

Zack Snyder's Justice League
Directed by Zack SnyderDetermined to ensure Superman's ultimate sacrifice was not in vain, Bruce Wayne aligns forces with Diana Prince with plans to recruit a team of metahumans to protect the world from an approaching threat of catastrophic proportions.
Cast of Zack Snyder's Justice League
Zack Snyder's Justice League Ratings & Reviews
- Mr. DFebruary 18, 2025Solid. Too bad there's no more 🤔
- Eric Bakke3d agoZack Snyder’s Justice League (2021) is still a bit of a mess—tonally uneven, bloated in places, and holy cow, there is so much slow motion. Honestly, it might be the most I’ve ever seen in a movie, and in a four-hour runtime, it really adds up. Still, it’s undeniably a major improvement over the 2017 theatrical release. The characters are more fleshed out, and the story is more cohesive Some of the added material feels unnecessary or indulgent—especially the extended epilogue—but it’s still kind of cool to see Snyder fully realize the film he originally set out to make. There’s something genuinely satisfying about watching a director finish what he started. Ultimately, I’m glad the fans got what they fought for, and I’m happy Snyder got to see his vision through. For anyone who was let down by the original cut, this version is definitely worth the watch.
- cursedbags4d agoreally good. wish Zack didn’t use a lot of slow motion but it was really good.
- Brian MillerJune 29, 2025Sooooo much better than the theatrical release. It's a totally different movie.
- Lincoln and Blake FrankJune 21, 2025Way better then Justice League
- Manuel FrangisApril 12, 2025I just watched Zack Snyder’s Justice League, and I give it 5 out of 5 stars. This is the version we were supposed to get from the beginning. It is everything the original release should have been and so much more. It is long, dark, bold, emotional, and full of jaw dropping moments. Honestly, it is one of the most satisfying superhero movies I have ever watched. It does not just fix what went wrong the first time. It elevates the whole story and gives the characters the justice they deserve. The four hour runtime sounds intimidating at first, but once you are in it, it moves with purpose. Every chapter builds the story in a way that feels earned. Nothing drags. Nothing feels extra. It is not just about adding more footage. It is about making the story deeper and more meaningful. You get full arcs for every character. It finally feels like a complete film with a real vision behind it. The biggest improvement is how the team comes together. Each member of the Justice League gets the time and respect they need. Cyborg especially stands out. He is the emotional heart of this movie. His story is powerful and personal, and it finally feels like he is more than just a background character. Ray Fisher delivers a performance that deserves real credit. The same goes for Flash. He is not just comic relief. He has depth. He has purpose. And by the end of the movie, he has one of the best scenes in the entire film. Aquaman, Wonder Woman, Batman, and Superman all get stronger moments too. The tone is serious but not heavy in a bad way. It feels grounded in real emotion while still being full of spectacle. The action scenes are on another level. They are bigger, better choreographed, and filled with epic visuals. The way Zack Snyder uses slow motion, lighting, and music gives each battle weight and style. You can tell every shot was carefully put together. It feels like a graphic novel brought to life in the best way. Every punch, every explosion, every stare down — it all hits harder. The villain is also much more compelling this time. Steppenwolf has real motivation and a stronger presence. His design looks much better and his connection to the larger threat adds more intensity to everything. The added focus on Darkseid makes the stakes feel massive, and it opens the door for something even bigger down the road. The score by Junkie XL fits perfectly. It is intense, emotional, and adds to every scene without overpowering it. It helps carry the tone of the movie and keeps everything locked into that serious, mythic energy that Snyder is known for. The sound design in general is just top tier. I give Zack Snyder’s Justice League 5 out of 5 stars because it delivers on everything it promised and more. It is not just a better version of the original. It is its own full movie — epic, emotional, and built with purpose. Overall Zack Snyder’s Justice League is an incredible superhero movie that proves what can happen when a director is allowed to fully tell his story. It respects the characters, gives them depth, and brings everything together in a way that feels huge and meaningful. I loved every second of it.
- Scott SmithApril 12, 2025There is no doubt that this 4 hour Snyder cut of Justice League is in every way a better movie than the 2 hour theatrical release. The film is amazing, and it's definitely the peak of the DC movie universe. The filming, locations, CGI, action, acting, and directing are all top notch. I wish we could have seen where Snyder was going with it all, but I'm glad we got his version of this movie to give us an idea of where he might have gone.
- CrossCutCriticMay 31, 2025To You, Who Thought You Had to Be a God to Save the World—And Learned Instead How to Bleed “He was despised and we held him of no account… but by his wounds we are healed.” — Isaiah 53:3,5 --- I. To You, Who Woke Up in a World That Had Already Lost Its Savior The sky has cracked. The god is dead. The scream echoes across the continents, but there’s no one left to answer. And you— you are not enough. You’re tired. You’re broken. You’re filled with memory, but empty of meaning. The war has begun, and the heroes you once believed in are scattered, skeptical, afraid of themselves. This is your world now. Zack Snyder’s Justice League begins with a scream. Not a battle. Not a promise. A scream—a sound of grief that ripples outward, waking up every sleeping evil and every man who once called himself strong. There is no peace. There is no hope. There is only waiting. If you’ve ever lived in a season where it felt like goodness had died and left you to pick up the pieces— if you’ve ever tried to gather the broken together not because you were sure it would work, but because doing nothing would mean surrender— then you already know this beginning. It is not the start of victory. It is the long silence of after. And in that silence, a single question remains: Can anything rise again? --- II. The Power You Thought Would Save You and the Wound That Actually Did You thought it would take strength. A faster Flash. A stronger Superman. A darker knight. You thought if you could just gather enough power, build the right team, resurrect the right god, you could undo the damage. But power wasn’t the answer. It never was. Because even when he came back, he came back wrong. Confused. Feral. Not the Savior— just the shadow of one. The world doesn’t need more might. It needs someone willing to bleed. And that’s when the real hero shows up. Not the one flying. The one breaking. Cyborg—scarred, silent, stitched together— carries the story’s beating heart. The one who was made to be a weapon and chooses, instead, to become a healer. He steps inside the apocalypse and says, “I am not broken. I am not alone.” And the world listens. Because the power that saves the world is not the one that conquers death. It’s the one that enters it. Zack Snyder’s Justice League is a myth of gods, yes. But it’s also a gospel of scars. If you’ve ever thought you needed to be invincible to matter— if you’ve ever believed the lie that pain disqualifies you from being a savior— then you already know this moment. It is not the god who saves. It is the wounded man who says yes. --- III. The Resurrection That Didn’t Feel Like Victory but Changed Everything Anyway You brought him back. And for a moment, you believed in the myth again. The cape. The light. The man who could outrun gravity and death. But he didn’t smile. He didn’t speak. He looked through you— like a god waking from a dream he wasn’t ready to return to. Resurrection, it turns out, isn’t a triumph. It’s disorientation. Superman comes back not as savior, but as mirror— revealing the fear and the fragility in those who called themselves heroes. He is not the answer. He is the interruption. The broken rhythm. The divine still covered in dirt and death and memory. And yet— he remembers. Not through logic. Through love. Lois. The only voice he hears. The one who speaks not of victory, but of home. This is how grace works in Snyder’s gospel: Not as fire from the sky, but as a woman’s hand, pulling the dead back into the light. If you’ve ever come back from something and found yourself unrecognizable— if you’ve ever been loved back into your name by someone who didn’t need you to be strong— then you already know this resurrection. It is not glory. It is memory. And it is enough. --- IV. The Future That Had Already Collapsed and the Love That Rewrote It Anyway You saw the end. A world turned to ash. Superman kneeling in grief, turned monster by loss. The earth cracked open, the sky unrecognizable, a nightmare etched in fire and regret. It had already happened— or would happen— unless someone ran faster than time itself. So he did. Barry Allen. The least likely savior. The one no one believed in. He ran not toward escape, but toward the wound. Into the explosion. Into the moment after failure. And time listened. He reversed death not by brute force, but by love— spoken to a dying father in a still-broken life: “Your kid was one of them, Dad. One of the best.” That’s the turning point. Not the punch. The confession. The world doesn’t change because someone is strong. It changes because someone dares to believe it doesn’t have to end in ruin. Zack Snyder’s Justice League becomes, in its final act, a theology of reversal. The story was ending in despair. But someone ran backward through the darkness and wrote a new one with their body. If you’ve ever felt time was too far gone— if you’ve ever stood in the wreckage and still said, “We’re not finished yet”— then you already know this moment. It’s not a rewrite. It’s resurrection, rewound and remade in mercy. --- V. The Gods Who Learned to Kneel and the Mortals Who Chose to Stay In the end, it wasn’t about gods. It was about men. Wounded men. Flawed women. People who bled, who doubted, who stood in the ruins and didn’t run. Bruce Wayne— once fueled by vengeance— lays down pride and builds again. Not a weapon. A table. Diana leads not by might, but by grace. Not to avenge, but to restore. And Clark— the man who died for the world and came back to live in it again— quietly opens his shirt and walks forward. The cape is still there. But the myth has changed. The League is not a pantheon. It is a communion of the wounded. Not the mighty, but the ones who stayed. Zack Snyder’s Justice League ends with open hands, not clenched fists. It is not about dominance, but redemption. The gods, it turns out, had to learn to kneel. And the humans— they chose to stand beside them anyway. If you’ve ever believed your story was too fractured to matter— if you’ve ever stood in your scars and said, “Here I am. Let’s begin again.”— then you already know this justice. It is not about saving the world. It’s about becoming human enough to try. --- Postscript Zack Snyder’s Justice League is not a superhero film. It’s an apocalypse told with stained-glass grandeur and grief-stricken hope. It is a lament for the myth of invincibility. And a resurrection of something deeper: A gospel of return. Of flawed men laying down their swords. Of power redefined as mercy. Of time rewound not to escape death— but to say yes to life again. There is a God who listens to screams. Who does not stop the pain, but enters it. Dies in it. Rises from it. And when we kneel in the dust, still afraid, still unsure— He does not say, “Be a hero.” He says: “I see you. You’re not alone. And this time— we rise together.” ---
- SigmaApril 7, 2025Long but amazing man even the scores and like the style I love it even 🙏
- JozzMarch 22, 2025Material prove that audience can push the industry.
- AnnaMarch 21, 2025boring, but unoffensive. anyone who put all their soywad funko pop energy into willing this into existence really needs better standards for what they channel their energy into.
- victor.b90October 14, 2024Yea it was alrighttttt