Batman.v.superman.dawn.of.justice.2016.extended... =link= Jun 2026
| Aspect | Theatrical (151 min) | Extended “Ultimate Edition” (182 min) | |--------|----------------------|----------------------------------------| | Plot clarity | Confusing edits | More coherent subplots | | Rating | PG-13 | R (for violence & language) | | Key additions | Less Superman investigation | More Clark Kent investigating Batman | | Africa subplot | Barely explained | Fully fleshed out | | Runtime | 2h 31m | 3h 2m |
This restores the film’s central theme: two heroes who, if they just talked, would realize they are on the same side. Batman.v.Superman.Dawn.of.Justice.2016.EXTENDED...
: The 2021 remaster restored the 1.43:1 aspect ratio for roughly 20 minutes of IMAX-shot sequences, including the opening credits, the "Knightmare" sequence, and the final battle. Why It's Considered a Different "Piece" | Aspect | Theatrical (151 min) | Extended
The 31 minutes reinstated into the film do not bloat the runtime; they sew the film back together. In the theatrical cut, characters seemed to make leaps in logic, and the plot moved from point A to point C without explanation. The Extended cut provides point B. It transforms the film from a series of coincidences into a deliberate conspiracy. In the theatrical cut, characters seemed to make
Perhaps the biggest beneficiary of the Extended Edition is the film’s antagonist, Lex Luthor, played by Jesse Eisenberg. In the theatrical version, Luthor often appeared as a twitchy, eccentric tech-bro whose plan seemed haphazard. Why was he framing Superman? How did he know Bruce Wayne was Batman? The theatrical cut offered vague answers.
This is not the case with Batman v Superman .
: While the theatrical version is rated PG-13, the Ultimate Edition received an R rating for its more intense and brutal depictions of violence.