I think that one ofDCU’s most popular choices forBatmaninBatman: The Brave and the Boldwould be better suited to a different character, whom he had already played decades previously. Few debates are more heated than who should don the cowl of Batman. As James Gunn and Peter Safranreboot the DCU, a tidal wave of fan theories and suggestions have proliferated online. One name keeps popping up – and while he’s got the looks, the build, the charisma, and a growing résumé, I can’t help but think he’d be even better returning to the other DC superhero he portrayed nearly 20 years ago.

TheDC Universe’s cinematic futureis in the midst of a hard reboot, and that means the casting slate has effectively been wiped clean – save for a few returning names fromthe DCEU timeline, like Viola Davis as Amanda Waller and John Cena as Peacemaker. With theDCU’sBatman: The Brave and the Boldon the way, the internet is swimming with picks for a new Dark Knight. One of the most popular is an actor who previously starred as another member of the Justice League – and perhaps should again.

Jack Reacher (Alan Ritchson) talking on a phone in Reacher Season 3 Ep 6

Alan Ritchson Is One Of The DC Universe’s Main Batman Fan Casts

Batman Will Appear In The DCU’s The Brave And The Bold

Alan Ritchson is one of the most popular fan-casting for the DCU’s Batman. He’s certainly in that sweet spot of superstardom – big enough to headline a series yet still rising enough tobring freshness to iconic roles. With his breakout as Jack Reacher in Amazon’sReacher, he’s now front and center in the public eye - audiences have taken notice.

Ritchson is tall, built like a tank, has intense screen presence, and, crucially, he knows how tocarry a quiet menace with just a look. These are all essential Batman ingredients. Online fan art, casting videos, and Reddit threads consistently rank him among the top choices to become the next Bruce Wayne in the DCU.

Alan Ritchson as Aimes in Fast X

Reacher has already given audiences a solid preview of how Ritchson could embody Batman’s brutal yet methodical approach to justice. He’s proven he can anchor a franchise, hold moral ambiguity, anddeliver action sequences with convincing weight. However, whileRitchson would absolutely be a great Batman, I think he could be an even better Aquaman.

Alan Ritchson Could Be A Better DCU Aquaman After Playing The Role Years Ago In Smallville

Long before Jason Momoa made the role his own in the DCEU, Alan Ritchson was Aquaman. He debuted as Arthur Curry inSmallvilleback in 2005, portraying the aquatic hero with a surfer’s confidence, righteous fury, and a hint of rogue charm. His version was less mythic god and more eco-warrior rebel – but it worked. For many, it was thefirst time Aquaman felt genuinely cool.

Though Ritchson’sSmallvillestint was brief, it left a lasting impression. His Aquaman wasn’t the butt of jokes or a watered-down sidekick. He had agency, attitude, and an edge thatmade him stand out among the show’s growing rosterof proto-Justice Leaguers.

The Brave and the Bold: Batman and Robin in the DC Comics written by Grant Morrison

Now, two decades later, with a more mature screen presence, deeper acting chops, and the physicality to rival any action star, Ritchson could take that early version of Aquaman and evolve it into something mythic. Something that blends both theregal gravitas and blue-collar gritthat Aquaman demands.

Why Alan Ritchson Can Be Aquaman In Smallville & The DC Universe

Superhero Movies Have Already Established Multiversal Variants

Recasting Ritchson as Aquaman in the new DCU wouldn’t just be a nod to nostalgia – it could be a genuinely smart creative choice. Indeed, bringing back an actor like Ritchson in a different but familiar role opens upcompelling narrative opportunities. He doesn’t need to play exactly the same Aquaman fromSmallville. In fact, it would be even more exciting if his new Aquaman were framed as a sort of multiversal variant – acknowledging his earlier role subtly, while crafting a distinct and modern version of the character.

Marvel has expertly proven this possibility with characters like J.K. Simmons’ J. Jonah Jameson in each of theSpider-Manfranchises, and Patrick Stewart joining the MCU as Charles Xavier inDoctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. The same face doesn’t need to mean the same history. It’s a wink to the audience that canbuild on their established knowledge.

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This would allow Ritchson to reinvent Aquaman in a new context: perhaps less god-king, more warrior-environmentalist;someone caught between two worldsbut with a sharper, leaner tone than Momoa’s rock-star take. He could bring a depth and grounded intensity to the role that complements what the DCU is trying to become – less myth-heavy melodrama, more emotionally complex storytelling.

A similar multiverse tactic hasalready proven successful forSmallville,when Tom Well had a cameo asSmallville’sClark in the CW’s Arrowverse. TheDCUcould follow suit and give one of DC’s most underrated actors the spotlight he deserves in a role he started but never got to finish. Batman may be the flashier casting, but Aquaman is where Ritchson could truly make waves.

Supergirl official teaser poster