09 January,2022 09:19 AM IST | Washington | ANI
Ben Affleck. Pic/AFP
It seems like actor Ben Affleck would apparently like to lock his 'Justice League' memories away in a hidden cave.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, during an interview with a news outlet that was published on Friday, the 49-year-old Oscar winner was asked about difficult times in his recent past.
Among the moments he discussed was his 2017 announcement that he would no longer direct 'The Batman', the Matt Reeves-helmed film that will now mark Robert Pattinson's debut as the title superhero.
After Affleck explained, he has come to the realization that he should focus on career choices that make himself happy, rather than trying to please others, he continued, "Directing Batman is a good example. I looked at it and thought, 'I'm not going to be happy doing this. The person who does this should love it.'"
ALSO READ
Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner spend more time together
Jennifer Lopez poses with turkey on first thanksgiving after filing for divorce
Jennifer Lopez REACTS to ex-husband Ben Affleck calling her 'spectacular'
Ben Affleck praises Jennifer Lopez's performance in 'Unstoppable'
Academy grants Oscar eligibility to Matt Damon and Ben Affleck's Kiss The Future
He added, "You're supposed to always want these things, and I probably would have loved doing it at 32 or something. But it was the point where I started to realize it's not worth it. It's just a wonderful benefit of reorienting and recalibrating your priorities that once it started being more about the experience, I felt more at ease."
Affleck went on to tell that 2017's 'Justice League', for which he reprised his role as Batman, was "the nadir" of his career. While listing reasons why it was a difficult shoot for him, Affleck cited director Zack Snyder exiting the film after the death of daughter Autumn in May 2017. Joss Whedon, whom Affleck didn't mention by name in the new interview, replaced Snyder.
"It was really 'Justice League' that was the nadir for me. That was a bad experience because of a confluence of things: my own life, my divorce, being away too much, the competing agendas and then Zack's personal tragedy and the reshooting. It just was the worst experience. It was awful. It was everything that I didn't like about this," recalled Affleck, who retired as the Caped Crusader in 2019 but will be back in the role for 'The Flash' in November.
The star continued, "That became the moment where I said, 'I'm not doing this anymore.' It's not even about, like, Justice League was so bad. Because it could have been anything."
Back in March 2020, Affleck told GQ that he "really loved" portraying the superhero in 2016's 'Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice', but that Justice League was hit with "one problem after another" and led him to feel burned out on the character.
In July 2020, 'Justice League' co-star Ray Fisher alleged that Whedon had been abusive during the film's shoot, and the actor also claimed that producers Geoff Johns and Jon Berg enabled Whedon's alleged actions.
Whedon, Johns and Berg did not comment at the time. After an investigation, Warner Bros. announced in December 2020 that "remedial action" had been taken, although the studio did not provide further specifics, as per The Hollywood Reporter.
Last year, HBO Max released a four-hour director's cut of the film, entitled 'Zack Snyder's Justice League', which has been colloquially dubbed the 'Snyder Cut' by social media users.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever