NeoRanger
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As gdw said, Clark's talking to himself in that scene. The story his dad tells him is a story he already knows, he only remembers it as something to relate to it because he is soul-searching. The mountain scene ties back to the "righting wrongs for a ghost" (meaning Superman had, in fact, been passive since Zod) and to the earlier scene where he calls his mom and asks her why Jonathan never traveled. When he goes back, he makes the conscious choice to do so himself. In that scene he sheds away the burden-- the burden of his father's expectations of him (to be a hero) and the burden the world around him puts on his shoulders. He goes back to Metropolis to just be himself and look for an anchor in the world that will help him deal with things when not everything goes according to plan. He relates to his father, sure, but he's not following instructions.Well, there's always story happening, in every scene there's story happening. I disagree that it's an active change. Clark is on the mountain and gets a vision of his father. Then it's what the father tells him that makes him see the light. And then the scene ends. For me, Clark's passive in that scene. Change comes from how characters act when they're put under pressure, but there's no pressure on Clark in that scene, so he reacts instead of acts. I would have wanted to see a longer sequence, so we can spend some time with the character development, and not make it rushed. The character development came way too easy for me.
I know, but Batman's weapons couldn't touch him before. Save for that World Engine in Man of Steel, nothing could. He didn't know he had to use his super-speed to get ahead of Batman that he had to do anything other than stand there and look really tall. And as far as negotiations go, it's generally better to not poke the bear any more than you have to. If anything, that's the primary problem with how this fight starts; he went to the poking bit a little too quickly and it backfired.But that wasn't my point. My point was that Superman could have used his super speed and finished the fight even before Batman had an opportunity to use his weapons. And Superman must have known that Batman had some weapons ready, considering what he's seen of Batman previously.
Let's be fair; it's not the audience's fault at that point. The flashbacks draw the parallel, but the fact they are so needed means that the film-makers knew something would get lost in the translation. The execution of the scene just isn't very good and that's primarily because of the dialogue in that entire sequence. Even if the audience got the reason behind the resolution, they dismissed it, because it just didn't resonate with them. It didn't resonate with them, because it was poorly executed.Correction, they didn't WANT to understand the scene.
As much as I have defended this scene, it's also the most heavy handed moment in the film. This movie had no problem NOT spelling things out for the audience, using subtle facial expressions and such to imply a lot of the story, and then it goes and beats you over the head with Bruce's multiple flash backs in this moment.
While I think it did need the flashbacks, I think it could have been FAR more deftly handled than it ultimately was.
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