James Gunn, the filmmaker guiding Warner Bros. Discovery’s reset of DC cinema, told followers on Threads that the new continuity will treat death as irreversible: “In the DCU, if you die, you’re dead.”
The declaration came after a fan asked if Princess Ilana Rostovic—killed in the first season of the forthcoming animated series Creature Commandos—might be revived. Gunn answered that resurrection “undermines stakes,” adding that devices such as the Lazarus Pit would appear only when a story is built around their consequences.
ScreenRant described the policy as a long-needed injection of peril, while ComicBook.com highlighted the director’s insistence that even the Lazarus Pit will not become a narrative shortcut. Gunn’s stance marks a break from the previous DC Extended Universe, where Superman returned to life one film after his funeral, and echoes the uncompromising casualties he staged in The Suicide Squad (2021).
Cameras are rolling on Superman, starring David Corenswet and Rachel Brosnahan, in Atlanta and Cleveland; the film opens 11 July 2025 as the first live-action entry in Chapter One: Gods and Monsters. Set photos obtained by People show Corenswet in the classic suit on Cleveland streets, a location helped by Ohio’s recent $44 million production-credit package.
Analysts suggest the hard-line mortality rule could distinguish DC from Marvel, where time travel and multiverses routinely undo fatalities, and reinforce Gunn’s pledge that each project will be “director-driven yet interconnected.” With post-production already under way on Creature Commandos, viewers will see whether “dead is dead” when the series lands on Max later this year—months before Gunn’s Superman takes flight.