TheFlamingCoco
Avenger
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I agree with you except with the Swanwick part. Waller could be saved for sequels. But I like the general, for what its worth 


1. and 2. are very good suggestions. I would have like to see 1. but I must say the Oil Rig scene was one of the two really great scenes in the film so I am glad they opened with that.1. Instead of Clark just wandering aimlessly around in the middle of nowhere, incorporate the segment from the "Birthright" mini-series where Clark travels to Africa and finds himself in the middle of a bloody civil war going on there.
2. I would have placed the World Engine in Metropolis, with Black Zero hovering over the Indian Ocean instead. Superman races off and saves some people from the ensuing chaos caused by the World Engine in Metropolis and ultimately stops the machine like he did in the film. The difference here is that when Superman is laying unconscious on the ground, the people of Metropolis gather to him and help him get back on his footing; something similar to the scene from Spider-Man 2 involving the train, thus showing that people are warming up to Superman.
Whether IM3, or any other specific movie, is a high bar or not is of individual opinion (and every single superhero movie has plenty of issues according to some) but I definitely agree that the "at least it's better than X" argument is a poor one as it's by definition setting a low bar.I've seen mixed to negative reactions for both MoS and IM 3 spanning several major issues for both. My original point is that we shouldn't compare MoS to IM 3 since it's not a high bar. In general I've seen a lot of people say "stop criticising MoS! at least it was better than X!" where X is usually a movie that has its own problems, like the avengers, iron man 3, superman returns, or superman 1978. One poster even compared MoS favourably to The Room.
This script has so many problems that it's hard to see how it could be fixed. But here is one small change I'd make.
Don't have the world builder split into two. That is simply a dumb plot device invented by Goyer to have two action sequences, because more action sequences was his number one priority. Just have it e one piece, one world builder, so that we get one action scene, which is sufficient. Remove the giant metal squid. Redistribute the screen time to Costner, Lane, Adams, Fishburne, and Lennix.
Other changes, which would have taken a substantial rewrite of the script:
- Have Clark meet Lois at the end of the movie, where she's meeting him as a reporter, she's dressed in a white mini skirt and a purple blazer, and he's giving her an interview to introduce himself to the world. She comes up with the name Superman. Prior to this, have a scene where Clark goes through some of the possible reporters he could give the article, and have him pick Lois based on whatever reason. Lois Lane could then have her own origin released three months later.
- No codex, no Kryptonians that kill 100,000 people as the first villains. Have it be a more moderate threat.
I think Ken't death should have been that his leg is broken or infact his back is broken or something, and Clark does go out and save him. And Kent dies in the hospital with Clark absolutely distraught. This way, he would learn the very human failing of mortality with Martha consoling him and telling him humans have to die, not all the superpowers in the world can reverse death.One of the better scenarios that I thought about that they could have done with this scene instead would be having Jonathan dying from a heart attack due to the stress caused by the tornado while saving Clark from getting exposed in front of everyone else.
Let me explain, Clark would disobey his father's orders and go about helping more people in order to help get them to safety and while doing so, he is being careless when it comes to concealing his powers somewhat since he is not being cautious from the flying debris. Clark is about to get a flying truck but since he knows it can't hurt him, Clark doesn't really duck for cover. Jonathan races to Clark and pulls him out of the way so that no one will see Clark getting hit and surviving it but the strain causes his heart to give out.
The lesson from all of this would be that Clark needs to be more responsible in how he uses his powers in front of people and he needs to choose a better time when it comes to revealing himself since he wasn't ready, from Jonathan's perspective, to show himself to the world just yet.
Herolee, the film kept TELLING us that things were about choice, but the truth was far from it. Clark was told to do everything. Right up until the very end where Zod forced him into killing him. Most of what Clark did involved him having his free will taken away from him.
I am 100% sure that is a Nolan fail. Nolan LOVES LOVES LOVES cross-cutting. I read an interview where he said he always have multiple threads in his climaxes to cross cut between them. Take TDKR, TDK, Incpetion and now even MOS, constantly cross cutting.Don't have the world builder split into two. That is simply a dumb plot device invented by Goyer to have two action sequences
They could do that either way. They could have the military help with the civilian evacuation and rescue. That would be more interesting than using Superman's cradle, his crib, as a weapon of death.The reason why Goyer had the machines split into two is because he wanted the Military to have a hand in defeating the Kryptonians, thus giving anyone that wasn't Superman more screen time as well.
I like the idea of her writing the first article on Superman, and her earning it.Wait, so you would want Lois to only be introduced at the VERY END of the film? If that's the case, then doesn't that contradict what you just said at the top regarding having Amy have more screen time?
Just make up a villain then, it's not hard.Such as? One of the things that NEEDED to be done in this film was giving Superman a strong physical threat to contend with on the big screen with modern day effects. People have been asking for that for decades now and regardless of personal reasons, having an exciting action sequence involving Superman taking on a super villain is what helps put the GA in the theaters.
I am 100% sure that is a Nolan fail. Nolan LOVES LOVES LOVES cross-cutting. I read an interview where he said he always have multiple threads in his climaxes to cross cut between them. Take TDKR, TDK, Incpetion and now even MOS, constantly cross cutting.
I find cross cutting to be a major fail in cinema. It masks an inherent weakness in the story that it ain't interesting on its own and you have to constantly cut hither and thither.
All movies which rely on cross cutting play very badly on repeat viewings. Case in point - Cloud Atlas.
Like I said both of those things as defined by you in a convenient manner.The Avengers reflected on the devastation within the confines of the type of film it was. The film was inherently lighthearted so it focused sufficiently on what came and went.
Living breathing, bleeding creatures that express agony when hurt, and seemingly strategize when presented with a dynamic threat.As far as legions of lives are concerned, it was pretty evident that the aliens being killed were quote unquote drones. So sitting there and analyzing the loss suffered on that end can be saved for Ender's Game.
It's definitely a more tonally consistent film if that's what you mean. Not sure exactly what you mean by "more serious" though. Less jokes? Alien threat was playing for keeps? Deaths shown on camera? Tone? I just think you are underplaying what Avengers actually is. The same way people under play the "seriousness" of whedon's other works particularly Buffy and Serenity because of a few jokes. You also seem to be giving the impression that the opposite of "lighthearted" is "serious."Man of Steel was a flat out serious film, and with that notion in mind, it's way more culpable regarding swatting stuff under the rug. But hey, you're never going to admit to that since it flies in the face of the staunch defense you're launching of a severely mediocre film.
Name one,I think it's now at the point where you're so eager to be right that you'll make numerous points with very little real support for them. Oh well. Keep going.
I think it worked well in Inception and TDK and TDKR, since the cross-cuts were interconnected and I personally didn't feel saturated. The characters in those movies were developed to my liking.
The giant metal squid, however, was not connected, and it didn't make sense. It didn't emerge organically from the plot. It was simply "Goyer wants another action sequence". It's also incoherent, why would the world-builder have giant metallic arms? What?


They could do that either way. They could have the military help with the civilian evacuation and rescue. That would be more interesting than using Superman's cradle, his crib, as a weapon of death.
I like the idea of her writing the first article on Superman, and her earning it.
Did you also miss the part where she gets her own origin movie that comes out three months later? Fan-******* mate
I just don't want the Clois relationship rushed, I want it stretched over several movies before it reaches steady state, with each prior state getting proper attention.
Just make up a villain then, it's not hard.

Criticism about the destruction in MOS should fall on Snyder not Goyer. It's Snyder who can edit down the amount of destruction and mix in reaction shots of a concerned looking Superman. Snyder is the one who can turn around and ask Goyer for a scene dealing with the consequences.
TDK was still ok, but Inception and TDKR were really dumb. I have a distinct feeling that Interstellar will also end in some sort of "chase" or "last minute something" and cross cut like a maniac.I think it worked well in Inception and TDK and TDKR, since the cross-cuts were interconnected and I personally didn't feel saturated. The characters in those movies were developed to my liking
A civillian evacuation and rescue would have brought more balance to the film.That could have been another alternate route, though I think Goyer wanted them to play a more direct hand in their defeat.
It has everything to do with it.Does this have anything to do with your issues regarding their "courtship" and how you hate the fact that Lois actually knows the secret this far in advance?
They were a few minutes of screentime removed from doing an origin film without Martha or Jonathan Kent.You can't really do a origin film involving Superman without Lois since she's been a part of the mythology and is as old as Superman when it comes to her importance of it.
I've never watched Superman IV, but they didn't make up a villain in Superman III, they used Lex Luthor with a different name and hairdo.Yeah, because that worked out so well for Superman 3 and 4 right?![]()
It has everything to do with it.
Lois and Clark are my favourite fictional couple. I want to see every stage in their relationship developed elegantly and diligently on the big screen. The people they are before meeting each other, the friendship phase, the dating phase, etc, I also wouldn't mind children later on.
I've never watched Superman IV, but they didn't make up a villain in Superman III, they used Lex Luthor with a different name and hairdo.
Villains can be made up, comics do it all the time, original movies do it all the time.
I agree. However I wasn't speaking on the complexity of the MoS movie, but rather the complexity of that particular issue and or element. Relatively speaking. "The greater good and the sacrifice in order to achieve it"Mjölnir;26816105 said:Just because there can be complex questions brought up doesn't mean that the movie is complex. Many movies treat complex issues in a simple manner. To take another example, the X-Men movies center around questions about being different, the treatment of minorities etc. Those are extremely hard questions to solve since we haven't done it in reality, but it certainly doesn't mean that the movies are complex in my view. They don't completely lack complexity but when you call a movie complex as a general statement you have to compare it to all movies. Complex movies rarely make much money since the average person can't get into them.
Fair enough. Though I personally don't see any sort of box around the (sub)genre, not anymore anyways. I personally find plenty of mental stimulation in some of these new bat films for example. Again it's a relative thing. Compared to what batman was 15 years ago.Superhero movies are for me fun movies that usually have some substance to them, but it's not something I watch when I feel to be intellectually challenged.
Since we already seemed to establish that the character was a definable "hero" at the age of about 12. I would just add that this just seems more like a personal desire to see the source material manifest in a more recognizable way than a flaw or writing.I don't need that either but this is a case of a movie where the protagonist doesn't become the superhero until he gets that. In that light I'd prefer if he had gotten a bigger portion of it from his human parents. I feel that was better to argue to change what was there instead of ripping something out completely and replacing it.