hopefuldreamer
Clark Kent > Superman
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According to the poll 89 people thought this was excellent, and 48 thought it was very good, yet it's the detractors who are the loudest in this thread.
It is pretty common for lurkers to vote in polls but not bother to post. And I think most of the time it's when something has either REALLY pleased you or REALLY upset you that you have a lot to say.
Btw hopeful dreamer, every movie ever made requires you to fill in the blanks, that's how human communication works, we fill in blanks using models of the world. We never communicate every detail.
That is such an unfair dismissal of my point, and of the technical side of film making/story building in general.
In fact, i'd say your trying to straw man me.
Of course you can't say EVERYTHING about EVERYTHING in a movie. But that doesn't excuse leaving integral aspects of the story to the audiences imagination rather than incorporating them into the story itself.
That something should adhere to conventions, such as the 'cbm rules of an origin story' is entirely subjective. Case in point: people tell unconventional stories all the times and they tell them in unconventional ways. People make unconventional films as well. That's my immediate respond to your statement.
I said nothing about 'rules'. I just said that an origin story has different priorities in terms of highlighting elements of back story than a non origin story.
So you can't take something like Great Gatsby and say 'Gatsby didn't need to explain the back story for it to work' and use it to justify a lack of information present in MOS (which IS an origin story).
It failed you because it didn't do something which you believe it should have. That's my understanding. That being said, I personally think they showed plenty of his loving environment. I think the simple fact that he witnessed his own father die for him is indicative of that which you claim isn't present(on screen). I'm having a hard time naming other super heroes having their parent(s) sacrificed their lives literally for hero in question(save for naruto and potter to an extent). You brushing off what was shown is your prerogative but I have the grounds to assert that it was there. Now it's a matter of debating if there is enough...which is always fun btw. Either way, that should put to rest this idea that "it wasn't there".
That they lifted the father son hugging/crying in the cornfields scene from secret origins...
Well that's a whole other can of worms, because I don't see Jonathon dying 'for his son'.
I see him dying for an idea that makes NO SENSE, is later DISPROVED (cause as it turns out, the world WAS ready and seems to have dealt with it fairly well) and was a delusional product of fear and irrationality.
So to me, it's not an example of Jonathon's love for his son. It's an example of his and Clark's dysfunctional relationship.
Let's pursue this idea of discouragement(though I personally only see disapproval of early exposure). What exactly is the qualm with this? For example if we look at the Steven Rogers paradigm, you find inspiration in a man/hero that persisted in the face of constant discouragement and harshness of environment to become a 'really good person/hero'. I have to assume this is the part where one downplays this direction when applied to superman, in favor of the tried and true approach that has been applied to him in the past? Which is why I always advocate for inherent value.
Looking further into Steve Rogers, you have someone that simply cannot find a way to contribute until the joseph campbell character shows up and gives him a way, enlightenment (and an extra push in the right direction, maybe even a costume). Both Steve and Clark doing good deeds leading up to and before this opportuinty(Clark doing more of course).
Again, I ask, just what is so wrong with this approach other then that it's different? Is it because you feel that if clark doens't get the encouragement during his young 'human' life than the turn to hero is a product of Jor? Because I would argue, that like Rogers, he's the hero long before that. Jor only proves an avenue(just like Eskire).
I have no issue with the concept of a hero overcoming discouragement in general and have never said so... so your point seems irrelevant

I just object to it in a big screen Superman origin story, when that discouragement comes from his parents - two characters who are credited in the majority of previous incarnations with at least HALF the reason he becomes the hero he is; usually by offering encouragement and support of his decision to do so, and having nurtured his heroic tendencies in his youth.
Even in Smallville, where his Dad was very protective (especially during season 1) they made sure that even when they were worried someone might have seen him, they still stopped to tell him how proud they were of what he did.
Yes, they showed the love between the two. However, they never showed two seconds of Thomas encouraging his son to go out and fight crime(or equivalent stakes JK was referring to). They focused on the love between a father and son. I argue when it comes to that aspect alone, MOS delivers. Jon loved his son and his son loved him back surely you argree. This isn't just some inferred insight, it's right there in all their scenes together.
You opened this discussion talking about how that was key to superman being both superman and having humanity in your opinion, and here we are.
When has Batman's back story ever been know to show his father encouraging him to go out and fight crime when he grows up?

That's a KEY DIFFERENCE between Batman and Superman.
Batman is the hero he is because of how his parents died. Superman is the hero he is because of how his parents lived.
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