The Snyder Cut rights a lot of Justice League’s wrongs

Let me save you some time: The Snyder Cut is better.

Zack Snyder’s Justice League is an upgrade over the 2017 original. The story of DC Comics’ trinity — Superman (Henry Cavill), Batman (Ben Affleck), and Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot) — banding together is more coherent. Flash (Ezra Miller) and Cyborg (Ray Fisher) get more interiority and function less like action figures. The hammerhead villain, Steppenwolf, has more to do and a slightly meatier backstory. Snyder also includes a glorious cameo of a future Leaguer. And there’s certainly more myth-building and thrill — think Snyder slow-motion set pieces flanked by his love for zippy CGI.

Given that this director’s cut cost a reported $70 million to finish up after years of fan clamor and rumors that it would brightly outshine the 2017 theatrical release, perhaps its “betterness” should be the default assumption. But it’s also worth taking into account that the 2017 movie, which Snyder stepped away from and Joss Whedon took over to finish, bruised its knees on the rock bottom of superhero storytelling.