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But the point of the scene is that he's willing to sacrifice his own life to protect his son from the rejection from mankind that he knows he'll have to encounter soon enough. Which he eventually does, of course.
Right. I know what the point was. And I'm saying it was stupid, completely unnecessary, and only changed things for the worse. In no way did Jonathan need to sacrifice himself for Clark in that particular instance, and in no way did Clark learn anything tangible by Jonathan doing so. Because Clark goes right on saving people, before he's "ready," which we know from Lois' reporting. And then when he finally gives himself up, as Superman, to the military, they're essentially like, "We're not quite sure about you" for a total of, like, 20 minutes, until they're working hand-in-hand with him a few scenes later. So not only did Clark never prove to us, the audience, that he was "ready," basically none of Jonathan's fears came true once he revealed himself to the world. Or, rather, they kind of sort of did for like 20 minutes and then that was that.
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The entire battle of Metropolis is literally that, Superman being forced into a situation where he has to reveal himself to the world and fight Zod to save the planet. Also the "this man is not our enemy" is the "celebratory" scene you wanted. I guess I'm confused why these don't work for you. Because they're in a different order in the movie?
I'm saying the realization that we're not alone in the universe was "wasted" on Zod revealing himself first, instead of the world realizing we're not alone via Superman appearing first. If Superman was revealed first, but did so saving people, the world would have likely/ultimately reacted positively to him. Or maybe there's of course some skepticism, but after a couple months/instances of him continuing to save people, there would definitely be a strong "pro" contingent, and Superman would have his "false victory," thinking his father was wrong (aka the pride before the fall). But then, when Zod finally showed up, and brought all kinds of threats and destruction, the world would likely turn on Superman, seeing as it's his fault Zod is there, and they would see both of them as freaks, finally proving Jonathan right. Then Superman would not only have to defeat Zod, he'd have to win back the people of Earth as well. To me, personally, that's so much more interesting and dramatic than "Even though we can't hurt you, we're going to detain and distrust you." "Actually, scratch that, we know it's only been 20 minutes but you seem like a pretty good guy, will you please help us take down this dude who's clearly only here because of you?"
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The climax and BEST part of the entire fight is when he has Zod in a headlock, and has to choose whether to kill Zod to save the family, or let him live and the people die. No super punching or super rage.
What, exactly, is the dilemma there? In what situation would Superman ever let Zod live? Especially at the expense of that family, if not billions of others? It was a no brainer. Sure, it was kind of sort of bitter sweet since Zod was the only other surviving Kryptonian, but the dude was also a psychopath and clearly needed to be handled. I guess Superman could have shown him mercy, and somehow sent him back to the Phantom Zone, but up until that point that's not at all the movie/situation Snyder had setup.