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It's apparently 214 minutes, making it about 3.5 hours. Guesses are now that just under an hour of Snyder's original footage was used in the theatrical release of Justice League, meaning a staggering 2.5 hours were cut from the film.
This also partly addresses Warner considering Snyder's cut "unwatchable" (a three and a half hour movie is a lot to ask, even from Snyder fans) but the length was more or less mandated by the amount of material Snyder needed to cover. The movie had to introduce a couple new main characters, show Batman rounding the team up, do the Return of Superman, introduce Kirby's New Gods cast, and build up to a future, even bigger, movie. Meanwhile, the studio notes were raining down during actual production ("insert more humor", "give Wonder Woman a bigger role", "can one of them be gay?", etc).
When BvS was released, Justice League was ramping into production, but Warner was wishy-washy while deciding whether to make major or minor changes to Snyder's existing plan. In retrospect, complaints about Snyder's "darkness" were knee jerk and rooted to in the success of Marvel or just following the leads of critics/king nerds, not legitimate criticisms, and if anything the DC movies failed to get dark enough to distinguish themselves as more serious movies (again thanks to studio interference). In the aftermath of Joker, it does seem like Snyder was finally vindicated for trying to make his movies darker and more serious.
The speds won. No one willing to sit through 3.5 hours is going to say it was bad.
I liked the Snyder movies so I'm a little biased. But obviously a decent number of people were not responding to the Snyder DC movies and I think the problem wasn't that they were too dark. The problem was that they focused on Superman who is not a "dark" character. People associate Superman with lighthearted cape shit. They don't want to see 9/11 imagery and him graphically dying.
Man of Steel financially was successful and critically decent among the audience at worst. More to the point, there's nothing about Clark's character and his world that requires them all to be "lighthearted" and/or zany like the Donnor films.
It made 668$ Million but was expected to make over 1 Billion Dollars.(There´s an Interview with an WB executive somewhere where he states he expects MoS to make at least as much the first Hobbit Movie.)Man of Steel financially was successful and critically decent among the audience at worst. More to the point, there's nothing about Clark's character and his world that requires them all to be "lighthearted" and/or zany like the Donnor films.
It was mildly successful and the reception was split right down the middle. You either liked or hated that film.