Originally I had rated both the same for different reasons. But MOS has 2 things Thor 2 completely lacks of: real characters that truly interact and a worthy story.
They both have fictional characters onlyMan of Steel has real characters?
Man of Steel, by miles
I couldn't enjoy Thor 2 anywhere as much as I enjoyed the first one, and I really like the first Thor film
They both have fictional characters only![]()
Nolanification of all things?
Don't understand that word at all considering the variety we get from blockbuster filmmaking on a yearly basis. But please, continue the echo chamber nonsense against Nolan's trilogy.
Not sure if you noticed, but since Nolan's reboot on Batman we've constantly been getting remakes and reboots that try to be more "dark" and "Edgy", some work, others do not.
And how am i echoing chamber nonsence against Nolan's Trilogy? I love his movies, Begins turned me into a Batman fan, The Dark Knight is one of my favorite movies. Just because something works, it doesn't mean everything needs to be like that.
Thor does have fun going for it, you can see why someone could rate it higher if that person is annoyed by the Nolanification of all things
thanks for your OPINION![]()
But what sort of character development was present in Man of Steel?But it's fun devoid of any character development. Like, any. Certainly not the solution to any Nolanification.
pretty much every movie "criticisms" or reviews are opinions. rotten tomatoes is just a collection of movie opinions. the trick is, is it objective or subjective? the former is what a good movie criticism should be, the latter will bring endless debates and is the most common type of a review. also what is right is not always popular and what is popular is not always right.![]()
I think it goes without saying that everything I post is going to be merely my opinion.
But what sort of character development was present in Man of Steel?
Clark was pretty much the exact same guy doing the exact same thing throughout the entire movie. He made the same choices over and over. Just because we see his literal birth and then him when he's older does not automatically mean we see character growth.
We see Superman wrestle with this supposed conflict of whether or not he should help but in the end it's utterly meaningless, because he makes the same damn choice every time.
What was the difference between Clark at the beginning of the film, saving the kids from the bus, and Clark at the end when he saves the family and snaps Zod's neck? Next to none.
It didn't make sense. "You're gonna one day do great things and be a great leader, but maybe you should've let those kids die". It wasn't well done at all.So when young Clark saves the bus, when he did NOT save Pa Kent and when he had to kill to save people are the exact same to you?
With Zod, he starts respecting Jor-el, killing him and then losing everything.
I didn't like MOS much, and I am aware that the 'to save or not to save' conflict was not very well done.
Wait, was Man of Steel's paper thin "romance" any better? There was never any hint of a romantic inclination, especially on his part, between the two until they had that jarringly inappropriate kiss that came out of nowhere.But even so there was plenty more character development than in Thor 2 where nothing happened to the characters. Thor and Jane, we still don't know why they love each other and nothing at all happens with their relationship.
They undeniably had more and more personality than the MoS supporting cast. We got maybe one or two scenes with them saying and doing nothing of value, and then all of a sudden we're supposed to care about them when the city starts falling around them and they are in peril.The villain's story was all just an excuse for the action and what to say about Darcy, her assistant and the pantless scientist. Mere excuse for poorly done humor.