2. Dude. Even in a 'world without rules', we're talking about a sophisticated computer system. Not to mention, even if she could devise is in like 5 minutes, Clark would already be gone. Are you saying could have had time to create it, mean it up, and initiate in the 2 minutes it takes the ship to leave the atmosphere? now THAT is ridiculous.
What I mean by world without rules, and I'm sorry if this is poorly explained, is that it's not a real world, and it's not a well-designed fake world. It's a fake world completely made up by Goyer, and since that world is thin Goyer can make up whatever he wants. There is nothing organic to the plot that says that only Jor-El should show up. Goyer chose to be quite mean-spirited and confusing as possible by having Jor-El show up and not Lara, that's the completely arbitrary choice he made, and it's made without justification. It annoyed a lot of people, it looks dumb, and the only thing it achieves is building up the great heroic character of Jor-El.
From a story-building view, having only Jor-El show up requires an explanation, having only Lara show up requires an explanation, none was offered either way though many could be made up, ... however, if it had been both of them together with a simple message of love and some backstory no explanation would have been required. As it is, Goyer went for a bizarre option, of having Clark only get to know Jor-El, so the lack of an explanation is damning.
Once again, there are quite a few issues with the film, but none of them have really been discussed in the last few pages. Some actual issues are pacing related, some involve the overwhelmingly monotonous and loud sound mix during the fight sequences, some involve bad dialog, etc. But overwhelmingly, the positive outweighs the bad for me. This is the best Superman film I've seen (STM is close, but the character depth and thematic exploration is much better in MOS imo), and probably my favorite encarnation of the character. Granted I don't read that many comics, I'm just a huge fan of the character and loved SI and SII when I was a kid, Smallville, STAS. Please, recommend me some, it won't affect my view of MOS, but I'd love to read some great Superman comics.
I'm genuinely curious if you (either of you) liked the film at all, or if you're just now getting caught up in some relatively unimportant minutia just to discuss what bugged you. Sometimes I think people just get caught up in all the negatives, and focus so intently on it that they can't enjoy the things they actually liked in it. Or maybe you really did just hate it all, lol.
I saw the MoS film twice, and I'll be buying the blu ray. I rate it a 7/10, I enjoy it, it has its good parts. It's better than the other Superman movies, and it's better than Smallville. I rate Smallville and Superman Returns as the worst representations of the character.
We've spent the past few pages discussing the lack of plot consistency in the film and the related lack of character development. Jor-El beating up Zod is a problem for both issues. It's a major issue for the film. The lack of depth world building. They tell us that Krypton is a sterile society, where everybody is bred and raised for one purpose... well, why not show it? We see it with the Kryptonians when they're on Earth, but we don't see it on Krypton. We see people making choices and going against their programming, Zod starting a revolution, Jor-El having a child out genesis, etc. You know, with better world building, you can pull viewers into the film, and if they're sufficiently pulled in they won't notice the inevitable errors that come up later, because every movie has errors, some are just more noticeable.
As fo my superman recommendations:
1) Death and Return of Superman, an 1100 page comics omnibus you can buy for $65
http://www.amazon.com/Superman-The-...keywords=death+and+return+of+superman+omnibus
It's a good story, and imo, a better representation of the character.
2) Superman Earth One, Volume 1 and 2
http://www.amazon.com/Superman-Eart...1379135962&sr=8-1&keywords=superman+earth+one
I's by J. Michael Straczynski, one of the great creative minds of our time in the realm of scifi, and Goyer explicitly states that he borrowed a lot from this book. I like volume 2 better than volume 1, but you need to read volume 1 first.
3) Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman, seasons 1,2, and 4
This is possibly the most popular version of Superman, as it was watched by nearly 20 million viewers every weak and was a pop culture phenomenon. To give you an idea of how popular it was, Teri Hatcher was the most downloaded woman on the internet for six months, for a picture where she reveals nothing.
The limitations of 1990s episodic TV can be seen, as well as the low budget, but the romance aspect and the overall humanity is compelling. At some point Lois learns who Superman is, and a lot had built up to that point which made it a climactic moment. It's got many, many feel-good moments.
4) Of the animated movies, I like Superman/Batman Apocalypse and Superman vs The Elite, but you have to take those for what they are, cheaply made animated movies.