Limonade
Sidekick
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Isn't that Batman?
Jinx
Isn't that Batman?
Isn't that Batman?
Batman uses a specific type of intimidating tactic.
Intimidating with power is a trait shared by many superheroes.
It's part of the way Superman operated when he was first created, and he still does it from time to time.
Not the best scene in the movie to make that case, if you ask me.
Superman's presence and reputation precedes him in doing just that though.
He doesn't have to go to such extreme lengths as he is nigh indestructable and all powerful.
Batman has to though, as he's merely a man trying to be something more.
It wasn't, though, or I wouldn't have had to ask you to clarify.
It's actually at least two instances. Zod and the Kryptonian criminals and Doomsday.
And I haven't ignored anything.
You seem to think people disagree with you on the point that Superman doesn't usually kill. No one is disagreeing that Superman usually doesn't kill, only that him having to kill a few characters is part of his modern mythology.
Google "Superman kills Zod in the comics" or the storyline called "The Price".
It's a very well known part of Superman's modern lore. He literally executes the Kryptonian criminals with Kryptonite.
This event was followed by an equally famous storyline called SUPERMAN: EXHILE, where Superman felt so bad about what he had done that he left Earth. EXHILE includes a very well known storyline with the villain Mongul where Superman fought in gladitorial matches on Warworld, a storyline that was adapted on Justice League the animated series, and has been adapted on SUPERGIRL, and which later informed the Superman AND Green Lantern mythologies, because Mongul returned after Superman's death and return and sought to destroy Superman's adopted homeworld as part of the Reign of the Superman/Return of Superman storyline.
Can't say I can garner any sympathy for a terrorist who was about to shoot a woman in the head.
Structurally, it's more or less the best place to do it, because this scene introduces the concept of Superman operating unilaterally and somewhat recklessly. That kicks off the entire conflict that his character deals with throughout the movie.
As the comics and various other media have shown, some criminals aren't afraid of that and think he's a boy scout and all bluster until he shows them otherwise.
Batman uses a different set of tactics because he doesn't have the power to intimidate the way Superman does.
It's less about who is doing the intimidating, and more about the person being intimidated, and what they respond to.
I'm not saying the story didn't happen, or that other more important stories didn't happen after it, but The Price just isn't key or well known, or else you would have jut said, "The Price" and no further explanation is needed. BH/HHH wouldn't have had to post pictures, because 90% of the forum would be shocked I didn't know about it already, and I would know about it, because it would have come up SOMEWHERE in the dozens of top ten superman stories I've seen from all kinds of Superman fans. But it hasn't, because it's not. Exile is less obscure, sure, but Death of Superman doesn't reference The Path (even if it references Exile).
But, to go back to the core of the argument here, The Price is a full story, not just a moment. Zod slays an entire planet, and leaves Superman powerless. If such a thing had inspired Man of Steel, the execution would have gone over much better, because it puts Superman in not just a morally justifiable position, but an empathetic one. The fact that such a superior version of the feeling Snyder attempted exists, and that, if he was referencing it, so profoundly misunderstood the value of it, that he felt like the superman coming out of that was a hero to celebrate instead of a pariah to exile.
We're straying off the point I am making.
It does no favors to the audience to portray a reckless Superman and then go on this woe-is-me attitude only to go on to say, "Well that wasn't me..."
The only reason I supplemented an alternative structure to the movie was to simple prove a way to avoid these types of discussions and have EVERYONE on board with this Superman.
Now if you're making the argument that we're not suppose to be on board with him at this point. Then fine, whatever... Superman in this film is morally unethical and no different than the people he stops.
His sacrifice at the end of the movie is merely a cheap ploy to get someone to say, "He sacrificed himself... so he's not that heartless."
saying then clarify why should we believe the terrorist is alive and is no longer important to the overall story for Superman.
Because it's not important for the story that he is dead or alive.
If that's not what you're saying then clarify why should we believe the terrorist is alive and is no longer important to the overall story for Superman.
Clearly I feel that dudes dead or else why have us forget him and stop associating Superman's action due to the aftermath of the situation.
It's a plot hole nevertheless.
Which The Path are you speaking of?
With regard to The Price, a quick Google search has The Supergirl Saga, which it is part of, ranked 43 out of the best 75 stories on CBR.com.
http://www.cbr.com/the-75-greatest-superman-stories-of-all-time-master-list/
Here it's at 98 of 100 at Comicvine
http://comicvine.gamespot.com/profi...top-100-superman-universe-stories-list/43534/
It's not top ten or top 25 or anything like that, but being considered in the top 50-100 storylines is a pretty big deal given the thousands and thousands of stories featuring Superman over the years.
It was not only the execution storyline, but also the reintroduction of Supergirl to the mythology. It was a key event in the Superman mythos.
Look, the fact that a lot of movie fans or younger fans of the comics don't know the story does not make the story less key in the modern Post-Crisis mythology. A lot of the Superman fans here aren't the hardcore students of Superman mythology they might think, simply because they haven't read stories from all or some of the eras.
Amongst comic fans with a knowledge of Superman's entire history, this is known a key storyline and event, as several posters have pointed out.
Anything is obscure to a certain audience who hasn't seen it, but the event in question is not that obscure to die-hard fans with a truly broad knowledge of the mythology. A newer comics-reading generation's ignorance of it does not make it "obscure" in the history of Superman. It's arguably one of the more famous and impactful Superman stories there is, and Superman historians treat it as such, and writers used it to develop and reflect on Superman's morality for the better part of two decades, the Byrne/MAN OF STEEL era, into DEATH OF SUPERMAN, and then beyond that, into the mid 2000's (where I think Superman killed a version of Zod again).
Who cares if it existed if we're not saying it's a justification? The idea of a precedent is, at it's core, an appeal to the similarity of a current event and a previous one. If I hit someone with my car and then cite a totally different context as 'precedent' (bumper cars, destruction derby), then no one is saying that I executed badly, but that I completely misunderstood the precedent that was being set.The core of the argument was about whether it existed in the mythology or not.
You are essentially creating a separate argument now about how well the issue was executed.
Never said the concept couldn't have been handled better. It could have been.
Only said that there was a precedent for it in the comics.
Unless your goal is to establish Superman as somewhat reckless, in which case it absolutely DOES do a favor to the audience, by establishing the character specific element early on.
He's not all "woe is me", Limonade. He doesn't become all "woe is me" until the middle of the film.
In the earlier sequence, he basically says "I didn't do anything wrong" after Lois questions him about his methods and involvement, essentially brushes off her concerns and doesn't give it another thought, and engages in hanky panky with Lois. He doesn't take the issue as seriously as he needs to until he sees how far reaching it is.
It is not until Clark sees what has happened with the Senate hearings and the media's assessment of Superman that he even begins to question his unilateral actions and attempts to change his approach.
But it is not particularly good character development to fail to establish character elements as early as possible.
You're supposed to realize there are flaws in his process, yes.
No different? That is ridiculous. He is clearly not exactly the same as the people he is opposing.
His sacrifice at the end of the movie is about him recognizing that he will have to sacrifice the things he wants, which is happiness with Lois, to save
others.
It's pure Superman.
It also sets up the specific dynamic they wanted for Justice League.
What's important to the story is that Superman saved Lois and was a little bit reckless in doing so.
Assuming it even MATTERS to the story whether the guy is alive or not...
Because Superman says he didn't kill those men. That terrorist is part of "those men", which suggests Superman did not kill anyone.
I don't understand what you're trying to say. Can you rephrase this?
Do you know what a plot hole is?
So we basically disagree on what 'key' means. For me, top 10 is key. For you, top 100 is key. Good to know. To you, something that die hard fans with "truly broad knowledge" know is not obscure. Good to know.
Who cares if it existed if we're not saying it's a justification?
The idea of a precedent is, at it's core, an appeal to the similarity of a current event and a previous one.
If I hit someone with my car and then cite a totally different context as 'precedent' (bumper cars, destruction derby), then no one is saying that I executed badly, but that I completely misunderstood the precedent that was being set.
I think Snyder, Terrio, and whoever wrote this sequence didn't expect people to question the nature of the English language.
Or did I miss something where Superman says "I didn't kill those men...well, except that one guy I killed"?
Clearly I feel that dudes dead or else why have us forget him and make no mention of him.
You say he's alive because Superman said so.
But his actions and words contradict each other.
It's not clear what happened to him afterwards. It just jumps to Lois walking out and the soldiers coming in. That's when Lois sees the dead body and which she questions him on.
She saw what he did to the Warlord. So she doesn't question him on that either.
I'm not jumping to any illogical conclusion given the information I was presented.
This is what I saw
Lois was inside with the warlord while people were being killed outside. By the time Superman arrives to save her the conflict outside was already over. They were obviously talking about the other men, not the warlord.
Lois says "I want to understand what happened". She "knows" what happened to the warlord. She doesn't know what happened to the other people, except that it looked like Superman had heat visioned them to death. That's what she's asking about.
The whole thing is very ambiguous as to what actually happened to the warlord, which is why you get these discussions.
Well Batman never killed the people in the car he was dragging with his Batmobile because we never see them die.![]()
I could care less about rankings. I don't equate "popular" with "key". Someone else made the comment about how it's not even in top few dozen storylines, I pointed out a list where it, in fact, was.
For me, "key" is something that affects the character, and informs their psychological mindset toward major moral or life issues. This is historically, one of those types of storylines/events for Superman throughout the late eighties, 90's, and early 2000's.
It's a character touchstone, very similar to say, Batman's loss of Jason Todd. It wasn't ALWAYS brought up, but it came up fairly often. It's one of those storylines where at least once or twice a year, the character referenced the event, reflected on it, and rededicated himself to his decision against taking life, etc.
Not in this context. In the context of a DCEU discussion it's about whether a precedent (your word) for MoS's neck snap scene existed.Because the conversation was about whether or not it existed.
Except it wasn't. He was punishing them for lives taken, after there was no one left to kill.And there is a fairly obvious basic similarity. Superman killed Zod to stop him from taking lives.
But it is the case. The reaction of Superman, to Superman killing is to stop being Superman. That's the storyline that you brought up, that even Superman knows Superman doesn't kill. It's not just a totally different context, but you aren't even aware of what happened in the story you brought up. You thought that Superman was trying to stop them from taking lives, and that this event informed the character. This is the "true knowledge" of Superman's "entire history" you're bringing to bear here?Superman killing Zod is not a "totally different context".
The example you just gave is obviously not a precedent in the same realm as this is.
The argument has been about whether Superman has killed or not, as a character.
There are people who are under the impression that he does not, and has not.
That is not the case.
So... The Price is somehow on the same level as Jason Todd's death, and is touched on just as much?
Not in this context. In the context of a DCEU discussion it's about whether a precedent (your word) for MoS's neck snap scene existed.
Except it wasn't. He was punishing them for lives taken, after there was no one left to kill.
But it is the case. The reaction of Superman, to Superman killing is to stop being Superman.
That's the storyline that you brought up, that even Superman knows Superman doesn't kill. It's not just a totally different context, but you aren't even aware of what happened in the story you brought up. You thought that Superman was trying to stop them from taking lives, and that this event informed the character. This is the "true knowledge" of Superman's "entire history" you're bringing to bear here?
Was Superman killing Zod and his friends in the comics before or after S2? I ask because the reason used in the comics would explain why Superman killed Zod in the movie rather than letting them live like in the Donner cut.
It was way after Superman II. Heck it was about a decade after.
I don't read comics so I wouldn't know. At least both Zack and the comics have him not happy about taking life unlike Lester who made a joke out of it.
What dead body? When does Lois find a dead body?
Lois finds a book or journal with a bullet in it. Where does she see a dead body?
Lois questions Superman about his involvement and his reckless in becoming involved in a foreign country, not about a specific dead body.