Mjölnir;26808509 said:
Jonathan doesn't tell Clark not to be a hero because he wants an easier life (or anything like that), he does it solely to protect Clark. Therefor not saving his father means that Clark allows his father to sacrifice himself for his (Clark's) sake. And again it's for a cause that the movie showed us didn't matter.
How did the movie show us that it didn't matter? By not exposing himself too soon, Clark was able to continue to grow and mature in abilities, maturity, and to discover what he wanted to do.
I'm referring to the school bus incident. He is seen doing something inhuman and nothing comes out of it because people see weird things under stress and really, who believes some nut job that claims that he saw a man lift a bus or something like that? Would you believe me if I said that I saw my neighbor fly last night?
Yeah, but how many times could Clark get away with being connected to unusual instances before someone -- possibly the wrong kind of people -- would figure things out? Clark wasn't ready to deal with the world and all the pressures that come with being so powerful. Jonathan knew this, which is why he did not want Clark to come save him.
My point is that it doesn't matter if there were a few witnesses at the bridge. The movie already showed us the realistic outcome of that, which is that the witnesses would cause a fuss and no one would believe them to be anything than nut jobs. At worst they would have to move. A small price to pay for your father's life.
Again, how often could he be involved in freaky instances before people started figuring things out? And really, you think they could just up and move?
I think that because we see how his raising is consistently telling him not to be a hero now. They raise him to be a good person, but with the limit that he should think about his situation over others, no matter what danger they are in. He has immense abilities that could do a lot of good but Jonathan's message is mainly about how dangerous it is. That's of course true in itself and the concern is logical, but his advice is one-sided. Parents can't just preach one side and leave the other open, you also need to encourage your child when you see what they want to do.
No, Jonathan's main message was that Clark had to figure out who he was first. Jonathan taught him to hold back, taught him to balance his powers with the knowledge of what the consequences were for using them. There are so many things that Jonathan taught Clark in this film, and you missed all of them, which is so sad.
Then he talks to his real father, who says that he should be a hero and that he's supposed to guide the entire Human race. It's through that encouragement that Superman is born and nothing in the movie shows that he wanted to take that step before, which is natural with what we saw of his upbringing.
Nope. Clark didn't get the message from his biological father to be this huge savior of the world, and run off and do it.
Clark practiced flying. Then he went home to his mom. He washed dishes, drank a beer, and watched a game of football.
Then, at the end of the film, Clark made it clear that he wasn't interested in usurping the powers of Washington, but he also made it clear that he wasn't going to be their puppet. He does not choose to be a leader, like Jor-El seemed to expect. Instead, Clark becomes a reporter.
Both of his fathers' sacrifices were realized in the last seven or eight minutes of the movie, when Clark chooses what he's going to do.
Mjölnir;26808639 said:
To me it has to do with the tone of the movie. It never once gave me the impression that I should just take things lightly so that's why I feel that it's jarring to go from murder and devastation to something so lighthearted. My other issue is that the actual killing of Zod was set up poorly. Superman isn't strong enough to stop Zod from turning his head towards the family, but he's strong enough to break his neck. It's just one example of that I think Goyer can come up with good ideas but it doesn't always translate to good scenes in my view.
If the ending scene had been side-splittingly hilarious, I might agree with you. But that's not the case at all. We had a film that had some grim moments, and it ended with what is truly a beginning, filled with possibility and hope. Like the rest of the film, the humor was subdued, although a little more obvious in that final moment. But I don't think it was all that inappropriate.
As for Superman killing Zod, I don't think that it was a matter of Superman not being strong enough to stop Zod. I think he was really begging for the rest of humanity. Zod had just said that he was going to make the world suffer, that he was going to kill everyone on the planet. Clark was running out of options -- the family was going to die, and other people would die too. So he begged one more time for Zod to stop, and when Zod would not reason with him, Superman did the only thing that he could do. Not just to save that one family, but to save EVERYONE.
I think he's really disciplined in that scene. The logical inexperienced reaction would be to follow your emotions.
You've never actually been in life or death situations, have you? You have an over-blown estimation on how selfless humans are. To put it in perspective, Jonathan stayed behind to guide people to safety. He saved a little girl. He saved the dog. NO ONE WENT TO HELP HIM.
Clark was little more than a child, who was surrounded by adults. Surely, by your standards, one of them should have run out there to go help Jonathan. But none of them did.
In RL, people don't always act heroically. There have been cases where people have been shot or stabbed, and are laying in a public place, begging people to help them, and yet no one does. And there are instances where people hesitate, certain that someone else will step in.
It's just not fair to say that Clark unequivocally did the wrong thing in that situation, because humanity itself has a long list of behavior that is far uglier than the fear and indecision of a terrified young man.
And I think you misread my statement about Superman. I just said it gets worse through that (and my description is what I usually hear from Superman fans) but that the core issue isn't about him at all. The core issue is that I don't see any good person allowing his parent to die to basically save themselves, and not from dying but from something that we saw didn't really matter much. I just think it's a very non-human choice that alienates me from the character, especially with so little time being spent on his past.
Read the above comment. Jonathan's death
did matter, in so many ways. And you are doing the entitlement thing again; making judgements on how 'good' Superman should be, and defining it in such a strict way that there is no way that MOS Clark could measure up to your expectations of what a good person does.
And of course Superman can't save everyone. That's how you have to write a character with so many powers. He definitely could have saved his father though. Easily. That's why it's a poorly written scene as it has Clark choose not to save his father rather than having him be unable to.
The only thing I know in the tornado scene is that Clark is strong and doesn't take physical damage. I don't know if Clark actually COULD have saved his father. It's possible that in the process of rescue, his dad would have been shredded to pieces by shrapnel, torn apart by the wind, or struck in the head by an object.
Clark didn't realize he could jump so high or fly until he was nearly 33. It's very possible he didn't know he had super-speed.You're judging a 17-year-old Clark based on the expectations of what a grown Superman who is fully aware of his powers would do. And that is fannish entitlement.
I think the scene, and character arc, would have made more sense if he instead failed to save his father (perhaps due to having to save his mother at the same time, or any other option) and the reason he is wandering around in the state he is at the beginning of the movie is because he's haunted by that and sees himself as a failure. As someone that can't be a hero. That way they could have had his parents both warning and encouraging around the hero issue, and his real father could be the catalyst that makes him overcome blaming himself but not be the entire encouragement to be a hero in his life. Not exactly script quality but just my own opinion written off the top of my head.
Er...maybe. I like MOS's version better. Clark haunted by his failure to save his father, unsure of himself, wanders the world in search of a solid identity. When he comes across trouble, he saves people, to make up for what he views as a failure to save his dad. It's all very poetic and lovely.
Note that I said "Superman". I.e. the hero that actually sets out to help others rather than doing it when he accidentally "has to" (as he is a good person) in the remote places he frequents. He doesn't necessarily want to help people, but he feels obligated to at times.
I don't know what you mean, no. In MOS, we have Clark Kent who becomes Superman. Not the other way around. You're trying to squeez MOS into your box of who you think Superman is -- which is fan entitlement. I know you don't like to hear that, but that's what it is.
Jonathan himself is a good character. The problem I have with him isn't really with him but what role he gets in Superman's creation. I would have preferred him to be a more important person to focus more on that the hero is Kryptonian in body but human in mind.
But that's exactly what we got in the film. Clark has searched his whole life to discover what it means to be human. Jonathan taught him to be compassionate. All Jor-El did was give Clark a nudge to figure out what his limits were with his powers. Clark chooses a very human profession, and shies away from the opportunity he has to wield his power to rule and lead people.
When he talks to Jor-El I get the impression that he becomes a hero because he's told that his life has a meaning. Something it seemingly never had before. He basically finds out who he is not just in heritage but who he's supposed to be as a person. I don't see it as a slight nudge, I see it as a completely life-changing point.
No, what he gets is the courage to search for his limits, and to discover what he can truly do. Being a hero is already an integral part of who Clark is. Like I said before, Clark finds out who he is, then the first thing he does is go home to his mom.
If you want to see humanity in Clark, you don't have to look any farther than that.
Well, whatever my opinions are it's not that. I stopped reading the Superman comics over 20 years ago and some changes to the character wouldn't hurt at all in my opinion.
I understand, but I do think you are still suffering from fan entitlement. I am not trying to be mean. Just being honest.
People want to see Superman, not Hancock, not Batman, not Spider Man, but Superman, it still has to be the character. The poster for the movie advertises Superman, the title is "Man of Steel", and the main character is called "Clark Kent". If they're selling a Superman movie, then they have a moral responsibility to produce a Superman movie. I made time on opening weekend, I paid $18 for a ticket (they're expensive in Australia) to see a Superman movie, which is what the previews promised me.
They did make a Superman movie. You paying money for the film and not liking their vision of Superman is fine. But your money entitles you to nothing. Absolutely nothing.
Goyer is allowed to make changes, of course. However, if those changes are inferior to what they replaced, and indeed they often were, then people will complain, and indeed they have. This is a Superman with no demonstrated background in journalism prior to working at the DP, one who let his father die with meek justification, one who revealed himself to the world when the situation demanded it rather than on his own terms, and one who has no entertaining and extended courtship with Lois. Can you honestly argue that these changes are improvements to the story?
YES. I absolutely argue in favor of all these changes. I disagree that Clark "let" his father die for no reason, but I love every change in this film.
A Clark who is talented enough to get hired onto a newspaper with no known background in journalism? Awesome. I love intelligent! well-written! Superman.
A young Clark who made a mistake that still haunts him to this day? YES YES YES. I need that in my life more than another time of Jonathan clutching his chest and dying from heart failure (again).
A hero who is shy about stepping out into the world and taking on all the risks and loneliness being a superhero involves? ABSOLUTELY. It's deliciously angsty, and gives us more meat to Clark than the idea that he just shows up one day and basically forces himself on the public.
And finally, the one that gets me the most. A relationship between Lois and Clark that is built on honesty instead of lies, where they have equal emotional footing? A relationship that starts off in a mature manner, where Lois is treated like a person, rather than just that object Superman wants to have? The relationship where Lois likes Clark for who he is -- all of him -- instead of her parceling out her love and acting like a confused ninny?
Hell. Yes. I will take all of it. Lois and Clark still have to figure out how to work together. They kissed, it's true, but can their relationship survive a competitive line of work? Will Superman's hero-business get in the way of things? Maybe he'll get over-protective and smothering, maybe he'll grow distant. Maybe she'll worry too much and he'll get irritated.
Or maybe they just cozy up together, work well together, and Superman has someone in his life besides his mother to hold him when the battles get too draining, or when he can't save everyone.
I just like that in this respect, he doesn't have to compartmentalize everything. He has someone to share his life with (at least until they jack it all up in the sequel for the sake of causing romantic tension, ~sigh~).
So all these changes? Yeah. They're good. We still have Superman from Krypton, we still have the "S" and the cape, he's still a good guy who grew up on a farm, who tries to do the right thing.
I'll take him.