James Gunn has again stoked speculation over the direction of his newly launched DC Universe, hinting that the sprawling cinematic plan revolves around an unexpected figure and telling fans to “watch the next season of Peacemaker” if they want real clues. “I think I do know whose story it is,” he said, adding only that “it’s not what anyone would guess.”
The show he singled out returns on 21 August with eight episodes and, according to recent trailers screened exclusively in cinemas, will see John Cena’s anti‑hero hopping across parallel realities as he and his team attempt to replace counterparts in a different timeline. Viewers can expect at least one “really, really, really big cameo,” Gunn has teased, while publicity materials confirm the arrival of characters such as Hawkgirl and Guy Gardner.
Gunn’s remarks land less than a week after Superman—the first feature in the interconnected slate—opened to an estimated $122 million domestic haul and $95 million overseas, a start industry analysts call a crucial litmus test for Warner Bros. Discovery’s revamped superhero strategy. The film, positioned as the cornerstone of Chapter One: “Gods and Monsters,” cost roughly $225 million and carries an 83 percent fresh rating on review aggregators, although critics remain split on its lighter tone and a late‑act decision that sees the Man of Steel kill a genetic duplicate.
That choice has reignited a decade‑old debate about the character’s moral code—one Gunn attempted to defuse days ago by explaining that the DCU “isn’t about telling one long story” so much as “creating a universe” where individual arcs can challenge tradition. Yet the filmmaker, who balances studio chief duties with hands‑on writing and directing, insists the bigger narrative is quietly aligning toward a crossover event unlike the conventional multiverse spectacles fans expect.
Even so, outside voices are already weighing the risks. One prominent radio host labeled Superman “pure torture,” while Forbes’ early pan called the script “overstuffed.” Others praise what an Entertainment Weekly profile described as Gunn’s “cohesive yet flexible” blueprint, noting that future projects such as Creature Commandos and Lanterns are designed to dovetail with themes seeded in Peacemaker.
Whether audiences embrace the slow‑burn mystery Gunn is knitting together will come into sharper focus when Peacemaker returns next month, armed with the first real hints of who—rather than what—this new DC saga is ultimately about.





















































