGee,Chuck Michael,Alessio Miraglia,Ryan Murphy,Rick Owens,Anand Pawar,Clayton Perry,Margit Pfeiffer,Tony Pilkington,John Sanacore,Daniel Saxlid,Jamie Scarpuzza,Brian Seagrave,Roy Seeger,Brian Tarlecki,Jussi Tegelman,David Werntz,Thomas Whiting,Beau Williams,Ryan Young,Vincent Zabaly,Evan J Haley
Special Effects by Bart Barber,Tyan Bardon,Roland Blancaflor,Darin Bouyssou,Meghan Brown,John C. Carlucci,Lou Carlucci,A.J. Catalano,Dan Cervin,Joe Digaetano,Jino Dinello,Alan Droeger,Mitch C. Duran,Hether Hylaszek,Anthony Julio,Pete Kelley,David Lobato,Jacqueline Makkee,Craig Mason,Jon K. Miller,Heidi Mistic,Eric O Neill,Jeff Ogg,James Paradis,Ed Parrish Jr.,David Perteet,Brandonn S. Petri,Claire Piao,Richard Redlefsen,Rob Ricketts,John Rosploch,Adam Wesley Ross,Mike Rotella,Ron Seida,Tom Stevenson,Cale Thomas,Andy Thompson,Mario Torres Jr.,Dean Tyrrell,Russell Tyrrell,Sara Villarreal,Eric Vrba,DungVan Vu,Samantha Watson,Joel Whist,John R. Ziganto,Brian Barnhart,Matt Corrigan,Alec Gillis,Phil Weisgerber
Visual Effects by Shaun Friedberg Pyrokinesis ,Paolo Acampora,Mike Accettura,Mayur Dadarao Adhau,Jamie Adkins,Brian Adler,Rohit Agarwal,Sapna Agrawal,Gerardo Aguilera,Africa Aguirre Martín,Khairul Ahmed,Ajesh.k.t,Kaevski Aleksandar,Lee Alexander,David W. Allen,Mark Edward Allen,Andrei Allerborn,Stephanie Alvarado,Weverton Alves,Luiz Amaral,Mauricio Amezcua Arregui,Jongjun An,Ryan Andersen,Eric Andrusyszyn,Anoop.Ashokan,Doug Appleton,Syed Arafath Apsar,Khan Arbaz,Ruben Arenas,Aaron Arendt,Georgy Arevshatov,Jose Armengol,Tricia Henry Ashford,Daniel Ashton,Rupert Ashton,Atanas Atanasov,Ryan Atimoyoo,Daniel Avery,Sunny Awale,Murat Ayasli,Dan Ayling,Emi Baba,Baburajan,Atal Bacchani,Zahida Bacchus,Eric Bachtiar,Charles Baden,Austin Baerg,Swapnil Bagul,Jörg Baier,Al Bailey,Michael Bain,Bhavika Bajpai,Leslie Baker,Shamus Baker,Santhoshi Balasubraman,Adam Balentine,Sanjay Baliga,Charlie Banks,Thomas Banuls,Zheng Bao,Pierrick Barbin,Victor Barbosa,Katie Barker,Brandon Barney,Aaron Barr,Stefan Bartels,Edward Bauman,Scott E. Baxter,Bryn Bayliss,Paul Beaudry,Paul F. Becker,Brian Begun,Manoranjan Behera,Nathan Behmlander,Jessica Beisler,Frank Belina,Brittany Bell,Gregory Bellis,Ashley Bellm,Christina M. Bender,Karina Benesh,Prabir Bera,Andres Berkstein,Rodrigo Bernardo,Lara Berners,Melissa Best,Dheeraj Bhadani,Aman Bhardwaj,Udit Bhardwaj,Baljot Bhatti,Jayesh Bhavsar,Babak Bina,Prasanjit Biswas,Aaron Black,Christopher Blasko,Stefanie Blatt,Douglas Bloom,Ashley Blyth,Dan Bodenstein,Florin Boieriu,Sara Bold,Jason Bond,Ricardo Bonisoli,Niles Bontrager,Nick Booth,Fernando Borges-Pacheco,Mark Bortolotto,Jelmer Boskma,Jean-Christophe Boue,Jason Bowers,Tatjana Bozinovski,Mike Bozulich,Adam Bradley,Neal Bradshaw,James Braid,Louise Brand,Alex Branton,Baby Braulio,Ben Breckenridge,Justin Brekke,Kristie Breslin,Ryan Bridger,Scott Brisbane,Laura Brocato,Hugh Brompton,Ryan Brooks,Colin P. Brown,Johnathon Brown,Robin T. Brown,John Brubaker,Mattias Brunosson,Giuseppe Bufalo,Matthew Bullock,Bryan Burger,Linus Burghardt,Odemaris Burgos,Shannan Burkley,Andy Burmeister,Jeffrey Burt,Sam Buys,Rachel Cadden,Djordje Cakovan,Kirstin Cambie,Doug Campbell,Dylan Campbell,Andy Campion,Robin Stuart Cape,Adrien Cappai,Michael Patrick Carmody,Dan Carnegie,Dan Carpenter,Caleb Carr,Brendan Carroll,Owen Cartagena,Steve Casa,Ethan Casper,Alejandro Iván Hernández Castañeda,Paco Castillo,Nick Cattell,Arthur Chan,Johnny Chan,Raymond Chan,Janice Chandra,Malavika Chandrakanth,Anoop Chandran,Yashvhanth Chandrasekaran,Jung Min Chang,Matthieu Chardonnet,Diane Charlery,Abhishek Chauhan,Stephen Cheatum,Vincent Chedru,Tim Cheng,Mark Chernausek,Derek Cheung,Vamsi Krishna Chilamkurthi,Rachan Chirarattanakornkul,Eunice Eun Jung Cho,Wonmok Mark Choi,Caleb Choo,Tim Chou,Akshay Singh Chouhan,Ankit Chowdhury,Matthew Choy,Allan Peresh Christian,Jasper Chung,Sam Claitor,Jimi Clark,Erik Classen,Claudio Clemente,Jessica Clifton,Alice Collins,David Conley,Thompson Conradi,Sorie Conteh,Vernessa Cook,Sean Coonce,Shane Cooper,Sebastien Corne,Alejandro Corral,Chad Cortvriendt,Andre Costa,Brenton Cottman,Christopher Courtland,Sam Cox,Nick Crew,Robert Crowther,Matt Cunningham,Rick Curts,Poprizov Cvetan,Melina Tancheva Cvetanoska,Anthony D Agostino,Yves D Incau,Nick Dacey,Dalmas Rémy,Nick Damico,Bryan Davies,Giles Davies,Michael Davies,Steven Davies,Jayson Davis,Stephen Davis,Carlos Patrick De Leon,David De Leon,Elise Deglau,Yoshi DeHerrera,Christian Deiß,Stanley A. Dellimore,Mark Derksen,Marie-Charlotte Derne,John D.J. Des Jardin,Rohan Desai,Abhimanyu Deshpande,Saurabh Deshpande,Santosh Kumar Dey,Craig Dibble,Rod Dimayuga,Dejan Dimovski,Josephine Dinata,Gareth Dinneen,Mark Divekar,Bhavya Dixit,Aaron Dixon,Tatsuya Dobashi,Ryan Doell,Komal Dogra,Tim Donlevy,James Dornoff,Aaron James Douglas,Alana Douglas,Bogdan Dubovyk,Olivier Dumont,Moriba Duncan,Simeon Duncombe,Dylan Dunford,Shawn Dunn,Geoff DuQuette,Anthony Durand,Debarghya Dutta,Michael Dvoravic,William Dwelly,Jonathan Dysart,Kishan E. Chandran,Scott Eade,Areito Echevarria,Clwyd Edwards,Amir Wahid Eleswy,Kane Elferink,Harry Ellard,Brady Endres,Marlon Engel,Joe Engelke,Mario Ercolano,Verónica Granadero Estrada,Youngbin Eun,Stephen Evans,Carolina Fabiani,Shizan Faisal,Kornel Farkas,Shaikh Faruq,Luca Fascione,Dan Feinstein,Andrew Fensom,Chloe Feodoroff,Jessica Fernandes,Lincoln Savio Fernandes,Omar Fernandes,Rogiero Fernández,Antonella Ferrari,Mark Ferrer,George Ferris,Juan Carlos Ferrá,Will Fife,Adolfo Anuar Figueroa,Jerod Finn,Andrew Fitchett,Maxim Fleury,Ryan Flick,Megan Flood,Larkin Flynn,Adam Forman,Ludovic Fouche,Michael Fournier,Frederick Fowles,Evan Fraser,Carl N. Frederick,David Frylund Otzen,Eloi Fulla,Thomas Furukawa,Akash Gade,Jason Gagnon,Adam Gailey,Mike Gajga,Megan Galbraith,Jason Galeon,John Adam Gallegos,Ed Gammie,Robert Gardiner,Julien Gauthier,Nicolas Gauthier,Russ Gautier,Lindsay George,Rino George,Daniel Georgiou,Judith Gericke,Avinash Gharule,Sandip Ghatak,Neil Safeer Ghaznavi,Suraj Ghodke,Suvojit Ghosh,Mathew Giampa,Jami Gigot,Sudhanshu Gill,Jen Gillespie,Kenneth Gimpelson,Thomas Girdwood,Neil Glasbey,Julian Gnass,Bryan Godwin,Lisa Goldberg,Harrison Goldstein,Oleksiy Golovchenko,Pam Gonzales,Danny Gonzalez,Catarina Gonçalves,Mariana Gorbea,Ranjit Gosavi,Xavier Goubin,Charles Gould,Arushi Govil,Roberto Gracia,Cody Graham,Michael Grawert,Charlotte Gray,Vanessa Gray,Alexandra Greene,Paul Greenwood,Neil Griffiths,Emmanuel Guevarra,Vinod Gundre,Vikas Gusain,Emilia Gustafsson,Carlos Guzman,Magid Hajj,Robert J. Hall,Martin Halle,Adam Hammond,David Hampton,Pete Hanson,Aleksandar Hardi,Bryant Hardwick,Yoshihiro Harimoto,Jeff Harkness,Geoffrey Harlos,Jake Harrell,Rio Harrington,Jeffrey J. Hart,Fathy Hassan,Jasper Hayward,Richard Hayward,R. James Healy,Ewoud Heidanus,Volker Heisterberg,Quentin Hema,Claas Henke,Mario Escudero Hern,Sean Heuston,Hans Heymans,Christopher Hiess,Ross Hildick,Jep Hill,Bryan Hirota,David Hirst,Maung Maung Hla Win,Wilbert Ho,Josiah Hobson,Mark L. Holmes,Matt Holmes,Jae Cheol Hong,Melvin Hong,Jesse Hood,Courtney Hooper,Edan Hopper,Shailey Horton,Yuka Hosomi,Craig Houston,Jeffrey John Howard,Josiah Holmes Howison,Edward Hoyle,Chung-Yin Hsieh,Michael Hubbard,Wendy Hulbert,Ahman Hung,Stu Hunter,János Hunyadi,Steve Hutchins,Huicheol Hwang,Corrado Ianiri,Wahid Ibn Reza,Sachin Ilamkar,Hasan Ilhan,Darko Ilievski,Nicholas Illingworth,David Ince,Anna Ivanova,Travis Jack,Josh R. Jaggars,Deepak Jalesh,David P.I. James,Beau Janzen,Daniel Jeffery,Jakub Jeziorski,Kundan Kumar Jha,Manohar Jha,Viv Jim,Jorge Jimenez,Michael Jimenez,Steven Qi Jin,Chay Johansson,John Johansson,JoAnna Johnson,Ross Johnson,Sheena Johnson,Gios Johnston,Danny Jones,Liam Jones,Thom Jones,Scott Joseph,Jay Joshi,Rushikesh Joshi,Mark Julien,Romeo Julien,Dinesh K. Bishnoi,Rajeev K.J.,Rajesh Kumar K.V.,Malgorzata Kaca,Trilok Singh Kachhawa,Sagar R. Kadam,Adam Kajder,Raghavendra Kamath,Anurag Kapil,Branko Karanzov,Stephen Karl,Michael Karp,Gustavo Kasai,Phani Raja Kasturi,Pavan Reddy Kavalakuntla,Tadaomi Kawasaki,Thomas Kayser,Mohsin Kazi,Ryan Keely,Tyler Kehl,Kevin Kelm,Seth Kenlon,Andrew Kent,Marcel Kern,Gurpreet Singh Khalsa,Harimander Singh Khalsa,Faizan Khan,Imran Khan,Cindy Khoo,Kavita Khosla,Jeff Kim,Nicholas Kim,Sungsoo Daniel Kim,Young Jin Kim,Quintin King,Gemma Kingi,Joel Kittle,Shira Mandel Kluger,Scotty Knapp,Kelvin Ko,Mihajlo Kocevski,Anne Putnam Kolbe,Srinivasa Raghavendra Kondapuram,Sean Konrad,Michelle Korczak,Collin Kortschak,Peter Koss,Peter Kostandelos,Jessica Koubi,Cameron Kraft,Lars Kramer,Hannes Krieger,Uma Krishnamurthy,Jai Krishnaswamy,Norman Krüsmann,Magnolia Ku Lea,Satbir Singh Kukreja,Arnand Kularajah,Sumukh Sharadchandra Kulkarni,Sujay Kumar G.,Aravind Kumar,Prashant Kumar,Prashant Kumar,Rajnish Kumar,Rajnish Kumar,Boon Yeo Kwen,Dominique Kwiek,Laure Lacroix,Dave Ladner,Kosta Lagis,Balamurugan Lakshmanan,Marc Landrain,Nathan Lane,Warren Larkam,Mike Larrabee,Greg LaSalle,Jeremy Lasky,Sebastian Lauer,Lorenzo Lavatelli,Asier Hernaez Lavina,Boon Hoe Law,Kurt Lawson,Matthew Leach,Julius Lechner,Karmen Lee,Ken Lee,Marco Lee,Maxx Lee,Woohyuck Eric Lee,Pier Lefebvre,Niall Lenihan,Matt Leonard,Mark Leone,John LePore,Joe Letteri,Joseph Li,Ryan Sunghun Lim,Jacys Cheng-Yu Lin,Kim Lindqvist,John Lindstein,Rachel Litz,Shenyan Liu,Brendan Llave,Christine Lo,Clementine Lo,Sophia Lo,Thomas Sing Wai Lo,Jason Locke,Harshada Lodha,Rajavel Loganathan,Simon Loisel,Benjamin Lopatin,Philip Lorentzson,Kenneth Lui,Michael Lum,Nicholas Lutzko,Fredrick Lyn,Rasely Ma,Daniel Macarin,Rob MacBride,Maximillian McNair MacEwan,Maura MacNamara,Garry Maddison,Kevin Mah,Karanveer Mahendru,Lee Maher,Kevin Mains,Robert Maisonet,Daisuke Maki,Kevin Maliakal,Zachary Mallett,Tony Man,Joe Mangione,Richard Ivan Mann,Jade Mansueto,Michael Mansueto,Sophie Marfleet,Veronica Marino,Anthony Mariya,Jason Marlow,David Marmor,Shaun Marnewick,Muhammad Marri,Aldo Martinez Calzadilla,Lidia Martinez Prado,Juan Martinez,Einar Martinsen,Daniel James Mason,Brent Mata,Rebecca Matkaluk,Manmath Matondkar,Richard Matthews,Christoph Matthiesen,Tylor Maurer,Neil Mayo,Zack Mazerolle,Jack McAllan,Helen McAvoy-James,Brian McCann,Chris McCrowe,Steve McGee,Marlin McGlone,Brody McIlveen,Chris McIlveen,Michael Means,Himanshu Meena,Gagan Mehta,Gabriela Mejia,Yvonne Mejia,Shéa W.C. Melville,Juan Carlos Mendoza,Joel Román Mendías,Kiran Menon,Szabolcs Menyhei,Omar Meradi,Mario Mercado,Jonah Michaud,Ivan Mickovic,Ivanna Mikhaylova,Lex Millena,Keith Miller,Lori C. Miller,Scott Miller,Seth F. Miller,Jackie Mills,Jane Min,Brad Minnich,Damjan Minovski,Ankur Mishra,Anuj Mishra,Sangita Mistry,Eric A. Mitchell,Souvik Mitra,Yann Moalic,Jamie Moggach,Azhul Mohamed,Arun Mohan,Udit Mohan,Justin Molush,Carlo Monaghan,Daniel Moore,Hailey Moore,Troy Moore,Daniel Morales,Diana Morawski,Fernanda Moreno,Ben Morgan,Julia Mueller-Madaus,Yvonne Muinde,Harry Mukhopadhyay,Chris Mulcaster,Tricia Mulgrew,Arwen Munro,Matthew Muntean,Masakazu Murakami,Asuka Murata,Nick Murphy,Prakash Murughendra,Devan Mussato,Sven Müller,Ajith Kumar N.,Jeff Nadwidny,Naren Naidoo,Trilochan Naik,Duncan Nairn,Avais Najar,Nandhakishore,Yekula Narendra Varma,Amit Narwani,Varshini Naveen Kumar,Amber Marie Naveira,Abhijeet Nawsagare,Devesh Neema,Jason Negreiff,Frida Nerdal,Avadhut Nerurkar,Will Newis,Khang Ngo,Giang T. Nguyen,Trong Khoa Nguyen,Drew Nielsen,NikhilKorpad,Tahl Niran,Thirupathi Nomula,Nicole Maria Nonis,James P. Noon,Mariluz Noto,Michael Nouryeh,Matthew Novak,Martin November,Brian Nugent,Matthew O Sullivan,Carlos Oceguera,Cyndi Ochs,Mike Ocoboc,James Ogle,Sami Oms,Bartek Opatowiecki,Martin Orlowski,Rob Ormond,Julie Orosz,Alex Ouzande,Jojan P M,Nitheesh P.C.,Molly Pabian,Prashant M. Padol,Emiliano Padovani,Debabrata Panda,Someshwar Pandey,Bikas Panigrahi,Om Parab,Rajendra Parab,David Parada,Praveen Kumar Sharma Parasnath,Daniel Pardo,Hunter Parks,Ellis Parry,Joshil Patel,Ratnesh Patel,Saurabh Patel,Harshal Patil,Goran Pavles,Anna-Marie Payne,Matt Pearson,Tom Pegg,Peter Pelisek,Laurie Pellard,Brian Peluso,Philip Pendlebury,Doug Penner,Lara Perez Takagi,Daniel Perez,Alex Perlstrom,Johannes Peter,Michael Peter,Eric Petey,Adam Petrie,Goran Petrushevski,Ashley Phillips,David Picarda,Ezra Pike,Carles Piles,Melvin Mathew Pillai,Mario J. Pillet,Victor Pillet,James Pina,Francesco Pinto,Tymon Pitts,Domi Piturro,Melvin Polayah,Pete Polyakov,Ipyana Ponder,Sasin Pongpowthai,Aditya Ponguri,Darren Porter,Michael Porterfield,Cornelius Porzig,Hannes Poser,Louis-Daniel Poulin,Ashutosh Prajapati,Lokesh Prakash,Kukal Prasanth,Koli Pratik,Kristin Pratt,Mathew Praveen,Brennan Prevatt,Holly Price,Kelsey Primar,Richard Pring,Thomas Proctor,Yann Provencher,Jaime Provido,Ivan Prvulj,Sergej Pulios,Rushabh Punmiya,Eddy Purnomo,Mohammad Qasim,Simon Quach,Darren Quah,Omprakash Raay,Deepak Rai,Vipin Raj,Velmurugan Rajamani,Ashwin Raju,Murali Ramachari,Pablovsky Ramos-Nieves,Kade Ramsey,Troy Ramsey,Ranjith,Chetan Rathod,Robert Reategui,Anil Reddy,Murali Krishna Reddy,James Rees,Gábor Reikort,Markus Reithoffer,Shinichi Rembutsu,Renganath,Florent Revel,Daniel Rhein,Adriano Rinaldi,Kurtis Ritani,Grant Roa,Stephen Robertson,Dylan Robinson,Kyle Robinson,Guillaume Rocheron,Raymond Rodriguez,Vinay Krishan Rohilla,Emmanuel Rojas,Amanda Roop,Philip Rosado,David Rose,Weatie Rosenlehner,Jonak Roy,Vania Ruano,Tony Rudolph,Lucita Rule,Alex Rush,James Russell,Timothy Russell,Johannes Saam,Ilamkar Sachin,Diganta Saha,Gabriel Enrique Salas,Ismael Salcedo,Bhushan Salgaonkar,Peter Salter,Chris Sanchez,Henning Sanden,Theodore M. Sandifer,Mohan Sangeeth,David Sanger,Tejas Sanghavi,Sean Santiago,Victor Sanz Fernandez,Hannes Sap,Tarkan Sarim,Sourabh Saxena,Carlo Scaduto,Federico Scarbini,Claude Schitter,Markus Schneider,Eric Schoellnast,David Schott,Andreas Schulz,David Scott,Andy Scrase,Sean-Ray,László Sebõ,Manivannan Sekar,Paolo Emilio Selva,Jaeil Seo,Lorenzo Serran,David Serrano,Alican Sesli,Fiaz Shaikh,Samsher Shaikh,Ira Shain,Shareef Shanawany,Abhinav Sharma,Amit Sharma,Rahul Sharma,Suraj Sharma,Sam Sharplin,James Shaw,Vivek Shedge,Kodeeswaran Shenbagaram,Holly Inyoung Shin,Swain Shiv,Fabio Siino,Murugan Siju,Marcela A. Silva,Elena Simonovska,Ian Sinclair,Ganesh B. Singh,Rahul Sinha,Kyle Sironen,Brett Skinner,Olaf Skjenna,David Skorepa,Sally Slade,Billy Smith,Courteney Smith,Katherine Smith,Marc Smith,Natalie Smith,Nicole Smith,Shane Smith,Andrew Smyth,Mohamed Sobhy,Bojana Solomonova Vishemirski,Sepp Sonntag,Nikolai Soudek,Nelson Sousa,Clay Sparks,Lisa Spence,Nic Spier,Ian Spriggs,Nathan Srigley,Sonal Srivastava,Jeremy Stapleton,Chris Stefiuk,Albrecht Steinmetz,Paul Stevens,John Stevenson-Galvin,Michael Steward,G. Allen Stewart,Joshua Stirling,Bernard Stock,Julia Strack,Robert Stratton,Dusan Strugar,Errol Stussi,Alexandra Sumner,Jenna Sunde,Connie Sung,Hemanth Surana,Josh Swanson,Moshe Swed,Stephanie Sweeney,Skylar Sweetman,Andrew Swihart,Krzysztof Szulc,Richard Sällqvist,Giuseppe Tagliavini,Reynold Tagore,Hirofumi Takeda,Justin Talley,Avadhoot Tambe,Jerrod Tan,Neil Russell Tan,Daniel Tapia,Adam Tate,Simon J. Taua i,Sanjay Tawale,John Taws,Rachel Tay,Felix Telfer,Jamie Telfer,Chris Templeman,Adrian Teng,Tim Teramoto,Jasbir Thakur,Olivier Thibaut,Raphael Thiery,Michael Thingnes,Joseph Thomas M.,Amy Thomas,Gareth Thomas,Amy Thompson,Jon Thorsen,Jithendran Thottupurath,Rohan Tirkey,Sushil Tone,Mariko Tosti,John-John Traoré,Denis Trutanic,Greg Tsadilas,Tzung-Da Tsai,Donald Tse,Phil Tunnicliffe,Alex P. Twigg,Ryan Uhrich,Nera Uljar,Claudius Urban,Alexander Urik,Arturs Vaitilavics,Mauricio Valderrama,Jonny Vale,Stefano Valente,Bojan Valjak,David Van Dyke,Jozef van Eenbergen,Adam Vanner,Varaprasad.Dhongili,Gabriel Vargas,Sherin Varghese,Murali Veera,Diana Velasquez,Ricardo Velez,Oliver Velichkovski,Saphir Vendroux,Erica Vigilante,Vinay.isetti,Aleksandar Vishemirski,Aude Vitrant,Cantatore Vittorio,Sören Volz,Scott Vosbury,Tarquin Vosper,Bruce Wabbit,Steven Wade,Nigel Wagner,Christian Waite,Adam Walker,Faye Walkington,Will Wallace,Cait Walsh,Jordan Walsh,Ed Walters,Jacky Wang,Kenson Wang,Rose Wang,Bhushan Warade,Jon Warne,Daniel Warom,Bret Watkins,Chris Watkins,Martin Toby Watson,Ros Webb,Zack Weiler,Glenn Wells,Jeff Wells,Daniel Wennerholm,Christoph Westphal,Brittany Wetzel,Huw Whiddon,Adrian White,Ian W.S. White,Kevin Whitfield,Antoine Whyte,Shane Christopher Wicklund,Ed Wilkie,Mark Williams,Robin Williams,Katya Wilson,Matthew T. Wilson,Barringer Fox Wingard III,Jeff Wolverton,Mark Wong,Megan Wong,Roger Wong,Beck Woolhouse,James Worley,Andy Wright,Piotr Fox Wysocki,Xye,Shyam V. Yadav,Vijay Kumar Yadav,Tuba Yalcin,Anna Yamazoe,Vincent Yan,Emily Yang,Asuha Yasuda,Farid K. Yazami,Robert Yeh,Narendra Varma Yekula,Sinae Yi,Sedat Yildiz,Clement Yip,Stacy M. Yoi,Ji Hyun Yoon,Lexi Young,Natalie Young,Cobol Yu,Jun Xian Yue,Ngnodjom Yvan,Douglas Zablocki,Asim Zaidi,Lawrence Zalasky,Alessandro Zanforlin,Fabio Zapata,Alon Zaslavsky,Zachariah Zaubi,Dan Zelcs,Alvaro Zendejas,David Zeng,Lei Zhang,Tong Zhou,Joelle Xin Zhow,Donaji Zuniga Rojas,Ian Abbott,Emil Alagjozovski,Najdovski Aleksandar,Ruben Gerardo Alfaro Moreno,Derrick Auyoung,Rajesh Babu,Daniel Baker,Jonathan Bird,Jillian Brooks,Thomas Buckingham,Ria-Bella Buys,Max Cannella,Gerardo Castro,Edward Catley,Chandrasekhar,Jake Chapman-Olsen,Bec Cranswick,Vance Dehne,Johan Dekker,Zoran Dimanovski,Goran Dimov,Matt DiNardo,Hugo Dominguez,Rafael Echegaray,Niv Ende,Aaron Fung,Katarina Gacevska,Clement Granjon,Mia Hippy,Hanna Marijke Hurndell,Hyukil Kwon,Frank Lalonde,Theresa Laurenson,Lazetutkovski,Melissa K. Lee,Pauline Liquido,Son T. Ly,Chiaki Matsubayashi,Jayati Mittal,Brittany Montero,Michael Morehouse,Prakash Pathak,Yadnyesh Patil,Mile Petrushevski,Taylor Potts,Bandhavit Puangpikul,Cesar Quijada,Radhakrishnan,Anand Ramesh,Bhanu Pratap Rathore,Grant Robertson,Kranti Sarma,Noah Schnapp,Jorge Schwarzhaupt,Flavio Segal,Krishnam Sharma,Derangula Tirupati Bhavani Shankar,Joseph Towe,Vanessa Velasquez,Elena Velkova,Rahul Venugopal,Joseph West,Christopher Whittle,Jahan Zeb,Peter Ji Zheng
Stunts Jerry T. Adams,Ammar Aldieri,Chris Jai Alex,Brian Avery,Dean Bailey,Donny Bailey,Ele Bardha,Helena Barrett,Janelle Beaudry,Vincent Bellina,Matt Berberi,Shawn Bernal,Jeremiah m Bishop,Freddy Bouciegues,Jessica Bouz,Michael T. Brady,Craig Branham,Steven John Brown,Richard Bucher,Richard Burden,Damon Caro,Richard Cetrone,Ilram Choi,Tim Connolly,Aaron Crippen,Lateef Crowder,Clay Cullen,Wayne Dalglish,Paul Darnell,Chad Dashnaw,Darrell Davis,Keith Splinter Davis,Todd Duffee,Zack Duhame,Kiante Elam,Kofi Elam,Tom Elliott,Dane Farwell,Mike Fierro,Jeremy Fitzgerald,Clay Donahue Fontenot,Gary Fry,Jeremy Fry,Troy Gilbert,Tad Griffith,Guillermo Grispo,Craig Gubert,James M. Halty,Isaac Hamon,Jesse Harrison,Jimmy Hart,Gene Hartline,Scout Schoenfeld Hendrickson,Sara Holden,Brian Imada,Jeff Imada,Kevin L. Jackson,Allen Jo,Terrence Julien,Mike Justus,Shawn Kautz,Krisztian Kery,Richard King,Henry Kingi,Horace Knight Jr.,John Koyama,Alex Krimm,Cody Bo Kruger,Devlin Lara,Matthew LeFevour,Oakley Lehman,Darcy Leutzinger,Sam Looc,Victor Lopez,Neil Macwan,Daniel Maldonado,Raymond Mamrak,Kortney Manns,Brad Martin,Nancy McCrumb,T. Ryan Mooney,David Angelo Morales III,Jason Mowen,Lin Oeding,Chris Palermo,Travis Parker,Dario Perez,Matt Philliben,LaDell Preston,Jade Quon,Ardeshir Radpour,Sahir Rashid,Tim Rigby,Larry Rippenkroeger,Jason Rodriguez,Steve Rosenbluth,Matthew Rugetti,Michael Runyard,Travis Russell,Stephen M. Sanders,Wesley Scott,Jeff Shannon,Rose Sias,Alicia Skirball,Monty Stuart,Jake Swallow,Caleb Swiatek,Todd Rogers Terry,Coleen M. Tracy,Steve Upton,Albert Valladares,Alicia Vela-Bailey,Jordan Warrack,Mark Warrack,Ryan Watson,Amber Whelan,Scott Wilder,Justin A. Williams,Danny Wynands,Kofi Yiadom,Bill Young,Eric Zimmerman,Eric Zimmerman,Mike DeMille
Camera and Electrical Department Jim Achtaz,Kyle R. Adcock,Mark David Adler,Jeff Amaral,Robert Anderson,Ron Ayers,Mike Barnett,Kevin Barrera,Art Bartels,Mike Baruzzini,Adrienne Bauer,Benjamin Bazmore,Free Bear,John Betancourt,Clark Birchmeier,Sebastian Boada,Jeremy Brussell,Jim Buford,Michael Caramagno,Trevor Carroll-Coe,Chad Catuara,Jesse Cecchini,John P. Chittick,Brian Christie,Oscar Cifuentes,John Clothier,Bill Coe,Scott Compton,Michael J. Conner,Dawn Copeland,Tommy Copper,Logan Covelli,Devin Cragin,Ryan Creasy,William R. Dalgleish,Jaime Dawkins,Allen De Silva,Nicholas Deane,Kelly Diehl,Gary J. Dodd,Cameron Drinkle,Jim Duggan,Eric Dvorsky,Michael Dzialowski,Noah Eagle,Scott Eagle,Clay Enos,Kevin Erb,Geoff Ernst,Ryan Faulkner,Jeff Feller,Mike D. Fernandez,Josh Ficken,Jule Fontana,Mark J. France,Tyler Gendron,Geoff George,Patrick George,Mike Gerzevitz,Bob Gomez,Jim Grce,Quinn Grove,Mike Hampton,Jimmy Harritos,Brian Heller,Daniel A Hernandez,Greg Hewett,Kevin D. Hewitt,Sean Higgins,Andrew Hoehn Jr.,Patrick Hoeschen,Brad Irvin,Peter Johnson,Dan Jones,David Joshi,Jason Kay,Brian Paul Kelly,Sean T. Kelly,Erica Kim,Brad Knopf,Tim Kossa,Brandon Kovatch,Doug Lavender,Jacob Lee,Peter Lee,Richie Lee,Andy Leo,Elizabeth Liang,Jeremy Lipton-Schwartz,John Maculevicz,Alex Malm,Levi Martinez,Matthew Massie,Casey McClurken,Jack McCollum,Chris McLeod,Bobby McMahan,Roger Meilink,Dan Mikulski,Chris Miller,Derek Miller,Joe Miller,Nick Miller,Mike Moad,Russell Moeller,Ryan Joseph Moran,Hamza In-Zo Muhammad,Ted Nimz,David B. Nowell,Cory O Dea,Kevin Olson,Stuart Penny,Chris Peterson,Scott Pillsbury,Patrick Redmond,Scott Renkola,Trevor Rios,Sean Roberts,Colin Robertson,John S. Robertson,Gus Sacks,Rodney Sandoval,Ian Seabrook,Rick Secosky,Marc-Antoine Serou,Daniel Shaw,Dean M. Simmon,David Skinner,Daniel D. Smith,Derek Smith,Ryan C. Smith,Scott Smith,Stephen Smith,Stewart Smith,Jon Sogoian,Sepp Sonntag,Tim Soronen,Ryan Spacone,Tim Speed,Andrew Sykes,Creig Symons,Christy Taddeo,David Thielhart,James Biff Thomsen,Ed Titus,Felicia Tolbert,David Tomita,Gladys Tong,James Topel,Jerry Tran,Nik Tyckowski,Jeff Urbanowicz,Joe Venafro,Vinny Walsh,Chuck Whelan,Perry Williams,Greg Wolfe,Lev Yevstratov,Jim Rogers
Animation Department Florine Abad,David Apgar,Victor Barbosa,Aaron Barlow,Leonardo Bonisolli,Wesley Chandler,Tommy Cheng,Evan Clover,Maxime Delalande,Allen Holbrook,Sungmin Hong,Kahye Hwang,Odigie Johnson,Alexis Kerjosse,Ken Satchel King,Kolby Krook,Jonathan Macintosh,Sachin Mathew,François-Xavier Nhieu,Matthieu Poirey,A. Martín Puentes,Shane Richards,Jay Roxas,Amy Sendon,Chad Shattuck,Ran Sieradzki,Ricardo Silva,Jacob Sorensen,Richard Spriggs,Ken Steel,Jeff Struthers,Nathan Thomas,Faizan Munawar Varya,Clement Yip,Ryan Wasson
Casting Department Mary Aldousary,Maryellen Aviano,Charles Irving Beale,Jeanette Benzie,Amanda Bolger,Lava Buckley,Lauren Candela,Geo Layloff,Ian Line,Mandy Marion,Johanna McGinley,Caitlin McKenna,Marie A.K. McMaster,Kathy Mooney,Jessica Gisin Needham,Janet Pound,Kristina Robison,Erin Stewart Tiedje,Caitlin Well
Costume and Wardrobe Department Kate Abraham,Tony Acosta Jr.,Chris Alexander,Sara Anderson,May Azzow,Ashley Beatty,Cynthia Bond,Rachel Bris,Jack Browning,Dorothy Bulac,Patrick Caulfield,Keith Christensen,Red Rose Connerty,Sophia Coronado,Stella Cottini,Dan Crawley,Tom Davies,Shirleen DiFonzo,Sharon Fauvel,Kathy Fennessy,David Fernandez,Jose Fernandez,Shaun Garcia,Richard Gartrell,Adam Girardet,Javier G. Gonzalez,Kristine N. Haag,Kiersten Hargroder,J.R. Hawbaker,Alexander Headley,Aline Hong,Michael Issa,Annie Jewell,Jennifer Jobst,Cacey Kirshner,Nathalie Kwok-Lundy,Don Lanning,Jessica R. Lawson,Rachel Lilley,Warren Manser,Jerad Marantz,Adrienne A Martinez,Karen Mason,Sonny Merritt,Renée Moisides,Bob Morgan,Gina Nalli,Lynn Ollie,John Ostrander,Liz Pecos,Tim Phoenix,Aura Sperling Pierce,Ryan C. Porter,Stephanie Portnoy Porter,Jason Rainey,Katelyn Rodgers,Jenn Rose,Claire Sandrin,Rich Siil,Angela M. Simpson,Ivory Stanton,Douglas J. Stewart,Sabra Temple,Brian Van Dorn,Andreas Vasshaug,Amanda Vinopal,John Voght,Serrita Walker,Gillian Waterman,Michael Welch,Nicole White,Tara Leigh Wilhelm,Malgosia Wojtkowski,Sarah Yellin,Deanna Zapico,Sarah Zinn
Editorial Department Todd Baillere,Anna Brenner,Carlos M. Castillón,Dhirendra Chhatpar,Belen Cobian,Alden Delos Santos,Vikram Dharankar,Jason Esquivel,Jason Fields,Alex Gilbert,Kevin Goolsby,Annie Johnson,Matthew W. Johnson,Thomas Kuo,Ken Lebre,Dave Lee,Anjelica Lewis,Rudy Lopez,Priyal Mahadik,Vaibhav Marathe,Corey Robert Martinez,Dan Muscarella,Warren Paeff,Joe Pestana,Brett Schlaman,Shawn Shaman,Stefan Sonnenfeld,Dan Spellman,Ian Sullivan,Girish Takle,Arthur Tremeau,John Tripp,Smeet Vedant,Daniel André,Sarah Fricker,Brent Koetter,Ross Miltenberg,Arianna Shining Star Smaller
Location Management Steve Aguino,David Artushin,Robert Bentley,Stuart Berberich,Adam Boor,William Bowling,Chris-Teena Constas,Michael Dellheim,Ted Demski,Russell DeVriendt,William Doyle,Megan Gilliam,Sarah Goller,Gina Guido,Jacob Gysel,Anne Keeble,Dave Krieger,David Manzanares,Donny Martino Jr.,James R. McAllister,Tim McClure,David McKinney,Kenneth Mercier,Tom Moisides,Kayla Porvaznick,Paul B. Roberts,David Rumble,Ryan J. Shaw,Rowan Stanland,Aisling Warren
Music Department Nico Abondolo,Mark Adams,Eun-Mee Ahn,Helen Z. Altenbach,Richard Altenbach,Christopher Anderson-Bazzoli,Bob Badami,Andrew Bain,Steve Becknell,Thomas Bergersen,Charlie Bisharat,Curt Bisquera,Bill Booth,Emad Borjian,Lauren Bousfield,Jacob Braun,Laura Brenes,Rob Brophy,Belinda Broughton,Andrew Bulbrook,Eric Byers,Sandy Cameron,Caroline Campbell,Darius Campo,Roberto Cani,John W. Chapman,Chuck Choi,Ali Christenhusz,Kevin Connolly,Blake Cooper,Grace Davidson,Zach Dellinger,Brian Dembow,Drew Dembowski,Bernie Dresel,Steve Dress,Andrew Duckles,E. Duke-Kirkpatrick,Bruce Dukov,Sheila E.,Steve Erdody,Peter Erskine,David Everson,Joshua Fielstra,Bruce Fowler,Walt Fowler,Josh Freese,Matthew Funes,Julie Gigante,Nick Glennie-Smith,Kevin Globerman,Craig Gosnell,Endre Granat,Gavin Greenaway,Jessica Guideri,Tina Guo,Taurees Habib,Trevor Handy,Thomas Harte,Tamara Hatwan,Amy Hershberger,Gary Hickman,Oscar Hidalgo,Paula Hochhalter,Steve Holtman,Thomas Hooten,Scott Hosfeld,Alex Iles,Benjamin Jaber,Benjamin Jacobson,Drew Jordan,Dennis Karmazyn,Kevin Kaska,Andrew Kawczynski,Philip Keen,Dan Kelley,Jim Keltner,Carrie Kennedy,Jenny Kim,Steven Kofsky,Aimie Kreston,Armen Ksajikian,Kevin Kumar,Joanna Forbes L Estrange,Ana Landauer,Timothy Landauer,Natalie Leggett,Tori Letzler,Phillip Levy,Dominic Lewis,Jon Lewis,Lisa Liu,Frank Macchia,Shawn Mann,Luke Maurer,Steve Mazzaro,Darrin McCann,Serena McKinney,Stephanie McNally,Ed Meares,Aaron Meyer,Alan Meyerson,Victoria Miskolczy,Yvonne S. Moriarty,Melissa Muik,Maria Newman,Helen Nightengale,Mike Nowak,Geoffrey S. Osika,Abbie Osmon,Toss Panos,Joel Pargman,Alyssa Park,Cynthia Park,David Parmeter,Alfredo Pasquel,Julian Pastorelli,Tom Pearson,Stephen Perone,Nicolas Philippon,Radu Pieptea,Hila Plitmann,Darian Pollard,Katia Popov,Ben Powell,Satnam Ramgotra,Teag Reaves,Bill Reichenbach,Amy Rhine,Rafael Rishik,J.R. Robinson,Ryan Robinson,Peter Rotter,Carl Rydlund,Neil Samples,Max Sandler,George Kim Scholes,Nevin Seus,Andrew Shulman,Gaurav Singh,Shalini S. Singh,Jeanne E. Skrocki,Kate Sloan,Tereza Stanislav,Christopher Still,Lukas Storm,Scott Sutherland,Lisa M. Sutton,Evgeny Tonkha,Doug Tornquist,Cecilia Tsan,Michael Valerio,Raul Vega,Josefina Vergara,Shalini Vijayan,Simone Vitucci,Irina Voloshina,Benjamin Wallfisch,David Walther,John Walz,Eric Whitacre,Booker White,Roger Wilkie,Steve Zander,Felix Erskine,Kelvin Galloza,The Hollywood Studio Symphony,Junkie XL,T Mills,Edith Mudge
Script and Continuity Department Amber Harley,Kimi Webber
Transportation Department Rob Bailey,Robert Barnes Jr.,Brad Beaven,Joe Bernier,Dave Calaway,Jason Castleman,Rick Collins,Michael Connor,Christina Cooper,Daniel Davis,Demond Dickerson,Mark Dometrovich,Tony Drosis,Casey Duncan,David J. Duran,Mike Fenster,Darrell Foley,Juan Carlos Garcia,Michael Thomas Garcia,Scott Gaughan,Brent Godek,Jennifer Gonzalez,Scotty Goudreau,Robert Griffon Jr.,Dash Hart,Geno Hart,David Hyder,Jonathon Isom,David B. Jackson,Dew John,Andrew Kapuscinski,Andrew Kelly,Kimmie Knudsen,Kurt Knudsen,David Labutte,Marc Lipman,Lily Mace,Dennis McCarthy,Rob McCormick,Reno S. Mifsud,Frank Morreale,Brett A. Myrick,Bill Neckrock,Billy Neckrock,Joseph Paoletti,Adam Pinkstaff,Robert Bob Rice Sr.,Sol Rivera,Claudia Rojas,Mark Sanchez,David Schmidt,Patrick Shannon Jr.,Patrick Stephenson,Pamela Summers,John F. Teeple,Patrick Velasquez,Michael Sinclair Walter,John Detroit White
Additional Crew Madison Ainley,Kamelya Alexan,Wendy Altman-Cohen,Andrea Amato,John Arbuckle,Ibrahim Ashmawey,Judy Bafaro,Vincent F. Baran,Michael Barbee,Nicole Basile,Anthony Batarse,Charles Irving Beale,Franklyn Beasley,Anthony Beckwith,Anna Belaro-Rodriguez,Lisa Berry,Pat Bird,Patrick Blood,Genona Blue,Nick Boak,James Bolin,Adrian Bond,Ryan Bosworth,Jeff Botelho,Tony Boyl,Jacob Brades,Steven Branstrom,Tiffany Brewer,Alenna Mae Brown,Lawson Brown,Lisa Brown,David Buehrle,Edward Bullard,Ricardo Bustamante,Micah Caldwell,Lauren Candela,Victor Capoccia,Kelly Carevic,Sam Carmichael,Natalia Castellanos,Jeremy N. Caves,Grady Chambless,Barish Chandran,Evan Chester,Alexander Cirillo,Jonathan Coffin,Julie A. Cook,Adam Cooper,Matt Copley,Adrian Cortes,Joshua Robert Coté,Carl Cunningham,Merrilee Dale,Allison Daly,Ashley Darbe,Kale Davidoff,Yvette De Marco,Jonelle Castillo Deal,Angela M. DeNike,James D. Dever,Gregory A. Drewino Jr.,Geoffrey Dukes,Sabrina Dungan,Gabriel Duran,Hali Duran,Brian Durling,Ezekiel Elin,Brandon Emerson,Brian Emerson,Cara Ferguson,Bradley Field,Charles Findlay,Joe Fiske,Stefani Flack,Todd Forsberg,Tonia Forsberg,Michael Franck,Richard Friend,Anouk Frösch,Tairon Gaffney,Maura Gannett,Moliterno Geno,Sarah Blue Winslow Gerber,Federico Ghetta,Sarah Giroux,Stephen Gleeson,Carrie Gooch,Deanna M. Goossens,Matthew Gowan,Jessica Gulley,Michael Gutierrez,Leah Gyimah,Katy Haggis,Wade Harlan,Gary Harper,Jeffrey J. Hart,Elizabeth Himelstein,David Hines Jr.,Jason Hinkel,Eve Hinz,Matt Holguin,Nicholas Holland,Michele Horn,Ryan Robert Howard,Laura Hoyt,Arundhati Jaiswal,Ross Jensen,Traver Johnson,Wayne Johnson,Joshua R. Jones,Marc Karzen,Bob Kaye,Michael G. Kehoe,Alicia Kitson,Eduard Klarenbeek,Aaron Kozak,Ross L. Kulma,Adam Kunselman,Curt Kutscher,Daniella LaGraff,Robert Lamkin,Joanne Lazarus,Jordan Lederman,Ice Lee,Charlie Lehmer,Jamie Leodones,Aaron Leone,Zack Lessner,Jackie Levine,Jennifer Lobban,Samantha Long,Adam Lorenz,Jeremy Lynch,Grant MacAllister,Elias Mael,Christine Mahaney,Jade Manuel,Gary A. Martin,Gustavo Martin,Mackenzie G. Mauro,Montgomery Mauro,Katie Max,Dennis McCarthy,Danni McClellan,William McClure,Sarah McKenzie,Frank McNamara,Nate Merritt,Jordan Kenneth Messing,Cole Messutta,Derek K. Miller,Elisabeth Miller,Maria Mira,Max Molinaro,Keri Morgan,Matthew W. Morgan,Ash Morris,Aaron Moskal,Sean Mouton,Lee Anne Muldoon,Mary Angela Munez,Lisa Nichols,Walter Norton Jr.,Timothy Nyquist,Nicole Oesterle,Bikas Panigrahi,Emmanuel Pappas,Ryan Paulk,Ryan Paulk,Christopher L Perkins,Ben J. Petty,Ryan J. Pezdirc,Alexander Phoenix,Domi Piturro,Michelle Plott,Ivan J Puentes,Alan D. Purwin,Anthony Benedict Rankin,Sahir Rashid,Alexander Ray,Patricia Reid-Douglas,Brian Reynolds,Teiva Ribet,Michael Rizzo,Nathan K. Robertson,Matt Rock,Todd Rogers,Arthur Roses,Carrie Roslan,Marjorie Rudick-Ford,Erin Sahlstrom,Dan Sasaki,Robert Sayers,Celeste Schipono-Coller,Kristen Schreck,Nicholas Sepanak,Adam Serwacki,Aubrey Lynea Shore,Emma Siegel,Daniel D. Smith,Francis Smith,Nikki Smith,Blake Smolensky,Nellie Smydra,Garrett Solomon,Emelia Rae Stark,Brett Storm,Troy Storm,Lauren Swearingen,Eric M. Szczepanski,Greg Teasdale,Joel Thingvall,Andy Thompson,Bobby Thompson,Danny Todd,Juan Torres Jr.,K. Ernie Urnikis,Faizan Munawar Varya,Nadia Venesse,Annika Virdone,Robert Voakes,Victoria Wagner,Alexander Waldman,Amber Waters,Ryan Watson,Madison Weireter,Karen White,Mark Whitehead,Roger Williams,David C Willing,Myke Wilson,Jacqueline Wilton,Amy Denning Winfrey,Eric Winn,Joshua Wisenbaugh,Jeff Wisniewski,James Wittenberg,Eric Wolf,Katie Woolridge,Howard Yan,Marc T.S. Zakalik,Litong Zhen,Joe Zumstein,Sanam Afrashteh,Al Cerullo,Leo Dorfman,Julie Dykstra,Peter Flechtner,Michael Heintzelman,Andrew Hoekstra,Giuliana Jakobeit,Lex Lang,Chris Lastrapes,Amanda Lewan,Karl Luthin,Cornelia Meinhardt,George Papp,Jerry Robinson,Paul Rodarte,Michelle Ruff,Dana Schneider,Brian R Sharp,Haakam Singh,Elliot Stewart,Erick Lee Stroy,Tareparepa Teinauri,Glenn Tocher,Tom Vogt,Robert Wax,Daniel Yi
Thanks Jim Aparo,Ahmaad Aspen,Jon Bogdanove,Brett Breeding,John Byrne,Gerry Conway,Gardner Fox,Tom Grummett,Jackson Guice,Brandon K. Hogan,Carmine Infantino,Wayne Johnson,Dan Jurgens,Robert Kanigher,Harry Lampert,Jim Lee,Frank Miller,Paul Norris,Jerry Ordway,George Pérez,Jerry Robinson,Louise Simonson,Jim Starlin,Roger Stern,Curt Swan,Len Wein,Mort Weisinger,Anthony P. Wenson,Marv Wolfman
Genres Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Companies Warner Bros., Atlas Entertainment, Cruel & Unusual Films
Countries USA
Languages English
ContentRating PG-13
ImDbRating 6.4
ImDbRatingVotes 694196
MetacriticRating 44
Keywords superhero,dc extended universe,based on comic book,sequel to a reboot,sequel