Margot Robbie Is Shocked That Harley Quinn Died In Justice League's Snyder Cut
MARGOT ROBBIE TOLD ABOUT HARLEY'S SNYDER CUT DEATH
In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Margot Robbie was told the ultimate fate of Harley Quinn in Zack Snyder's Justice League. However, she had not seen the post-apocalyptic ending and was unaware of Ben Affleck's Batman describing how Harley had died in his arms.
"Whaaat?" Robbie said, shocked and completely unaware of that ending. She laughed it off and thanked the interviewer, "I didn't know that. Thank you for telling me!"
When asked about her thoughts about Harley Quinn dying in Snyder's film, Robbie said, "I guess it's kind of like the comics."
Robbie expanded on those thoughts, comparing the DCEU to the comics in that "the film version of the DC universe, I actually think they're a lot like the comics:"
"You pick up one comic and something's happening and then you pick up the next comic and maybe that character's not alive, maybe that character's not with that person, maybe that character looks completely different."
She described "each movie is its own sort of thing" and how things can change drastically from film to film like the comics:
"Each movie is its own sort of thing, and I think that works in the comic book world, and I think that works in the DC film world as well. It's not like Marvel where everything is more obviously linked in a more linear way. It feels like there's so many adjacent stories, worlds, and films happening at the same time, just like there are in the comics."
Robbie is undeterred by hearing Harley Quinn died in Zack Snyder's Justice League because "it doesn't necessarily change what other people are able to do with this universe" and its characters:
"So, yeah, I didn't know that, but it doesn't necessarily change what other people are able to do with this universe, I don't think. What one director decides I don't think dictates what another director might be able to pick up and do with the world and the characters, which is fun."
As a recent example, she said that James Gunn "didn't have to be beholden to the version that David Ayer set up:"
"I think that's an appealing aspect for directors in the DC world, they can make it their own, the way James did. He didn't have to be beholden to the version that David Ayer (director of Suicide Squad) set up. He could pick it up and make it his own, which I'm sure was more appealing for him."
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