I don't know about you guys...but I am THRILLED to hear the rumors that the new Batman movie is going to throw out the boring, cliche "I'm sad because my parents are dead" dark knight-era stuff!
From what I hear...this will bring back the Batman from the 40's...he is openly racist, his parents aren't mentioned, and he works for the US government!
This has happened before...so therefore...many in this thread MUST agree that it can happen again. This is a part of Batman, and I think it is awesome that they are getting rid of the so-called "definitive" Batman and bringing us another side of him.
But again, this is just a rumor...started by me.
The goal wasn't to create a planet where his people could live like gods. The goal was to make a planet that they didn't have to share with humanity.
I read about the Empire interview, and that Snyder actually says “The ‘Why?’ of it for me was that if was truly an origin story, his aversion to killing is unexplained…" is just forehead slapping astonishing to me.
I read it. So, Nolan had the right instinct that it was out of character and Snyder insisted because, in short, "it would be cool." Why am I not surprised.
Ugh. I really do not want Snyder to make anymore of these. It will always hold the series back.
That's news to me.
You've gotta figure with his listed producer credit, that by the time the film was released he signed of if not endorsed big story decisions such as that. That's kinda the point of a producer credit I would think. Whether he had to be convinced or otherwise.

Really? If you read it, you clearly ignored most of it.
In NO way was it because 'it would be cool.' It was EXPLICITLY done as a character defining moment.
Nolan WAS against it, adamantly so, to the extent that he didn't even want them to TRY writing it; UNTIL he read it.
The scene is truly a shocking moment.
Don't get me wrong, MOS is no TDK, and I usually hate when they kill off a villain after they've used him (or her) in a movie, but this was my absolute favourite execution (pardon me) of it in any superhero film.
Not just that I liked how it was done, but I felt it actually worked, and made sense within the film. It has FAR more weight than if he was just sucked into the Zone with everyone else.
It wasn't just to get rid of the villain, or give him an ending, but it was used as a truly character defining moment.
I really don't see how the MOS Superman is that much of a deviation from the "traditional" Superman.
I read about the Empire interview, and that Snyder actually says The Why? of it for me was that if was truly an origin story, his aversion to killing is unexplained " is just forehead slapping astonishing to me.
No, he was saying that, if it were an origin film, and they did NOT give an explanation, just took it as part of who Superman was, he just "always" had that "rule," that it would NOT have been good, and that they should have an "explanation."
It is also apparent that, yes, he gets his morals from his upbringing with the Kents.
However, there is a difference between "it's how I was raised" and an actual experienced moment. Something written into the dna of his life.
It' created a moment similar to Bruce's parents' murder. It cements in him the fact that he will NEVER kill.
Had Bruce's parents never died, Bruce would still likely believe killing was wrong, but there's a difference between "Killing is wrong" and "I will NEVER resort to killing."
No, he was saying that, if it were an origin film, and they did NOT give an explanation, just took it as part of who Superman was, he just "always" had that "rule," that it would NOT have been good, and that they should have an "explanation."
It is also apparent that, yes, he gets his morals from his upbringing with the Kents.
However, there is a difference between "it's how I was raised" and an actual experienced moment. Something written into the dna of his life.
It' created a moment similar to Bruce's parents' murder. It cements in him the fact that he will NEVER kill.
Had Bruce's parents never died, Bruce would still likely believe killing was wrong, but there's a difference between "Killing is wrong" and "I will NEVER resort to killing."
There are Martians on Mars.
It's my hugest problem with the realistic portrayals and Nolan's approach to superheros. It's like "how can we take material that itself is inherently silly and make it not silly. I think Raimi had the perfect attitude for Spider-Man. Instead of being ashamed of those things, embrace them. You can embrace the silliness and still tell great dramatic stories. Then I see Amazing Spider-Man, which decides it needs a scene of Parker skateboarding to Coldplay.
Okay yeah, I walked into that one
Obviously it wasn't perfectly handled in TDK trilogy either. But at least it was THERE. They talked about it. They talked about the why of it, how he felt about it, how the villain used it to their advantage etc.
And yeah, he might have been able to stop it from happening if he put his foot down. I'm not saying that he felt the same way as I do about it... just that he at least thought it should stay. And I think that's because he finds the concept interesting, and at least a little bit recognised it's importance to the character and the DC universe as a whole.
By the way, MovieBob's Big Picture today talks about this exact thing. Snyder's "explanation" only proves the opposite. If Superman is in a situation in the sequel where killing Lex will clearly save lives, Snyder has just set the precedent that he's willing to do that.
Except at least there would be prisons on Earth that could hold Lex. Can't say the same for someone like Zod.
I just used Lex as an example, but lets try it for others; Bizarro, Darkseid, Parasite, Brainiac etc, etc. The logic does not hold.