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TCTTS
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veryfuller said:

I'm not arguing he has to be put in a filmmaking box, I'm saying that he doesn't seem like a fit for this particular property, and I would not say he is the "perfect writer/director" for it. And irreverent humor is one thing....but he hasn't made a movie that has the tone of sincerity that I think any Superman film has to have.

He could end up knocking it out of the park, but I'm not going to be hopeful of that until I see him do it.

Fair enough.
TCTTS
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Brian Earl Spilner said:

I guess 7 billion isn't a lot.

So much of the charm of Superman is him saving individual people, or a group of people, here and there. It's saving them from everyday dangers, like a firefighter with super powers. More importantly, it's the balance of him having to keep his anonymity in Metropolis while *also* saving people in Metropolis. The dual, competing lives, etc. Yet we got none of that in Man of Steel. Yes, he saved the world, but that's something we needed to see him work up to in a sequel or something. Because immediately saving everyone had the effect of feeling like he saved no one, especially considering how much of Metropolis he and Zod leveled in the process.
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TCTTS said:

The Porkchop Express said:

TCTTS said:

Brian Earl Spilner said:

Yes. He got done dirty.

As for heart, empathy and emotion, Man of Steel had it in spades.


Where? Was it when Pa Kent committed suicide via tornado, which had zero effect on the plot, since Clark ended up becoming Superman anyway, and none of the things Pa was concerned about ended up happening, thus rendering his death pointless? I guess I did feel empathy for the people in Smallville when Superman got in a fight there and basically destroyed the town in the process, which, it turns out, was merely a warm up for destroying an entire metropolis a few days later, and saving almost no one in the process. That was very emotional for those people too, considering they lost everything, and clearly deserved a way better hero (not to mention, screenwriter) too.
It's not that he didn't want Clark to become Superman, it's that he was scared that the world would find out before Clark was ready, and thus tear him apart, or put him in a cage, or treat him like nothing more than a freak.

It was one of the dumbest deaths I've ever seen on screen. It would have made so much more sense for Jonathan to let Clark save him, then simply either ignore or explain away to the few people who would have actually seen Clark save him, as them being crazy or making sh*t up or whatever. Then, Jonathan could have continued to "protect"/guide Clark as an actual father is supposed to do, rather than being absent for the rest of his life/suicided via tornado. Especially after Clark had already used his powers in front of people in Smallville, and then continued to do so in the wake of Jonathan's death, hence Lois tracking down all those stories of a mystery hero saving people. The tornado thing, had Clark saved Jonathan, would have simply been another unprovable story in aseries of unprovable stories.

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.

The heart and empathy and emotion all start when he shows Clark the spaceship and young Clark says, "Can't we just keep pretending I'm your son?" and Costner starts crying as he says, "You ARE my son."

I'll give you that. Great moment.

The empathy is there when Clark restrains himself from beating up the bullies that mess with him at the fertilizer store. And the emotion is there when he saves the whole bus despite the one kid mocking him moments before.

Those were admittedly pretty good scenes too.

It's there when Jor-El is willing to sacrifice his own life to give Clark a chance millions of miles away.

Jor-El and everyone else on Krypton was about to die anyway. He sacrificed nothing, other than an extra day or two with his infant son.

When Clark is seeking to escape from himself, but fate keeps intervening. The scene on the oil tanker is the very definition of what Superman is. Selfless and unstoppable.

Good scene, but again, one that directly goes against the spirit of Jonathan's sacrifice, considering Clark still wasn't "ready" yet, whatever that means. In fact, nothing about Clark's character development ever signaled that was finally "ready" to be Superman. It needed that moment, yet it never came. Instead, he simply found the ship, tried on the suit, and then gave himself up to the military a few days later. I still can't believe that's how he was introduced to the world, after another alien (Zod) got the big reveal (to Earth) first. It would have been so much better to force Superman into a situation where he had to save people, thus revealing himself to the world in the process (Oh my gosh we're not alone.), everyone celebrates him (Dad was wrong!), only to THEN have Zod show up, and have everyone start questioning Superman/be pissed at him for bringing so much destruction, Superman's a freak, he doesn't belong here, etc (turns out, dad was right).

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?

When Zod threatens Hot Mrs. Kent, you get fantastic Superman RAGE and then he takes extreme pride in what his Earth parents taught him on how to control his senses when Zod loses his helmet and can't handle all the feedback.

I mean I guess it's kind of cool that he's learned to control his senses, but that doesn't do much of anything to save his town. All Superman does in that sequence to "save" anyone is to tell them to "Get inside." Super fights with nothing but super punches and super rage are ultimately so damn boring. Superman actually having to physically save people *while* fighting Zod would have been so much better, and so much truer to his character. Yet we get none of that, not even in Metropolis.

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.

I've said it before here. Superman is the hero I wish was real. He's not as cool as Batman or Ironman or Wolverine, but he's the guy we all could look up to and try to be more like (no offense to Jesus).

Agreed! But the Cavill version wasn't that person. While I think the Gunn version could very well be.

I really hope Gunn can give us something special. But when Superman is fighting Braniac's drone army while listening to "Dancing in the Moonlight" by Blue Harvest, don't say we didn't warn you.

Ha, I have faith that Gunn is smart enough not to simply make the Guardian of the Galaxy.

The Porkchop Express
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TCTTS said:

Brian Earl Spilner said:

I guess 7 billion isn't a lot.

So much of the charm of Superman is him saving individual people, or a group of people, here and there. It's saving them from everyday dangers, like a firefighter with super powers. More importantly, it's the balance of him having to keep his anonymity in Metropolis while *also* saving people in Metropolis. The dual, competing lives, etc. Yet we got none of that in Man of Steel. Yes, he saved the world, but that's something we needed to see him work up to in a sequel or something. Because immediately saving everyone had the effect of feeling like he saved no one, especially considering how much of Metropolis he and Zod leveled in the process.


The only thing wrong with this scene is I was mad Cavill had copied my workout routine.
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Cinco Ranch Aggie
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Now I really like that particular tweet regarding JG directing the new Superman movie. The reason why is his explanation, of his love for his dad in giving him the freedom to read comics that ultimately led to him making movies. I had the same reaction when the Wonder Woman director talked about her dad when she was going to do Rogue Squadron (and I'm not happy that has apparently been cancelled, but that's for another thread).

Superman has always been my favorite character from the comics. I didn't read comics as a kid, so I suppose it was more from watching Saturday morning cartoons like Super Friends. I liked Batman a lot, but Superman was the coolest of the cool. When Superman: The Movie came out in 1978, that would have been the best thing I'd ever laid eyes upon as an 11-year-old had it not been for Star Wars a year earlier.

Superman II is a movie that has not withstood the test of time, but whoo-boy, that was a fun movie in the summer of '81. Superman III was trash, and Superman IV: The Quest for Peace was absolute dog **** (one of the worst movies ever made, right along with Batman and Robin a decade later). Superman Returns was decent but ultimately seems a barely remembered movie.

Man of Steel. I loved the approach that Synder took with it, where it was not simply a retelling of the origin story laid out in a linear fashion. The Krypton in that movie blew away the 1978 Krypton. I really didn't find much to dislike about that one, as Porkchop's post above spells out very well. Yeah, Pa Kent's death was down right dumb. But that exchange of dialogue that Porkchop referenced was every bit the emotional weight that Porkchop suggests.

Batman Versus Superman: Dawn of Justice is a movie that most here love to take a crap on. I'm not on that list. Yeah, it's a dark movie. Yeah, "Martha". Yeah, Jesse Eisenberg. I think it goes back to 4-year-old me, seeing cheap plastic cups for Slurpee's at the local 7-11 featuring DC characters, and the two most prized cups that I had was Superman and Batman. Seeing those two sharing the screen just brought a smile to my face. And then for good measure, throw in Wonder Woman's big screen debut.

Justice League. The version of the movie that came out in 2017 was dog crap, but I believe that Zach Synder's Justice League showed that there the bones of a good movie were there all along. Warner Brothers did what a lot of studios do with some movies, I believe, and made edits and cuts that should not have been made, resulting in a very disjointed story with a ****ty villain and some hero characters that were just there. In the latter version, Superman's return and joining the battle against Steppenwolf was fantastic, and prompted me to get the score just for that piece of music.

For all the criticisms of Synder's dark movies (they were dark), there is humor sprinkled throughout each of them. Near the end of JL, we get to see Clark's Martha moving back in to her house. Clark asks Bruce about that, to which Bruce says, I bought the bank.

My thoughts on the actors portraying the Man of Steel - no one will ever touch Christopher Reeve even though I loved Henry Cavill in the role. Brandon Routh was alright, but I've already said I consider that movie to be mostly forgettable.

Scores - I really enjoy listening to Hans Zimmers' work in Synder's first two Superman-centric movies, but since John Williams > Hans Zimmer, I much prefer JW's Superman theme. It's right up there with Star Wars, Indiana Jones, and Jaws.

Back to James Gunn's Superman movie, I can just about guarantee this movie will blow people away. Why's that? Superman is likely one of the most well-known characters ever created. So look what JG did with a bunch of characters from a series that only true comic book fans probably knew much about with Guardians of the Galaxy - he made each of those characters house-hold names while turning in two fantastic movies.
Brian Earl Spilner
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TCTTS said:

Brian Earl Spilner said:

I guess 7 billion isn't a lot.

So much of the charm of Superman is him saving individual people, or a group of people, here and there. It's saving them from everyday dangers, like a firefighter with super powers. More importantly, it's the balance of him having to keep his anonymity in Metropolis while *also* saving people in Metropolis. The dual, competing lives, etc. Yet we got none of that in Man of Steel. Yes, he saved the world, but that's something we needed to see him work up to in a sequel or something. Because immediately saving everyone had the effect of feeling like he saved no one, especially considering how much of Metropolis he and Zod leveled in the process.


It sounds like you just wanted a remake of Superman: The Movie. (Aka Superman Returns)

Why reboot it if it's basically the same movie, just better looking? The Superman as the ultimate boy scout thing had been done for 5 movies at that point.
Claude!
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Have you read the "Superman For All Seasons" graphic novel? I think it tracks, at least in spirit, a lot of what you would've preferred to see in a Superman story.
C@LAg
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Brian Earl Spilner said:





It sounds like you just wanted a remake of Superman: The Movie. (Aka Superman Returns)

Why reboot it if it's basically the same movie, just better looking? The Superman as the ultimate boy scout thing had been done for 5 movies at that point.
i do not know.

people lap up the same boring (cliched at this point) bruce wayne/batman in every single movie.

at this point the bruce wayne character is entirely superfluous.

neither bruce nor batman show any real growth and ability to move on. textbook status quo characters
Brian Earl Spilner
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The thing with Batman is it's rarely about him. Give him some great villains and people will keep watching.

It's why people love The Dark Knight.

The Batman did feel a bit more Bruce Wayne heavy, and also leaned way more into the detective side than anyone else had done in a live action movie, so that set it apart. Basically a noir thriller that happened to star Batman.
The Porkchop Express
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Claude! said:

Have you read the "Superman For All Seasons" graphic novel? I think it tracks, at least in spirit, a lot of what you would've preferred to see in a Superman story.
That's a gorgeous graphic novel. I love the reveal when he tells his parents that Lana has known for decades that he's Superman and just kept it a secret.
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C@LAg
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Brian Earl Spilner said:

The thing with Batman is it's rarely about him. Give him some great villains and people will keep watching.

It's why people love The Dark Knight.

The Batman did feel a bit more Bruce Wayne heavy, and also leaned way more into the detective side than anyone else had done in a live action movie, so that set it apart. Basically a noir thriller that happened to star Batman.
that was my point. bruce wayne is irrelevant. he is a stagnant character with no depth outside of "muh parents died". he cannot move past that and his general moping provides almost nothing of value for storytelling.

batman is better, but not by much. he too is pretty much unyielding and unchanging and really only serves every story as the foil to the much more interesting villains.

with the porous and revolving jail systems, neither character actually does anything good for Gotham City or its people

if he chose either to be BW OR Batman he could actually achieve something.

spend 100% of his time as BW spending his hundreds of billions to improve GC

or

devote 100% of his time to Batman, give up his stupid code, and work to really eliminate the criminals of GC.

but no. we are stuck in a boring merry go round of status quo.
TCTTS
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Quote:

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.

Quote:

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?"

Quote:

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.
Brian Earl Spilner
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I'll be honest, it just sounds like because it's not the EXACT Superman movie you would've made, you're making it out to be something far worse than it is. There's plenty of emotion and heart in the movie, but you dismiss it because you didn't like certain scenes or decisions.

It's not a perfect movie by any means, but it's far better than you give it credit for, imo.
Madmarttigan
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TC is in a **** on things mood today it seems.

Man of Steel is by far and away the best Superman movie. Period. I'm with you BES.
TCTTS
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Brian Earl Spilner said:

I'll be honest, it just sounds like because it's not the EXACT Superman movie you would've made, you're making it out to be something far worse than it is. There's plenty of emotion and heart in the movie, but you dismiss it because you didn't like certain scenes or decisions.

It's not a perfect movie by any means, but it's far better than you give it credit for, imo.

Eh, I disagree. Because mine aren't personal preferences based on a whim, or some random thing I wanted to see adapted from the comics. They're personal preferences based on what I felt would have increased the drama, given us a truer Superman, and made sense of things that made no sense. I didn't want a certain *kind* of Superman movie, I wanted a *better* Superman movie. Don't get me wrong, most of the casting choices were inspired, the sequences on Krypton were cool, and the score was incredible. But it's a muddy, contradictory movie, with an inconsistent tone, and there's a reason they didn't make a direct sequel to it.
TCTTS
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Madmarttigan said:

TC is in a **** on things mood today it seems.

Man of Steel is by far and away the best Superman movie. Period. I with you BES.

Ha, no, I've been sh*tting on this movie since 2013.
Brian Earl Spilner
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Brian Earl Spilner
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Claude! said:

Have you read the "Superman For All Seasons" graphic novel? I think it tracks, at least in spirit, a lot of what you would've preferred to see in a Superman story.


Not really a comics guy, the only graphic novel I've read is Watchmen. I'll check it out.
jeffk
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I thought something important had happened.
rhutton125
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It remains to be seen if Gunn can make a good superhero film without characters bonding over booze in some kind of bar/party/celebration scene. Happens in GotG, The Suicide Squad and Peacemaker.
The Porkchop Express
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Brian Earl Spilner said:

Claude! said:

Have you read the "Superman For All Seasons" graphic novel? I think it tracks, at least in spirit, a lot of what you would've preferred to see in a Superman story.


Not really a comics guy, the only graphic novel I've read is Watchmen. I'll check it out.
IF you read that one, you have to read Red Son too.
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AgfromHOU
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Check out Superman: Up in the Sky.

It just came out a few years ago and is a great Superman story. For a longer arc, the War World saga arc that just ended a few months ago is quintessential Superman.
Aggies76
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TCTTS said:

Let's liven it up a bit, let's laugh again at a situation or two Clark finds himself in with Lois, and then let's use that humor to set up genuine, affecting emotion in the ways Gunn is so incredibly skilled at doing.


This would work for me as long as it doesn't get campy and borderline silly the way the later Christopher Reeves movies did.

I like what Snyder was doing with Superman, in his words "taking him out of the comic book and putting him into the real world". The world would be scared to death of an alien like this until he earned their trust. I think this is where Snyder was going but he got off course somehow. I like Superman as a serious character and I hope Gunn doesn't take him too far the other way.
TCTTS
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I think Gunn will simply make him more charming, not goofy or emo or anything like that. And I just don't see how he won't treat the character/world with reverence. He knows the tone it needs to be. Granted, it won't be nearly as serious or as dour as Snyder's iteration, but that doesn't mean it'll be wacky or slapstick either. Everything Gunn is saying is pointing to something thoughtful and optimistic, which is exactly what the character should be.
Aggies76
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I think you are right about most of this but I would be surprised if Gunn's new Superman is more charming than Cavil's version.
TCTTS
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I thought Cavill absolutely *looked* the part, more than maybe any actor ever will, but I honestly thought his portrayal was dry as hell. It wasn't *bad* by any means, and at times his Superman was quite good. But there was zero difference between his Clark and his Superman, there was no struggle in juggling identities, no nuance, no real pining after Lois, no existential inner turmoil as he fell in love with with her, etc. He was just one-note Mr. Stoic for three movies, who happen to let a smile seep through once in a blue moon. And again, it was a good note for what it was, but Clark/Superman can and should be so much more complex as a character than what we got in the Snyderverse.
Sapper Redux
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Aggies76 said:

TCTTS said:

Let's liven it up a bit, let's laugh again at a situation or two Clark finds himself in with Lois, and then let's use that humor to set up genuine, affecting emotion in the ways Gunn is so incredibly skilled at doing.


This would work for me as long as it doesn't get campy and borderline silly the way the later Christopher Reeves movies did.

I like what Snyder was doing with Superman, in his words "taking him out of the comic book and putting him into the real world". The world would be scared to death of an alien like this until he earned their trust. I think this is where Snyder was going but he got off course somehow. I like Superman as a serious character and I hope Gunn doesn't take him too far the other way.


Snyder seems incapable of having earnest, hopeful heroes in his films. They have to either be stoic or cynical or dupes. I don't have a problem with a serious Superman, but serious Superman would still be kind and hopeful and a bit too trusting of human nature. I think Cavill managed this to an extent, though Snyder still played it as a form of cynicism.
TCTTS
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This.
The Porkchop Express
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TCTTS said:

I thought Cavill absolutely *looked* the part, more than maybe any actor ever will, but I honestly thought his portrayal was dry as hell. It wasn't *bad* by any means, and at times his Superman was quite good. But there was zero difference between his Clark and his Superman, there was no struggle in juggling identities, no nuance, no real pining after Lois, no existential inner turmoil as he fell in love with with her, etc. He was just one-note Mr. Stoic for three movies, who happen to let a smile seep through once in a blue moon. And again, it was a good note for what it was, but Clark/Superman can and should be so much more complex as a character than what we got in the Snyderverse.


So the real dilemma breaks down to you having terrible taste.
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fig96
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The Porkchop Express said:

Brian Earl Spilner said:

Claude! said:

Have you read the "Superman For All Seasons" graphic novel? I think it tracks, at least in spirit, a lot of what you would've preferred to see in a Superman story.


Not really a comics guy, the only graphic novel I've read is Watchmen. I'll check it out.
IF you read that one, you have to read Red Son too.
Red Son is fantastic.

I didn't love Man of Steel or the general portrayal of Superman in that and the following films, primarily because they tried to go sort of dark and brooding and it just didn't work. I never bought into the toneSuperman is truth and justice and apple pie, something that doesn't generally play well with the current superhero landscape.

I still feel like the ideal solution is a standalone retro Superman. Set it in a nondefined 50s/60s art deco Metropolis where he has to save the city from a mad scientist with some giant robots before encountering Luthor or Braniac or another classic villain.
TCTTS
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fig96 said:

The Porkchop Express said:

Brian Earl Spilner said:

Claude! said:

Have you read the "Superman For All Seasons" graphic novel? I think it tracks, at least in spirit, a lot of what you would've preferred to see in a Superman story.


Not really a comics guy, the only graphic novel I've read is Watchmen. I'll check it out.
IF you read that one, you have to read Red Son too.
Red Son is fantastic.

I didn't love Man of Steel or the general portrayal of Superman in that and the following films, primarily because they tried to go sort of dark and brooding and it just didn't work. I never bought into the toneSuperman is truth and justice and apple pie, something that doesn't generally play well with the current superhero landscape.

I still feel like the ideal solution is a standalone retro Superman. Set it in a nondefined 50s/60s art deco Metropolis where he has to save the city from a mad scientist with some giant robots before encountering Luthor or Braniac or another classic villain.

This is exactly why Gunn's version sounds so good and so spot-on...

Quote:

Superman: Legacy tells the story of Superman's journey to reconcile his Kryptonian heritage with his human upbringing as Clark Kent of Smallville, Kansas. He is the embodiment of truth, justice and the American way, guided by human kindness in a world that sees kindness as old-fashioned.

THAT'S some great characterization right there, which instantly hints at conflict in an organic, character-centric way, and something I hardly saw in Cavill's version. Cavill's was a cynical-seeming Superman in a dark, cynical world. And what's the fun in that? Where's the characterization? Where's the conflict? Cavill's Superman just seemed dour and brooding the whole time and only seemed to be revered because he had super powers, not because of what he stood for ethically/thematically. While he was certainly on the *side* of good, he didn't really stand for anything - like truth, justice, and the American way - especially in the face of a society that was the opposite of him, or found those values to be old-fashioned.
TCTTS
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The Porkchop Express said:

TCTTS said:

I thought Cavill absolutely *looked* the part, more than maybe any actor ever will, but I honestly thought his portrayal was dry as hell. It wasn't *bad* by any means, and at times his Superman was quite good. But there was zero difference between his Clark and his Superman, there was no struggle in juggling identities, no nuance, no real pining after Lois, no existential inner turmoil as he fell in love with with her, etc. He was just one-note Mr. Stoic for three movies, who happen to let a smile seep through once in a blue moon. And again, it was a good note for what it was, but Clark/Superman can and should be so much more complex as a character than what we got in the Snyderverse.


So the real dilemma breaks down to you having terrible taste.

It has nothing to do with taste, seeing as I presented my reasoning in a pretty matter-of-fact manner. Cavill's Superman simply didn't embody a number of things Superman usually is or deals with. I get that they wanted to try something new, but stripping Superman of some of the characterizations and situations that made him who he was for 75 years wasn't the way to go.
fig96
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That blurb sounds spot on and is an interesting take on trying to insert a more classic Superman into a modern world. I'd admittedly a Gunn fan and I'm really intrigued to how he approaches this.
jeffk
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Y'all want to come over and watch Smallville?
The Porkchop Express
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I was just teasing you, hence the smileys and Willie's. I respect your opinion but completely disagree with it. I. Think you're missing a ton of subtle things in his performance but you've had your opinion for a decade and I've had mine for the same length of time so probably no real point in continuing.
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