Granted, that’s what we were told by the trades who, in turn, were told by the studio.
But what if that’s exactly what Matt Reeves and Warner Bros. want everyone to think?
After following Matt Reeves’ reveal of the main cast via Twitter/X late last week, I am more convinced that we might be witnessing one of the best bits of controlled misdirection in modern Batman filmmaking. And let me be clear: If Reeves and WB are running a ruse, BOF is absolutely here for it.
Reeves doesn’t do predictable. He doesn’t do fan‑service casting. He doesn’t hand out plot details like candy. This is the filmmaker who delivered a grounded detective noir in an era obsessed with multiverses and nostalgia cameos. He and Mattson Tomlin have described the sequel as “new and dangerous,” and nothing about that phrase screams “obvious villain choices you guessed on day one.”
So let’s talk about the three most talked-about casting additions: Sebastian Stan, Scarlett Johansson, and Charles Dance.
Sebastian Stan
The moment his casting hit, the internet said he was Harvey Dent. The trades even reported it as such. And sure, he could be Dent. But that’s exactly the kind of assumption Reeves would let people run with while he’s been quietly crafting something far more interesting. Stan might be Dent… or he might be someone we aren’t even discussing because we’re too busy chasing the shiny object.
In a Gotham state of mind… Welcome. 🦇🦇 pic.twitter.com/K3bCD83zCI
— Matt Reeves (@mattreevesLA) May 14, 2026
Scarlett Johansson
This one is even more interesting.
The prevailing assumption is that Johansson is playing Gilda Dent, neatly pairing her with Stan’s presumed Harvey. Again, it was reported by the trades. It’s tidy. It’s logical. It’s exactly the kind of narrative symmetry we fans love to latch onto.
And that’s why I’m now totally questioning it.
Johansson is a powerhouse talent. Reeves wouldn’t bring her in just to play a wife, nor would she take such a role. Yes, Gilda Dent is a compelling character, but I don’t see Reeves and Tomlinson going down the THE LONG HALLOWEEN/Holiday Killer road. Sure, she could be Gilda…but she could just as easily be someone completely different. Someone tied to the deeper Gotham conspiracy Reeves has been building since the first film. Someone whose identity is being intentionally masked by the “Gilda” assumption.
If Reeves wanted to hide a major character in plain sight, letting the internet convince itself she’s Gilda Dent is the perfect cover.
Next exit, Gotham… Welcome. 🦇🦇 pic.twitter.com/d0zSwOT7bm
— Matt Reeves (@mattreevesLA) May 14, 2026
Charles Dance
And then there’s the rumor that Charles Dance is playing Christopher Dent, Harvey’s abusive father.
Now, Dance could absolutely crush that role — the cold, domineering patriarch who shapes Harvey’s trauma. But again, that’s the obvious. The expected. It fits too neatly into our fan expectations after learning that ScarJo is Gilda and Stan is Harvey.
Which makes it exactly the kind of assumption Reeves would let people run wild with (and unwittingly helped by the trades), while he’s quietly setting up something far more unexpected.
Dance could be Christopher Dent… Or he could be someone far more dangerous. Someone tied to the Court of Owls, perhaps? Someone connected to Gotham’s old money. Someone whose reveal would hit harder if everyone walked in expecting “Harvey’s asshole dad.”
Out of the shadows… Welcome. 🦇🦇 pic.twitter.com/Yf6hhfbErq
— Matt Reeves (@mattreevesLA) May 14, 2026
And honestly? I hope that’s exactly what’s happening.
Because this — the mystery, the misdirection, the filmmaker staying ten steps ahead of the speculation machine — is what makes following a director‑driven Batman project exciting. Let the rumor/clicbait sites do their thing. Let the internet think it cracked the code. If Reeves is playing chess while everyone else is scrolling TikTok, that’s a win for the movie and a win for fans who want to be surprised.
BOF has been covering Batman on film for nearly 30 years, and if there’s one thing we’ve learned, it’s this:
Never assume the first answer is the right one — especially when a great filmmaker is holding all the cards.
And that’s why I will always support filmmaker-driven solo Batman movies over studio/producer-driven shared universe ones.
If Reeves and WB pulled off a casting ruse? If Stan, Johansson, and Dance aren’t who we thought they are? If the real twist is happening right now, before a single frame of the film has been shown?
Good. Bring it on. BOF approves.
On the other hand, perhaps a double ruse mind-f*ck is happening as we speak, and they are all playing the characters the trades reported, and we thought they were all along.
Good. Bring it on. BOF approves. – Bill “Jett” Ramey

