Zack Snyder is continuing to fuel conversation around his DC films with a string of new posts that all seem to point back to his portrayal of Superman.
Two days ago, Snyder posted “The Trinity.”
One day later, he followed with, “Where sorrow met hope, and love paid the ultimate price.”
Now on Easter Sunday, Snyder has shared another image of Superman with the simple message: “Happy Easter.”
Taken together, the posts are hard to miss as a reference to Snyder’s long-running use of religious imagery tied to Superman, especially the Christ symbolism that ran through Man of Steel, Batman v Superman, and Zack Snyder’s Justice League.
Zack Snyder posts Superman on Easter
Snyder’s Easter Sunday post features Superman floating above the Earth with his arms extended, paired with the caption, “Happy Easter.”
On its own, the image is striking. But coming right after his previous posts, it reads as another clear callback to how Snyder framed Superman as a savior figure throughout his DC movies.
The earlier posts set it up
Just a day earlier, Snyder shared the caption, “Where sorrow met hope, and love paid the ultimate price,” alongside imagery that strongly evoked death, sacrifice, and mourning.
Before that, he posted “The Trinity,” bringing Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman back into the spotlight once again.
The progression makes the Easter post stand out even more. It does not feel random. It feels like Snyder is deliberately continuing the themes of sacrifice, death, and resurrection that were central to his version of Superman.
Snyder’s Superman has always leaned into Christ symbolism
Snyder’s take on Superman has long been tied to religious imagery. From Man of Steel to Batman v Superman and then Zack Snyder’s Justice League, his films repeatedly framed Kal-El as more than just a superhero.
The death of Superman, the mourning that followed, and the eventual return of the character all played into that approach.
With these latest Easter posts, Snyder appears to be leaning back into those themes in a way that fans immediately picked up on — a rebirth.







