LOS ANGELES -- Ben Affleck will no longer direct himself in The sex indian videoBatmanfor Warner Bros., the studio confirmed Monday, nine months after WB announced that he would helm the standalone DC Universe film.
According to Variety, which first reported that Affleck was out, the Argo director still plans to play the caped crusader and will produce The Batman. The movie still hasn't set a release date, and now faces further delays as a search for a new director gets underway.
SEE ALSO: 'Batman v Superman' totally tweaked Marvel, and you probably missed itAffleck gave the following statement via Warner Bros.:
"There are certain characters who hold a special place in the hearts of millions. Performing this role demands focus, passion and the very best performance I can give. It has become clear that I cannot do both jobs to the level they require. Together with the studio, I have decided to find a partner in a director who will collaborate with me on this massive film. I am still in this, and we are making it, but we are currently looking for a director. I remain extremely committed to this project, and look forward to bringing this to life for fans around the world.
WB chief Kevin Tsujihara first confirmed the longstanding rumor of an Affleck-directed Batman standalone film last April at Cinemacon in Las Vegas, mentioning the director in an off-handed comment during his address to the nation's theater owners. It was an unusual way of announcing a big-name director on a major project -- and it never felt like it quite stuck.
Affleck had recently hinted that things weren't quite coming together for The Batman, and now we know why.
"Warner Bros. fully supports Ben Affleck’s decision and remains committed to working with him to bring a standalone Batman picture to life," the studio said in a statement to Variety.
Affleck -- who first played the dark knight in Batman v Supermanand had a cameo in Suicide Squad-- is done shooting Justice Leagueand just got done promoting his gangster film Live By Night, which was a bona fide box office bomb, making only $10 million in North America in a handful of weeks.
Topics DC Comics
Amazon's new Fire TV streaming interface is a slick improvementThe Hurricane Harvey telethon needs a Kanye West momentSingapore gets its first female president ever and she even has her own emojiThese 5 TVs will deliver the ultimate PS5 and Xbox Series X experiencePatton Oswalt had choice words for an idiot who tweeted that depression 'isn't real'The 16 very specific things we most loved this yearHillary Clinton confirms she coped after her election loss with yoga, hiking, and wineYoung, racial justice activist on why she fights for representationTed Cruz Twitter porn gaffe inspires inevitable Photoshop battleOnePlus has a phone that changes color, and it actually sounds usefulXiaomi Mi 11 will be the first Snapdragon 888 phoneApple ships hackerThese 5 TVs will deliver the ultimate PS5 and Xbox Series X experienceHillary Clinton confirms she coped after her election loss with yoga, hiking, and wineWhat the first new moon rocks in decades can tell us'The Mandalorian' finale postHow to screen record on MacFake Shakespeare Facts is the kind of fake news we can get on board withPhoto apps show you are your own best social mediaJupiter and Saturn align on Monday for the first time in 800 years Reading Isadora Duncan’s Pulpy Autobiography Staff Picks: Samantha Hunt, David Lynch, John Ashbery 10 Tech Products That Are Next to Impossible to Repair A Painting, Once Looted by Nazis, Returns to the Art Market Surface Noise: What We’ve Lost in the Transition to Digital Le Corbusier’s Iconic Chaise Longue Has Changed the Adult The Lost Joys of the Screen Saver Who Gets to Name Diseases—and Why Isn’t It You? To Hölderlin (from Rilke with Love) Jaime Davidovich’s Pioneering Television Art Michael Chabon on Carsickness, Unsung Heroes of Pittsburgh Post Staff Picks: Jane Bowles, Soviet Poetry, Yasunari Kawabata, and More This Nude George Washington Was Too Hot for the Nineteenth Century The Art of Whipped Cream: Paintings by Mark Ryden Reimagining Doestoevky’s “White Nights” As a Building You, Too, Can Be T. S. Eliot’s Child. Just Give It a Try. Remembering David Lewiston, Who Recorded Music Around the World Underwear Life: An Interview with Francesco Pacifico by Adam Thirlwell Misplaced Logic: An Interview with Joanna Ruocco Five Limericks (in the Style of Edward Lear)
1.4548s , 8588.6796875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【sex indian video】,Co-creation Information Network