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In public use, a director's cut is the director's preferred version of a film (or video game, television episode, music video, commercial, etc.).It is generally considered a marketing term to represent the version of a film the director prefers, and is usually used as contrast to a theatrical release where the director did not have final cut privilege and did not agree with what was released.
The Final Cut was re-released on Ultra HD Blu-ray on September 5, 2017, (one month prior to the theatrical release of Blade Runner 2049). This release includes standard Blu-ray editions of The Final Cut along with the US theatrical cut, the international cut, and the Director's Cut, as well as the Dangerous Days documentary on DVD.
Donnie Darko: The Director's Cut is a 2004 re-cut version of Richard Kelly's directorial debut, Donnie Darko. A critical success but a commercial failure when first released in 2001, Donnie Darko grew in popularity through word-of-mouth due to strong DVD sales and regular midnight screenings across the United States.
Director Forman later introduced an R-rated version with nearly 20 minutes of restored footage, which was released by the studios as a Director's Cut on September 24, 2002. [48] From 2002 to 2025, the Director's Cut was the only widely available release. [49] It is not clear whether the Director's Cut represents Forman's actual artistic vision.
Fans disappointed by 2017 film "Justice League" will finally be able to see the original director's vision for the movie that united several DC Comics superheroes on screen for the first time.
From 2010 onwards, the "Director's Cut", along with various new extras, was released internationally on Blu-ray. [23] [24] In 2014, the original 308-minute miniseries, also known as The Original Uncut Version, was released on Blu-ray in Germany with optional English audio and subtitles. [25]
Zack Snyder's Justice League (colloquially referred to as the Snyder Cut) is the 2021 director's cut of the 2017 American superhero film Justice League, the fifth film set within the DC Extended Universe (DCEU) based on the team of the same name appearing in DC publications and the follow-up to Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016).
Two versions were shown in the film's 1982 theatrical release: the U.S. theatrical version (117 minutes), [1] known as the original version or Domestic Cut (released on Betamax, CED Videodisc and VHS in 1983, and on LaserDisc in 1987), and the International Cut (117 minutes), also known as the "Criterion Edition" or "uncut version", which ...