Okay -- 45 minutes into Rebel Moon Director's Cut.
While a viewer's response is partially going to be based on whether they even like Snyder's typical tone, and there's some typical and excessive Snyder garnishes (the violence is pretty explicit here), the RMDC p1 is like an actual professional film. It lets the scenes breathe, there's actual plot and character arcs. The first 20 minutes is actually spent framing Atticus and Aris as characters, which help explain what we see later, and what follows in the farming village actually shows Kora as more nuanced and conflicted about what she wants -- aside from her being terrified of being found. Gunnar is kind of a pragmatic opportunist who doesn't intend harm but actually causes harm -- and it's clear he's interested in Kora but not comfortable enough to actually make an overt bid.
The grain thing makes more sense, as in part it seems like Atticus has a secret purpose in coming to their location in terms of finding the rebels Devra and Darian (the 20 minute prelude is also Atticus laying waste to a capital city in order to locate them, so it's believable he would come here as well since I suspect he was aware that someone had been selling them food). Them asking for all the food is not just to "feed his men" but can also be read as an opportunity to prevent the rebels from having those resources + punish whoever in the area was selling them the grain. Also, it gives a reason for them to actually SEEK the help of Devra and Darian later in the film, versus just being random people they go to for help; the village had helped them, now maybe they want to provide some support?
There is also actual world detail / building stuff that makes the universe feel a little more fleshed-out. I kinda want to know what exactly the priests are doing with the teeth and the picture of the missing princess. It's kinda creepy; every death adds to the tableau.
Unbelievable, really? Like, things actually make more sense? The scenes breathe? I think some of the violence is gratuitous but it also is simply describing Atticus' brutality and making him even more intimidating as a villain (he's a pretty sick pup); and the sex scene (while probably more than some viewers want to see) still was paced well and kept suggesting that Kora has some really bad scars on her lower back and side -- I kept straining to see the extent of it and Snyder just teases you and never quite shows enough or long enough for it to register in detail how badly she's been wounded. Also, it establishes how ambivalent Kora actually is to having a relationship and/or "officially becoming part of the community" ... mainly because of her past trauma.
Anyway, I can't tell whether Dody Dorn also edited the Director's Cut, but that first assembly that was trotted out on Netflix barely deserved to be called a movie. I'm not even sure if I can credit it as being "amateur," it was so terrible. At least this (so far) is a film that could have released in a theater aside from its length, and although it's not high art, it's actually been enjoyable so far.
I think it actually feels more polished than the storywriting on Star Wars. Which is sad. It's just not as marketable (esp to kids).
Netflix sucks for forcing them to make a shitty earlier cut. Pretty unbelievable how bad that was, and it ruins enthusiasm for the full films. This is getting close to the bastardized Justice League (Whedon) vs Snyder's actual version that came out years later.
edit: Finished the first part. It's definitely watchable now, if long -- I took a few breaks. I'm having trouble remembering how specific moments matched up with the earlier version. But Ray Fisher is still the GOAT. And of course always give us more Bae Doona.
I think there were a few missed opportunities (in how a scene might have played out), and at times people talk too on-the-nose, they would understate things rather than wrapping it all up in a nice philosophical bow.
But I like that there are unique features of this universe now that I'm kind of fascinated by, with the gigantic mechanical personification of the Dreadnought, the teeth thing and the priests, the staff also had meaning. The characters have backstories developed more which helps position them for later parts of the story. Jimmy actually is more fascinating in this version, he's like a robot reinventing himself after finding kindness in the support of Sam. etc.