Rebel Moon fans issue same complaint to ‘greedy’ Netflix about new Zack Snyder film
Netflix subscribers are making similar complaints about new film Rebel Moon, which is currently the streaming service’s most-watched title.
The new fantasy film is the latest release from writer-director Zack Snyder (300, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice), and it has shunted Aardman sequel Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget and thriller Leave the World Behind down the charts. Snyder’s epic is the first chapter of a two-part franchise, which will conclude in 2024.
Rebel Moon – Part One: A Child of Fire was added to Netflix on Thursday (21 December), and has received a deluge of negative reviews from critics, including The Independent, who called it “a borderline incoherent shambles” in a one-star review.
While other critics appeared to concur with this judgement, leaving the film with a paltry 23 per cent score on review aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes, subscribers who have been watching the film seem to disagree. At the time of writing, Rebel Moon has an audience score of 69 per cent.
It’s perhaps unsurprising that the film is going down better with viewers than critics – Snyder is a director with a solid fanbase, and said fanbase has come out in full force to support his new film on social media.
However, even the most fervent Snyder fan appears to believe there is one issue with the film – thar it needs to be longer.. Social media is filled with messages claiming that Rebel Moon features pacing issues, and that Netflix should have released the director’s cut, which it held back in favour of a grand unveiling in early 2024.
“I think Netflix holding back a longer — and from what I hear, better — edit really backfired,” one viewer wrote, with another adding: “For me there were some slight pacing issues but I imagine those will be more or less fixed in the longer cut.”
Other subscribers agreed, with one commenting on X/Twitter: “So when is the extended version of Rebel Moon coming out? I still have 30 minutes left but I already want a longer version.” Elsewhere, another chimed in: “Not releasing the full “director’s cut” to begin with on Netflix is just gross and greedy.”
Find more reactions below.
#RebelMoon shamelessly steals from Star Wars beat for beat so far but is it crazy I'm kind of digging this movie? An hour in I was actually hoping Part One was longer. This movie has potential, I'm interested to see how it turns out. pic.twitter.com/btgZB84D53
— FilmGamer.com (@FilmGamerOne) December 22, 2023
I couldn’t wait for #RebelMoon. Watched it and it wasn’t as great as the trailer I had watched soooooooo many times & got goosebumps for every single time. I REALLLLLLY wanted to love it! Maybe the longer version will do it. It’s just too short.
— JV (@j_voudren) December 23, 2023
The only real issue I have with @ZackSnyder's Rebel Moon – Part One: A Child of Fire is that it was clearly cut down from a longer, weirder, harder rated-R version that cut some characterizations short. But besides that, it rocks. I'll see it again on @netflix tonight! @rebelmoon
— Yoko Higuchi (@theYokoHiguchi) December 21, 2023
Meanwhile, Forbes wrote how Rebel Moon will “suffer” because of Netflix’s decision to hold back the director’s cut in order to whip up interesting among Snyder’s fanbase.
Snyder has been vocal about there being an existence of an extended cut of the film that’s not suitable for younger viewers. He has revealed that Netflix asked him to make a longer version of the film, and he said the result is “almost like a different movie”.
He told AP: “It’s not an ‘extended cut’ of this movie – it’s almost a different universe that [the new cut] lives in than this movie.”
Rebel Moon – Part One: A Child of Fire, which Snyder co-wrote with Kurt Johnstad and Shay Hatten, follows an army of warriors who take on the Imperium, a military governing a fictional galaxy threatening a farming colony on the moon. It stars Sofia Boutella, Djimon Hounsou, Ed Skrein, Michiel Huisman, Doona Bae, Ray Fisher, Charlie Hunnam and Anthony Hopkins.
The film is available to stream on Netflix now, and Part Two will arrive 19 April 2024.