While it's true that Superman can't have a normal life, the illegitimate child angle doesn't fit the Superman character and to think it does is to misunderstand the essence of the character.
The child is simply one of the hardest most complicated situations a man like him could deal with. Supervilliains defies his physical strenght, a son means a challenege for Superman that is simply much more complicated than even Kryptonite.
And the biggest is the challenge the most conflictive it is and the most interesting is the story for our hero. What you state at the end is just your intolerance and inability to accept any different vision than what have been seen already.
Superman might be the same but the stories - as with any hero - must test him, put him into the biggest possible conflicts.
That said, fatherhood was a key topic in STM and again in the Donner version of SII (with Jor-El in it).
Superman as absentee father and deadbeat boyfriend goes against everthing the character stands for. The storylines to come are anti-thetical to the essence of the character.
As explained in the movie, he HAD to go away beyond his will, so "deadbeat" is not the proper word. He was absentee as any man who had to go to the war before he even knew he was going to be a father.
It wasn't that Singer was being risky- he just doesn't know enough about the character to make a proper Superman film.
He knows the Donner franchise so well that he based this story only on what was unresolved before. Lois and Superman impossible love, Superman’s impossibility to have a normal life and fatherhood as a key theme.
Superman becoming a father closes the cycle of Jor-El unable to be with his son, Jonathan Kent’s life and death, Superman’s inherent loneliness (not only he is the last of his race but he has to live most of his life pretending).
And then it leaves stories for the future.
It tries to be that version of SUperman. But it ultimately fails at it b/c the actions are incongruous. They don't add up to the same character. THere's no way Reeve's Superman would have left Lois the way the Superman in SR does.
You mean he wouldn’t have quit his mission without telling anybody?
But I guess after the events in SII, Superman learnt that Lois is something he cannot overcome. He might have known that if he goes to her to say “I gotta go and I’m possibly never coming back, because there might be survivors in Krypton” there could have been temptations to re-consider such decision. She could convince him to quit being Superman before!
But as in SR, Superman has made terrible mistakes. Quit his mission for a girl. To leave without saying good-bye.
If you don't understand the Donner films, you don't understand the Donner films.
Yeah, and if that animal is a cat, is a cat.
We both get by now you forgot to make a point in that line. Or is it “redundant redundance.”
But to anyone who truly understands the character of Superman it is clear that Singer misunderstood what Donner was going for and translated it incorrectly to SR, or purposely changed it to fit his own sensibilities.
To anyone that knows a little of language, it is clear that you try too often to make circular and hermetic logics. And that makes nothing for your points.
You keep saying “I am right because anyone that thinks differently is wrong.” Or worse, “If you don’t get this is due to the fact that you don’t get this.”
There’s no bit of a valid point to retort to in that paragraph.
Anyhow, it didn't work and we're looking forward to the reboot/re-introduction.
That sounds great for you. I mean, if you were able to actually leave SR behind and enjoy the re-boot situation more than you enjoy coming back to hate this movie.