Kevin Smith says the Snyder Cut of 'Justice League' exists, wants it to be released

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - JULY 20: Kevin Smith speaks at the Kevin Smith Reboots Hall H! Panel during 2019 Comic-Con International at San Diego Convention Center on July 20, 2019 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Albert L. Ortega/Getty Images)
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - JULY 20: Kevin Smith speaks at the Kevin Smith Reboots Hall H! Panel during 2019 Comic-Con International at San Diego Convention Center on July 20, 2019 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Albert L. Ortega/Getty Images)

Kevin Smith has confirmed that Zack Snyder’s cut of Justice League actually exists and he believes that it should be released.

DC fans have been clamouring for Snyder’s version of the blockbuster to be released ever since the blockbuster hit cinemas back in November, 2017. While Snyder wrote and directed the film, he was unable to conduct the reshoots because of the death of his daughter, and was replaced by Joss Whedon.

Disgruntled fans that were unhappy with Whedon’s adjustments have since demanded that Warner Bros release Snyder’s version, and now they have even more hope after Smith’s comments.

Read More: The Snyder Cut: What was Zack Snyder's original vision for ‘Justice League’?

“I’ve not seen it firsthand. And also to be clear, I know Zack, but it’s not like, ‘We're f****** tight son!’ … That being said, I’ve spoken now to enough people at various levels in that production. There is a Snyder cut. For sure. That's not a mythical beast. It exists.”

“Now, it's not a finished movie by any stretch of the imagination. There were things that went away from the story that they shot that didn't wind up going into (visual) effects or anything like that. So I would assume, based on what I've been told, that large sections of that Snyder Cut are, you know, pre-viz (with) a lot of green screen. We're not talking a finished movie.”

“When people hear ‘Snyder Cut’ in their heads, they think about, like, a DVD they've seen of an extended cut or something that's finished. The ‘Snyder Cut’ that, again I haven't seen, but the one I've heard everyone speak of was never a finished film. It was a movie that people in production could watch and fill in the blanks. It was certainly not meant for mass consumption.”

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - MARCH 22: Director Zack Snyder attending 'Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice' European Premiere in Leicester Square, London, England on March 22, 2016. (Photo by Tolga Akmen/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - MARCH 22: Director Zack Snyder attending 'Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice' European Premiere in Leicester Square, London, England on March 22, 2016. (Photo by Tolga Akmen/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

Smith even told Cinema Blend that Warner Bros would be silly not to release the Snyder cut of Justice League.

“I feel confident that the audience could handle that cut of the movie without being like… I think there's a common thought process, probably within the studio – and again, no studio has said this to me, but I would assume that they're like, ‘We can’t show people this. Yes, there is a Snyder Cut, but no audience would be able to look at this and see what the director's intent was.’ I disagree.”

Read More: Zack Snyder's final cut of 'Justice League' could still happen

“That would seem like common wisdom because everyone always wants to put their best foot forward. But I think the audience now, particularly the audience that would consume the Snyder Cut and discuss it at great length, can watch a work print. They can watch a work-in-progress and fill in the blanks in their heads.”

“Every studio likes to make money. They do multiple incarnations of movies on video all the time. This could just be one more of those. All they have to do is lend their audience a little more credence to be like, ‘Look, they’ll get it.’ Put up a bunch of f****** disclaimers, including one from Zack himself at the head of it going, ‘Obviously the movie wasn't finished, but here's what we were thinking.’”

“There's definitely a way to do it. … They could definitely shoot a version of that flick where, you know, they put [Snyder] into it explaining what would have went here, what went there.”