Zack Snyder posts new Batmobile photo from 'Batman v Superman'
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice director Zack Snyder posted this automobile photo to Twitter tonight. We’re guessing it’s for sale, but he didn’t fill out the rest of the information, so EW is taking a crack at the seller info …
*** CUSTOM BUILT 2015 two-door sedan***
– Original owner
– Low mileage and good condition
– Flip-top doors
– Assorted bullet and crash wear-and-tear, otherwise indestructible.
– Matte finish “stealth” paint job
– Rack and pinion steering
– Hood-mounted, twin-barrel machine gun turret
– Built-in fire-extinguishing system
– Night vision headlamps, turn signals (no brake lights)
– Jet engine propulsion for leaping curbs, innocent bystanders
– Sirius XM satellite radio *1 month free trial subscription.
Serious buyers ONLY. No text or emails will be considered. (Contact seller via Klieg light w/ bat cutout.)
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, starring Henry Cavill as the Man of Steel and Ben Affleck as the Caped Crusader, hits theaters March 25, 2016
FIRST LOOK: Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice'
Director Zack Snyder: ''He’s not any of the Lexes that you’ve seen, that’s for sure'
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice
Posted March 25 2015 — 10:33 AM EDT
The mark of a good villain is how he knows to stop monologuing before he gives away too much of his plan. That’s also the mark of a good superhero-franchise director. Details on Zack Snyder’s Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (due March 25, 2016) have been scarcer than kryptonite. We know that a cameo by Aquaman sets up 2017’s Justice League and that Wonder Woman has a sizable role. And now we have our first glimpse of Jesse Eisenberg as one of comics’ greatest bad guys: Lex Luthor. “He’s not any of the Lexes that you’ve seen, that’s for sure,” says Snyder, “other than him being a captain of industry and one person to the world and another person to himself. And bald, of course.” Eisenberg might not be the first person you’d think of to play the supervillain, but he did have experience portraying a morally challenged billionaire in The Social Network. And this edition of the follicularly challenged megalomaniac taps into a similar hyperintelligence mixed with malignant straight shooting. “Our Lex is disarming and he’s not fake,” says Snyder. “He says what he believes and he says what’s on his mind. If you can unravel the string and decipher what he means, it’s all there.” Now excuse us while we try to unravel that string and decipher what Snyder is secretly trying to tell us.