'Batman vs Superman' spoilers: Film 'is not a Superman sequel,' Batman's personal hate towards Man of Steel revealed

A screengrab from the "Batman vs Superman: Dawn of Justice" trailer YouTube/Warner Bros Pictures

"Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice" was introduced as a follow-up to "Man of Steel" but Superman himself begs to disagree. In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, star Henry Cavill revealed that "as far as the individual character is concerned, this is not a Superman sequel."

"It's more of an introduction to Batman, an opening to 'Justice League,' and an expansion of the world that was created in Man of Steel," the actor explained. "There's plenty of time for individual Superman sequels," he went on to say.

Meanwhile, "Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice" director Zack Snyder said in a separate interview with Entertainment Weekly that the grand DC Comics flick will put emphasis on the fact that although superheroes work to save people, in the process many die too and that can't just go unpunished.

"I was surprised because that's the thesis of Superman for me, that you can't just have superheroes knock around and have there be no consequences," Snyder said. He adds the movie isn't like "other superhero movies where they joke about how basically no one's getting hurt."

This, in fact, is what swayed Ben Affleck into suiting up as the Dark Knight. This also serves as the premise for "Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice" and this, more importantly, is what instigated a warfare between the two—Batman's quest to make Superman pay for the consequences of his actions.

"One of the things I liked was Zack's idea of showing accountability and the consequences of violence and seeing that there are real people in those buildings," he said. "And in fact, one of those buildings was Bruce Wayne's building so he knew people who died in that Black Zero event," he added.

"Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice" is the most awaited DC Comics film with a stellar roster such as Gal Gadot (Wonder Woman), Jason Momoa (Aquaman), Jesse Eisenberg (Lex Luthor), Ezra Miller (The Flash), Ray Fisher (Cyborg) and Amy Adams (Lois Lane). It hits the cinemas March 25, 2016.

News
Poverty and destitution is driving our mental health crisis - and Christians must act
Poverty and destitution is driving our mental health crisis - and Christians must act

We must acknowledge Britain’s shameful poverty crisis as the major driver of mental illness in this country, says ex-gangster turned bishop.

MSP wants to expand Scotland's controversial abortion buffer zones
MSP wants to expand Scotland's controversial abortion buffer zones

Perhaps one day all of Scotland will be a buffer zone.

Why the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea and the Nicene Creed matters
Why the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea and the Nicene Creed matters

You might be wondering: what does a fourth-century church meeting have to do with me today? Actually, quite a lot.

Calvin Robinson loses priest licence after just 9 days in new denomination
Calvin Robinson loses priest licence after just 9 days in new denomination

The Reformed Episcopal Church has withdrawn its licence from Fr Calvin Robinson, the second such incident in the life of the controversial cleric in just five months.