Suicide Squad slammed

Cast and fans defend the anti-hero movie against critics' terrible reviews

David Ayer (left) directing Will Smith in Suicide Squad. PHOTO: WARNER BROS

The cast of new anti-hero movie Suicide Squad defended the film on Wednesday from scathing reviews, saying it was for the fans to decide if it does justice to the DC Comics characters it is based on.

"The critics have been absolutely horrific, they're really, really horrible. You know, I just don't think they like superhero movies," Cara Delevingne, who plays the Enchantress, said at the film's London premiere.

She added that while "this movie isn't perfect", it was made for the fans. Suicide Squad, out in theatres in the US last Friday and in Singapore yesterday, follows a rogue group of anti-heroes with special powers - Deadshot, Harley Quinn, Boomerang, Killer Croc and El Diablo - who are held hostage by Gotham's government to use as weapons to protect the city.

Many critics have panned the film, with Richard Lawson of Vanity Fair calling it "too shoddy and forgettable to even register as revolting". Vulture's David Edelstein called it "the year's most muddled piece of storytelling". Time's Stephanie Zacharek wrote that "by the end, it's as if you've seen nothing". Hollywood Reporter's Todd McCarthy wrote that it is a "puzzlingly confused undertaking that never becomes as cool as it thinks it is". As of Wednesday morning, the film had a 35 per cent rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes.

Will Smith, who plays Deadshot, commended the film's writer-director David Ayer for weaving together the stories of 10 characters and setting up a new world within Warner Bros' expanding cinematic superhero universe. "I think people had expectations that may have been different, but I'm excited for the fans to get to vote," he said.

Ayer added: "I made the movie for real people who live in the real world. I made the movie for people who actually love movies and go and see movies."

The flurry of negative reviews led more than 17,000 people on Wednesday to sign an online Change.org petition calling for Rotten Tomatoes to be shut down.

Mr Abdullah Saleh, a 22-year-old university student in Alexandria, Egypt, launched the petition, saying he felt "there is some kind of pattern for movie critics to give DC Extended Universe movies bad reviews". "I created the petition to gather DC Fans and express their anger just for fun. I didn't mean it to be taken that seriously," he said.

He later suspended the petition, saying "the only thing that it does is spreading a speech of hate and online fighting".

Suicide Squad showcases a new direction for Warner Bros' DC superhero universe, which has taken a more dramatic and serious tone in action films such as Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice. It is expected to gross US$125 million (S$168 million) in North America when it opens this weekend, according to box-office analysts.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on August 05, 2016, with the headline Suicide Squad slammed. Subscribe