Yeah, but there's a right way to do it and a wrong way to do it. I can't speak for the other people, but my problem with the end fight isn't that there's so much destruction. My problem is with the presentation. My problem is that it's so over the top and yet pretty callous about presenting the reality of all of that destruction, and their attempts to humanize it aren't, to me, particularly effective. It revels in the spectacle a little to much and it doesn't pay attention to the human element quite enough. Made worse by the fact that, as soon as Zod dies, it immediately cuts away from Metropolis and doesn't mention the destruction of that day again. It feels very juvenile to me, like a military-obsessed 13 year old boy's idea of what a dramatic climax is. And I, personally, don't like the way that military obsessed 13 year old boys look at the world.