DC Film Zatanna Lost: Emerald Fennell’s Psychological Superhero Tragedy

DC’s Lost Zatanna movie hit the dust- find out what Emerald Fennell’s dark, chic take on the character was and why Warner Bros abruptly ended production.

Published: February 14, 2026, 9:26 am

A special kind of heartbreak is reserved for the “best movies never made.” We preoccupy ourselves with Jodorowsky’s Dune and Del Toro’s At the Mountains of Madness, speculating on how they might have altered the cinematic terrain. In 2026, with Emerald Fennell on the press trail for her raw adaptation of Wuthering Heights, a new identity was officially added to that tragic pantheon: Zatanna

For years, speculation has swirled about what the Oscar-winning writer/director of Promising Young Woman and Saltburn might do with DC’s best stage magician. Now, with Fennell’s recent frank interviews, we at last have a peek behind the curtain. 

“It wasn’t a superhero flick, it was a fairly deranged saga about a nervous breakdown.”
–She says

Rewriting the Superhero Origin Story

Fennell depicted Zatanna around the time of a very strong personal and professional transition. Immediately following her Academy Award win, she was catapulted into the high-gloss Hollywood movie star — a world she didn’t quite recognize.

Beyond the Cape

Beyond the Cape
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Feigen became the tool she used to filter her alienation through the script. Instead of a typical origin story in which a hero discovers how to use their powers to save the world, Fennell’s Zatanna is a woman coming undone. 

I had this very simple question: “How do I make a superhero movie that I’m comfortable watching with my kids and that personally speaks to me?” I was a woman having a breakdown.
— Emerald Fennell

This wasn’t just “gritty” like we’ve grown accustomed to from DC, it was psychological terror. For a character like Zatanna, who practices Logomancy (speaking backwards to affect reality), a broken mind is a frightening weapon. When the magician loses her grasp on reason, reality itself starts to distort. 

The “Demented” Aesthetic of Fennell’s Vision

If you’ve seen Saltburn, you’re aware Fennell doesn’t do “palatable.” Her take on Zatanna would almost certainly have swapped clean CGI energy blasts for something more tactile and grotesque. 

Feature The Traditional Heroine Fennell’s Zatanna (The Archetype)
Mental State Resilient & Stoic Fractured & “Hysterical”
Relationship to Power A Responsibility An Addiction/Burden
Aesthetic Clean & Heroic Grotesque & Baroque

This incarnation of the character was described as a “hard woman” — untidy, scary, and thoroughly human. It was a dismissal of the “cool girl” trope, instead dwelling on the bodily and cognitive toll of doing magic. 

Why Zatanna Was Never Made

  • Bad Robot Bottleneck: The movie was part of J.J. Abrams’ sprawling “Justice League Dark” universe. Despite a $500 million deal, films of John Constantine and Madame X stayed stuck in development purgatory for years, without so much as one frame being filmed.
Zatanna Was Never Made
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  • The WBD Merger: When WarnerMedia became Warner Bros. Discovery, the directive changed from “growth at any cost” to “debt reduction.” CEO David Zaslav began a “purge” of risky projects—most famously shelving the nearly finished Batgirl for a tax write-down.
  • The Gunn/Safran Reboot: In late 2022, James Gunn and Peter Safran assumed control of DC Studios with a charge to create a unified, optimistic “Gods and Monsters” arc. That”deranged” standalone movie about a woman breaking—down simply didn’t fit the new blueprint. 

The Legacy of the Unmade

The removal of Fennell’s Zatanna exemplifies an escalating anxiety in contemporary film: the struggle between auteur ambition and franchise security. While Zatanna probably will debut in the new DCU (if not before in James Mangold’s Swamp Thing), she will unquestionably be a more “stable” version of the character.

Auteur Vision vs Franchise Safety in Modern Blockbuster Cinema

Auteur Vision vs Franchise Safety
Image Credit: Fandomfans

Fennell’s “lost” script is still an intriguing “what if” — a souvenir from a moment when the superhero genre nearly gripped something decidedly raw, unsettling, and revolutionary. It appears that in today’s blockbuster economy there’s a lot of room for monsters, but precious little for meltdowns. 

Read More 👉  ‘Star Trek: Starfleet Academy’ Rebuilds Hope as Episode 6 is Turning Point

Conclusion

The still unproduced Emerald Fennell’s Zatanna is not merely a scrapped project, it’s an alarm that modern blockbuster cinema is too scared to ring. With all the sophistication as well as volatility of the mind, it tested safe franchise logic that was unthinking. What we lost was not a superhero movie, it’s a risk. And in today’s studio system, that may be a rarer magic than any other. 

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Alpana

Articles Published : 135

Alpana is Fandomfans Senior Editor across all genres of entertainment. She evolved in the media industry since a very long time, she manages the content strategy and editing of all the blogs. Her focus on story development, review analysis, and research is well-equipped that ensures every article meets the standards of accuracy and depth.

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Why Supergirl Could Be DC’s Biggest 2026 Movie

Why Supergirl may become DC's biggest 2026 blockbuster, leading the new DC Universe into an exciting future.

Written by: Alpana
Published: June 12, 2026, 11:29 am
Supergirl

Superman got the spotlight and hype as “The Man of Steel is back” but it defines the new era of James Gunn’s DC universe. It isn’t the one we know with the Cape and S-Shield, but comes right after it. It is confirmed now with the Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow release on June 26. The film is not safe and audience pleasing but a louder and messier and that’s why Supergirl 2026 could end up being the DCU’s most important movie yet. 

She’s Not Your CW Supergirl Anymore

Let’s get one thing out of the way immediately. If you’re picturing Melissa Benoist’s warm, optimistic, “we can all be heroes” version of Kara Danvers — wipe that from your mind. That series and Supergirl version was great on its own level but James Gunn brings a completely different character and storyline.

A Darker, Edgier Kara Zor-El

Gunn and DC Studios made it crystal clear that this version of Supergirl is not that earnest and saving the world type. But a “less earnest and more edgy” type which means they deliver a darker and more complex tone. It’s a direct rejection for an inspiring character which defines previous adaptations. This one is a hero who has seen the worst things that could break most heroes but she is still standing. This Kara carries weight. She carries trauma. And she carries it across the cosmos.

Supergirl Anymore

The DCU Chapter One source material tells you everything you need to know. Based on Tom King and Bilquis Evely’s Eisner-nominated comic series, the story follows Kara helping a young girl named Ruthye avenge her father’s murder at the hands of a space pirate named Krem of the Yellow Hills. It’s a revenge road trip set among the stars — part western, part cosmic epic, part character study. It’s not a city-saving origin story. It’s something far more personal.

Milly Alcock Supergirl Is DC’s Secret Weapon

Every franchise has one rule that they cast their superheroes performance lead that nobody saw before. Gal Gadot was unknown before Wonder Woman and Robert Downey Jr. before Iron Man was also unpopular. And Milly Alcock Supergirl? She might just be the best casting surprise of the entire DCU.

From Rhaenyra Targaryen to Kara Zor-El

Milly Alcock played a young Rhaenyra Targaryen role very well. The face expressions and body tone was dynamically balanced when she was told she couldn’t have the thing she was born for. She was rejected by the system to rule and sit on a throne as she deserved. The performance was furious, layered, and heartbreaking all at once.

Milly Alcock Supergirl Is DC

Now transpose that energy onto Kara Zor-El — a woman who watched her entire world die, who arrived on Earth after Clark Kent had already claimed the Kryptonian legacy, who has every right to be angry and chooses to channel it into something bigger than herself. The parallels are almost too perfect.

James Gunn himself — the man who has cast everything from Groot to Peacemaker, has called the decision to cast Milly Alcock “the best bit of casting” he has ever done. That’s not PR speak. That’s a filmmaker who’s seen the dailies and knows something the rest of us don’t yet.

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Jason Momoa as Lobo Is Pure Chaos Energy

Just when you thought the casting couldn’t get more interesting, Jason Momoa entered in a picture. Not as Aquaman. Not as any hero. As Lobo, he was a twisted character who didn’t care about anything. But more dangerously he is a terrible space bounty hunter.

Why the Supergirl + Lobo Dynamic Works

Momoa has wanted this role for years and it shows. The first teaser footage already has fans losing their minds, and the dynamic between Kara’s controlled, purposeful fury and Lobo’s absolute chaotic energy is exactly the kind of unpredictable pairing that makes for legendary cinema. Think of it as the cosmic version of a buddy cop movie where one partner has a moral compass and the other one eats their moral compass for breakfast.

Supergirl + Lobo

James Gunn has confirmed that Lobo isn’t just a cameo — he’s a vital part of Supergirl’s story. That alone makes this film a must-watch. Because when a character as anarchic as Lobo is woven into the narrative with purpose, rather than just tossed in for fan service, you know the storytelling is operating at a different level.

Read More  👉 Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow’s Five Planets Explained: Every Alien World Kara Visits

DCU Chapter One Needs This Win

Superman restarted the DC film universe with confidence. It established tone, introduced the world, reintroduced characters audiences loved and characters they hadn’t met yet. But Superman was the foundation. Supergirl 2026 — as the second film in DCU Chapter One: Gods and Monsters — is where that foundation gets tested.

Supergirl Can Make or Break Cinematic Universes

History is pretty clear on this: the second chapter of any rebooted franchise is where audiences decide if they’re truly on board. The first film earns goodwill. The second film spends it. Like Marvel, The Winter Soldier was the biggest hit after Iron Man 2. The dark knight sequel was a cultural event. 

Supergirl to Iron Man

I, Tonya and Cruella director Craig Gillespie is the perfect Director for this film because he already proved his work with films which featured anti-hero women who refused to be defined by what the world expected of them — has openly compared Supergirl to Iron Man in terms of ambition and character-first storytelling. This suggests that the film is set to rule alone not as a universe builder. 

The Backlash Is Actually a Brilliant Sign

Let’s talk about the discourse, because it’s impossible to ignore. There was a trailer line that sparked a full-blown Snyder vs. Gunn fan war online. Tracking numbers fluctuated. Reddit had opinions. Twitter had louder opinions. And somewhere in the middle of all of it, Zack Snyder dropped a cryptic post that sent half the internet into a spiral.

Controversy = Cultural Relevance

Here’s the thing about backlash — it means people care. The films that nobody argues about are the ones that nobody remembers. The Dark Knight faced skepticism before release. Wonder Woman was written off as a risk nobody wanted. Guardians of the Galaxy was literally described by studio executives as a movie that “couldn’t possibly work.”

Every era-defining superhero movie has had a pre-release controversy arc. The ones that survive that arc and deliver something real become classics. Supergirl is already in that arc. The question is just whether it sticks the landing and based on everything we know about the cast, the source material, and the director, the answer looks like yes.

Read More  👉 DC Chapter 2 Latest Update: What Is James Gunn’s New Plan?

Conclusion

Supergirl isn’t trying to be Superman. That’s the whole point. She’s not trying to inspire through warmth or win people over with optimism. She’s trying to be something the DCU desperately needed — raw, cosmic, uncompromising, and unapologetically herself.

With Milly Alcock delivering what James Gunn calls his best-ever casting decision, a source comic that’s won industry awards, Jason Momoa finally getting to be the character he was born to play, and a director who’s made a career out of making complicated women feel like icons — Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow has every ingredient to be not just DC’s biggest film of 2026, but one of the most memorable superhero films in years. June 26 can’t come soon enough. And when it does, don’t say you weren’t warned.

Alpana

Articles Published : 135

Alpana is Fandomfans Senior Editor across all genres of entertainment. She evolved in the media industry since a very long time, she manages the content strategy and editing of all the blogs. Her focus on story development, review analysis, and research is well-equipped that ensures every article meets the standards of accuracy and depth.

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Clayface 2026 Horror Movie Plot, Trailer & DC’s Dark Horror Reboot Explained

DC’s bold R-rated Clayface 2026 body horror film featuring a tragic Batman villain. Discover how it became the best Reboot, cast, plot details, and teaser breakdown of this dark psychological thriller.

Written by: Alpana
Published: April 24, 2026, 11:35 am
Clayface 2026

We’ve waited for one of the most eagerly awaited films in the new DC Universe to be an R-rated, full-on body horror movie about a giant mud-man. And here we are. It’s April 2026 the Clayface 2026 teaser trailer just dropped and it’s completely, utterly and terrifyingly sold. 

It’s pretty clear that the new DC Universe being overseen by James Gunn and Peter Safran isn’t looking to tiptoe. Centering on a classic Batman villain after Superman and Supergirl with a dark, psychological thriller is a massive swing. But given the pedigree of the filmmakers and the disturbingly intense footage we just saw, Clayface 2026 could be exactly the jolt of energy the comic book movie breed needs right now. 

Are you ready? Because we’re diving into everything you need to know about the Clayface 2026 movie.

The Horror Maestro Meets Gotham

From the brilliant modern horror mind of Mike Flanagan (The Haunting of Hill House, Doctor Sleep) and Hossein Amini’s comes the fantastic script for the Clayface movie.

Myth is that Gunn didn’t even have a Clayface film on his DCU whiteboard. But when Flanagan came calling with a tragic, terrifying, stand-alone horror movie, Gunn just couldn’t say no. Although Flanagan is not directing – that duty goes to James Watkins, the director of the disturbing English-language remake of Speak No Evil – this is unmistakably Flanagan. 

Peter Safran has likened it to David Croneberg’s cult 1986 film The Fly, suggesting that the producers are indeed leaning into the body horror aspect. It’s unpredictable, what could make you feel ill at ease from the start if that doesn’t. This is no campy CGI slugfest. It’s a down to earth, visceral, and downright soul-crushing psychological spiral of madness. 

Clayface 2026 Plot: A Hollywood Nightmare

From what you describe, Clayface 2026 movie sounds like nothing but the classic “A Feat of Clay” that aired on ‘Batman: The Animated Series’ should have been extended into a movie. It’s evidently a visually gorgeous and heartbreaking story about Matt Hagen, a former up and comer in Hollywood whose life takes a nosedive when he is disfigured in an attack by a mobster.

His frenzied attempts to recover himself scientifically come in the form of Dr. Caitlin Bates, a revolutionary and mysterious woman whose brilliance is only matched by the contentious nature of her practices.

Batman The Animated Series

This arrangement is poised to yield an intriguing blend of tragedy, transformation, and moral ambiguity while paying homage to the spirit of the original series with a touch more cinematic flair.  

Hagen is a human test subject for her experimental drug. And, predictably, horror-style, things go very wrong. The procedure goes horribly wrong and not only does it dehumanize Hagen, it alters his entire cell makeup, turning him into a clay-like being who can assume any form. 

Rather than a conventional origin where the character learns to use their powers for good, Clayface is a tragedy about a man losing himself, becoming a casualty of unhealthy love, and eventually turning into a monster hellbent on revenge. 

Who’s Playing Who in Clayface 2026?

The cast of Clayface 2026 is full of heavy-hitters with real cred, rather than your typical blockbuster A-list, which works perfectly for the movie’s lean, $40 million indie-horror style budget. 

Tom Rhys Harries will portray Matt Hagen / Clayface in the upcoming series. The trailer of Clayface 2026 already shows him expressing panic and anger at a high level so we know we are going to genuinely care about this guy right before his terrifying transformation.

Tom Rhys Harries

Naomi Ackie as Dr. Caitlin Bates: Ackie is the “fringe” scientist that activates Hagen’s mutation. And, interestingly, she’s also framed as Hagen’s love interest, bringing a majorly twisted, co-dependent dynamic to the creation of the monster. 

Max Minghella as a Gotham City Detective: Minghella is a detective who is dating Dr. Bates. You need not be a screenwriting major to know that this love triangle is going to end in the biggest disaster. 

Rounding out the cast: There are also some fantastic character actors Eddie Marsan and David Dencik in as of yet undisclosed roles. 

Is This the DCU or the Matt Reeves ‘Batman’ Universe?

This is when casual fans definitely become confused, but the studios have made it surprisingly clear. Clayface 2026 is 100% absolutely in the mainline James Gunn DCU. It is the third film in the series, lined up with David Corenswet’s Superman

However Matt Reeves (The Batman) is also heavily involved as a producer. It’s like a joint effort. By bringing Clayface into the core DCU, it also opens the door for Tom Rhys Harries’ terrifying monster to one day face off with the DCU’s next Batman (whoever that ends up being in The Brave and the Bold). 

Breaking Down the Clayface 2026 Teaser Trailer 

If you didn’t catch the Clayface 2026 CinemaCon short trailer that released online yesterday, go watch it right now. 

The trailer has no talk. With foreboding, bass-tinged music and truly repellent horror soundtracks, it’s a masterclass in visual storytelling. Hagen’s Hollywood heyday, the savage alley beating that disfigures his face and the torturous sojourn he spends under the ministrations of Dr. Bates are all fleetingly and shockingly revealed to us. 

CinemaCon short trailer

Then, the money shot was a brief, shadowy view of Hagen in an alley. His face is very malleable, melting and contorting in the dark before he transforms his fist into a huge, lead mace and smashes it onto someone off screen. It’s brutal. It’s raw. It shows that DC isn’t just going to hand us a guy with a little bit of goo on his face; they’re going full monster. 

Fixing the Villain Movie Curse

Villain solo movies in comic books are dreadful right now. From the stunning box office flop of Joker: Folie à Deux to Sony’s puzzling Spider-Man-less villain universe (Morbius, Madame Web), the notion of putting a bad guy front and center in a film is wearing out audiences. The problem? Studios are just too scared to let their villains actually be villains. 

They’re always making them into sympathetic anti-villains who are in some ways worse than the villain, or who are fighting an even worse villain. 

Clayface 2026 looks hell-bent on making that mistake right. From all the statements made so far by Gunn, Safran and Watkins, Matt Hagen is not a secret hero. He is a very flawed, violent, traumatized person who runs full speed into his dark side once the clay takes hold. By rooting the film in the horror world, the filmmakers have the flexibility to allow the villain to be the monster within his own tale. 

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Conclusion 

Mark your calendars, horror fans and nerds of all kinds. Clayface 2026 will hit theatres and IMAX on October 23, 2026.

To put out a genuine comic book body horror movie smack dab in the middle of the Halloween season is just brilliant marketing. It’s a giant tonal shift from the bright, hopeful skies of Superman, showing us that this new DC Universe is going to be enormous, diverse and unpredictable. 

If you’re a hardcore Batman comic reader or just a fan of no-holds-barred cinema, Clayface 2026 is turning out to be one of the most compelling experiments in recent Hollywood history. Marvel, it’s your turn.

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Alpana

Articles Published : 135

Alpana is Fandomfans Senior Editor across all genres of entertainment. She evolved in the media industry since a very long time, she manages the content strategy and editing of all the blogs. Her focus on story development, review analysis, and research is well-equipped that ensures every article meets the standards of accuracy and depth.

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