Who Should Direct The Man Of Steel Sequel?
With the recent revelation that Warner Bros. is determined to 'get Superman right' and that a [...]
GEORGE MILLER
When news broke a few months ago that Mad Max creator George Miller would be making a Superman film, the internet went wild for a few days...until it was inevitably shot down. No Man of Steel sequel was currently in production, per Warner Bros.
Around that same time, questions arose as to whether Miller would be making Mad Max sequels, throwing more fuel on the fire of speculation that he might work on the DC Extended Universe. According to IMDb (which only bats about .500 in these things), the filmmaker is credited as a producer on Justice League, which as Ben Affleck will tell you might be a pretty good indicator that Miller has more DC going on right now...but as far as anybody knows, Miller's first priority is writing and possibly directing Mad Max: Wasteland.
All that said, he's a visual master, and bringing him into the Superman franchise would allow the studio to take something on that's simultaneously as grounded and gritty as Snyder and as vibrant and colorful as Donner. At the risk of jumping on one of the most popular bandwagons in recent years, it sounds perfect on paper.
BRAD BIRD
Given his success with The Iron Giant for Warner Bros. -- the movie frequently called "the best Superman movie ever made" -- it's hard not to at least throw Brad Bird's hat into the ring for this one.
He's a guy who's been playing with house money for most of his career. In spite of financial misfires like The Iron Giant and Tomorrowland, almost everything he's ever done has been met with enthusiasm by critics, and he's bounced back from setbacks with massive hits like Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol and The Incredibles.
The biggest stumbling block to getting Bird would likely be wooing him away from Disney. He's been constantly rumored to be in the mix for a Star Wars film, and his long resume at Pixar makes him more or less a lifer at the House of Mouse. But it's nice to at least entertain the idea...!
TIM STORY
Who doesn't like a redemption story?
Clearly Warner Bros. and DC Entertainment do, which is why they were willing to bet the farm on Ben Affleck as Batman and (mostly) win.
And Tim Story, whose most recent films include Think Like a Man and Ride-Along, is another guy whose career was almost imploded by doing superhero movies for Fox (in this case, two Fantastic Four movies). But with the success of his recent films and with a Fantastic Four movie having come out in the interim that's widely regarded as being worse than either of his, Story on a superhero movie isn't the worst idea in the world.
And hey -- bonus? Tim Story is a hugely talented filmmaker, whose big-budget superhero movies weren't all that good. Is part of that his fault? Sure, but superhero films were much different back then -- and let's also not forget that the audience as a whole enjoyed the hell out of Fantastic Four and it became retroactively bad mostly after everyone hated Rise of the Silver Surfer.
But watch Barbershop and tell me he doesn't get character. Watch Ride-Along or Taxi and tell me he can't direct the hell out of an action sequence when he has to. And remember that if he were to take this gig, he'd have Geoff Johns, Ben Affleck, and others whispering in his ear, preventing things from going too light or silly.
EDGAR WRIGHT
Scott Pilgrim vs. The World convinced everybody that Edgar Wright knows how to make a movie that pleases the fan base -- which, really, is the missing component in Zack Snyder's films.
He's managed to make smart, action-packed, good-looking superhero movies that alienate so many people that they lose a lot of potential revenue. And it's really unlikely that Wright would make that mistake.
Besides the box office disappointment of Scott Pilgrim, things have generally gone pretty well for Wright in his career, which is dominated by visually-interesting comedies with big action set pieces. He almost made Ant-Man for Marvel -- and by that we mean, he developed the movie for years before he and the studio stopped seeing eye to eye and filed for divorce about two weeks before the movie started shooting.
This one, like Brad Bird, would be a Hail Mary throw but one with huge upsides with geek audiences. And, really, who doesn't want to see Simon Pegg come in to play a grown-up Kenny Braverman or something?!
KATHRYN BIGELOW
Bigelow's aesthetic would lend itself really well to continuing Snyder's visual take on Superman, although it's unlikely that an auteur like her would be willing to be cowed by the studio.
The director of (the original) Point Break and Near Dark, Bigelow is one of the most influential female directors in genre filmmaking, even if in the recent past she's shied away from that sort of thing in favor of more gritty, grounded movies that have made her a perennial Oscar favorite.
One of these days, Bigelow -- widely regarded as one of the best directors in Hollywood --- will end up helming a $200 million mega-blockbuster. It's just a quest of whose offer she ends up accepting first. And if it were to be Superman, it would give the DC Extended Universe a huge infusion of "credibility" among the critics who have consistently despised the studio's output so far.
Honorable Mention: RICHARD DONNER
...Well, the man's still active, after all.
At 86, it's unlikely Donner would be able to direct a movie of this scope and scale -- his last big-budget feature film was in 2006 -- but bringing him on as an adviser and executive producer would likely be a significant symbolic gesture to bring in fans who may have sworn off the franchise after Snyder.
What would his role be, then? Certainly he's capable of helping craft a screenplay, still. He did, after all, work with DC Entertainment's Chief Creative Officer and President Geoff Johns on a run on Action Comics not that long ago.
Another possibility is having him work closely with a relatively untried director, providing some experience with big-budget, high-expectation feature films on either a young director, or somebody out of TV like Glen Winter (who has directed a number of the best-loved Smallville episodes and TV pilots in recent memory) or Michelle MacLaren (whose Breaking Bad episodes and Game of Thrones success nearly got her a couple of major motion pictures before she finally came to a deal with Columbia on The Nightingale recently).
This assumes that accomplished people like that wouldn't mind working with somebody like Donner, but we're going to assume that even when you know what you're doing, most filmmakers probably suppose Richard Donner could provide some insight on a Superman film.