David Ayer claims his original plan for ‘Suicide Squad’ was "beaten into a comedy" by studios bosses.
The 52-year-old director helmed the much-maligned superhero movie – which starred the likes of Will Smith, Margot Robbie, and Jared Leto – but David now admits the film’s final cut wasn’t what he originally planned to create.
In response to comments about the ‘Suicide Squad’ trailer, David explained on Twitter: "This trailer nailed the tone and intention of the film I made. Methodical. Layered. Complex, beautiful and sad. After the BVS reviews shell shocked the leadership at the time, and the success of Deadpool – My soulful drama was beaten into a "comedy" (sic)"
David previously confessed that making the 2016 movie was a "tough experience".
The filmmaker – whose previous credits include ‘Harsh Times’, ‘Street Kings’ and ‘Fury’ – also revealed his confidence was dented by the harsh critical response.
He said: "I got some supercharged muscles on ‘Suicide Squad’, from making a film so big, but it was a rough experience. A tough experience. It became a bit of a slog at the end.
"It was an incredible financial success but I got flayed by the critics and that’s scary, that’s painful. And it shook my confidence as a storyteller."
David also admitted he wishes he made The Joker a bigger part of his film.
He tweeted: "Wish I had a time machine. I’d make Joker the main villain and engineer a more grounded story. I have to take the good and bad and learn from it. I love making movies and I love DC [Comics]."