X-Maniac said:
I meant that i wanted more 'interpersonal conflict' - scenes including action that really brought out the emotion between characters. No one really seemed to 'react' to things in a big way..feelings were very suppressed, understated... that's the impression it left me with...
Tell me what you mean when you wanted it 'more emotionally invested.'
And that is what i loved about SR?
Everyone in that movie is so restrained and because of it, I felt so much tension during everything. They responded as real people do to things and I think knowing their characters as Singer portrayed them help you get that.
On the rooftop, there is such marked suppression of emotion that is painful and tragic. Lois wants to say something, she' can't. Superman wants to, but he can't. Both are bound to be good people -- especially Superman -- so they avoid the topic, avoid the emotion, and it crescendos later on when she must save him and STILL cannot express her feelings because she's before her "family."
There's a great thread at Bluetights that's a bit overwraught, but nonetheless it explores the subtextual meaning of Superman Returns. It's nothing special, but Doughtery and Harris reallly did structure that film in such a way as to have the characters saying something totally different then what they were saying. It's something that we're use to seeing in films like American Beauty, etc. -- dramas of the sort with real texture and emotion.
For instance, when Superman takes Lois up and asks her what she hears, he responds with, "I hear everything." It's a simple line, but in the context of that scene it has a larger subtextual meaning. I hear everything relates to him hearing Lois say she doesn't love him; relates to why, saddled with the weight of the world on his ears, he felt the need to leave Earth and find his own people, and it refutes Lois' entire article concerning the world doesn't need a savior. If this isn't Superman reacting, I don't know what is. He's basically saying, "Sometimes, I get tired and its too much." This is a theme explored in the comcis now and then, too.
Later, Luthor tortures Superman and says, "Kind of like how a father inherits the trait of his son." What I like about this is the realism of Luthor presuming Superman knows he has a son. Luthor is essentially threatening in a roundabout way to kill Jason, but Superman at that point has no clue what he's talking a bout and probably references his own father. But it's a clever way to keep a plot thread going on the part of the writers, and also to have Luthor react naturally should he know Superman had a child.
Later, when Lois asks Superman to not go back, she says, "You're hurt." Which is really a pathetic excuse for "I wnat you to stay." But she can't say that, can she? No, because her fiancee is right there and it would be wrong. So again, we have this outpouring of emotion that has to be restrained. Superman's response, "Goodbye, Lois" mirrors why she was mad at him -- he never said goodbye. Again, an emotional response and twist on the part of Superman.
Lois' reaction to Superman's Near-death was quite potent in my opinion, and written all over her face. The way that entire scene was shot -- the framing of Jason touching the S Sheild as she told Superman -- was genius and moving. When she's leaving, her face is tight and she's holding back alot and she's in a reversal of sorts since now she's the story. A
The ending is perhaps the most emotional part of the movie. Superman responds openly and frankly to the fact that he has a son and that he's going to give him up to Lois and Richard to raise. He basically cries -- like most men do -- at seeing his child. Truly emotional and in my theatre, not a dry eye when this happened the 7 times I saw it. But then, even better, is the UNDERSTATED emotional scene:
Every time in this movie, where typically Lois and Superman would break into some melodramatic argument or conversation, Lois either cuts it with "Will ___ see you around?" and Superman replies. To further bury the matter, Superman will say "Goodbye or Goodnight, Lois" while staring at her in a way that insinuates so much more. The ending scene does this greatly. Lois responds to Superman's return and his role by stopping smoking, nad appears to be in quite a clusterf#ck. She opens her mouth about Jason, to apologize it would seem, but Superman just smiles and his face just tells her something. She asks him "will we see you around?" Already, she just knows he knows that Jason is his son. "I"m always around," Superman responds. "Goodnight, Lois" and then the way he stares at her, his eyes lingering on her when he flies away.
They have an entire conversation in those lines. The beats in that conversation are so emotional and its amazing that none of it is said, but all there nonetheless.
Lois about to apologize is finally acknowleding that she was harsh. However, Superman smile that stops her is basically saying, "I forgive you for not telling me and I understand why you were so angry now. I left both of you." When she asks, "Will we see you...around?" She's saying, "This can't go on, we can't talk about this, but I'd like to see you, and I'd like your son to see you." Superman responds with, "I'm always around" which basically states "I'm always in love with you, I'll always be there for you..." and then "Goodnight, Lois" cuts the conversation before they betray her relationship with Richard. The way his eyes linger on her is just content and pride, he's almost proud of Lois, proud of their secret...
It's an amazing scene. The emotion is there if you want and look for it. It's just that it's very, very real as it would appear in real life. As a writer, perhaps I"m more atuned to picking this up since when writing myself I have to be sensitive to emotional manfiestations as they are in real life, and not in cinema, where they do tend for simplification to be a tad overstated. That's what I loved about SR; it wasn't melodramatic at all.