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Pattinson and Corenswet are both outstanding in their roles; however, that doesn’t mean they should appear on screen together. For the following four reasons, a crossover between Pattinson’s Batman and Corenswet’s Superman in the DCU would be a bad idea.
4) The DC Universe Needs to Feel New

Superman‘s commencement of the DCU triumphs because it genuinely feels like a new beginning after years of disappointment from the DCEU. A story brimming with heart and hope, Superman dives into its world with enthusiasm and without hesitation to show Clark Kent’s human and heroic sides. From the city of Metropolis to Superman’s Fortress of Solitude, the DCU’s first movie expertly fleshes out its world, which feels real and lived-in.
Thus, all subsequent DCU installments need to feed off the energy of this amazing fresh start. Advancing the franchise’s world-building with a unique version of Gotham City instead of the same depiction used in The Batman and The Penguin would be ideal, as turning to Pattinson’s Batman could undermine the excitement and novelty of Gunn’s vision for an interconnected universe. Adding Gunn’s ongoing Peacemaker series to the DCU is already an imperfect move, but crossing over with The Batman would cause even more of a mess.
3) The Batman Universe Is Brilliant As Is

Unlike past Batman films, The Batman fully leans into the brutality of Gotham City and the hero’s prowess as a mystery-solver. Just one movie and one eight-episode TV series have established this universe as an intricate world rife with fascinating characters like Selina Kyle/Catwoman (Zoë Kravitz), Oz Cobb/Penguin (Colin Farrell), and Sofia Falcone (Cristin Milioti). One of The Batman and The Penguin‘s biggest strengths is how vivid and immersive Gotham feels. With or without Batman’s presence, the streets teem with both dangerous and ordinary activities. In addition to their spellbinding atmospheres, The Batman and its spinoff show deliver gripping plot lines elevated by breathtaking fights, intense character interactions, and shocking twists.
These stories are about so much more than heroes and villains. They thoroughly examine morally gray personas and delve into how Gotham’s harshness has shaped them. The Batman and The Penguin work as an amazing one-two punch, and their success could signal great things to come in The Batman Part II and beyond. There’s no need to shake things up by merging Reeves’s universe with the DCU and risking The Batman‘s downfall. Rather, DC should continue developing characters and introduce more Batman figures in its existing storyline. By keeping The Batman a contained universe, DC can expand on what it has already perfected without ruining it all with a rushed Superman crossover.










