Superman Returns the moral of SR story

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well, almost every superhero's movie has a moral of the story. well, we got the message clearly in spidey 1,2,3 and bb as they kept repeating the phrase; so that the audience wouldn't miss it.

so, what is the moral of SR story? the son became the father, the father the son??? what's that?

and i think, from lex, the moral should be... never ever date any girl who doesn't share your idea and dream.
 
The moral is don't have loose sex and then run out on your significant other for 5 years without so much as a damn post it note on the fridge.
 
The world will move on without you.

But it didn't and neither did Lois really, she was just mad at him because he ditched her.

THe rest of the world seemed to accept him back immediately.

I would say the moral of the movie was, sometimes when you makes mistakes you have to learn to live with them because somethings you just can't fix.
 
But it didn't and neither did Lois really, she was just mad at him because he ditched her.

THe rest of the world seemed to accept him back immediately.

I would say the moral of the movie was, sometimes when you makes mistakes you have to learn to live with them because somethings you just can't fix.
sounds good.

but did he make any mistake???

going back to krypton to find out his root is really what he wanna do (in SR universe)
and banging lois lane... i don't think he would regard it as a mistake... after all he has gotten the bonus back. :woot:
 
The true life moral is... don't give Singer $220 million to make a Superman movie.

The movie moral is... Get a better security system in your secret fortress.
 
I think the moral has something to do with him believing he was alone, Krypton being a graveyard; losing Lois, losing Jor-El and the crystals,...etc

And then when all hope was lost, Lois tells him Jason is his son... and he feels a renewed sense of purpose.
 
well, almost every superhero's movie has a moral of the story. well, we got the message clearly in spidey 1,2,3 and bb as they kept repeating the phrase; so that the audience wouldn't miss it.

so, what is the moral of SR story? the son became the father, the father the son??? what's that?

and i think, from lex, the moral should be... never ever date any girl who doesn't share your idea and dream.

Well, superheroes stories doesn't have to have a moral. Superhero movies' audiences don't necessarily need some moral guidance - specially coming from summer blockbusters -since they can have their own ways of living and look at life.

At most the moral would be that in real life there are no black and white/absolute morals. Or that in real life there are hard decisions and even if you make the right one, things are going to be be difficult and unpredictable.
 
Well, superheroes stories doesn't have to have a moral. Superhero movies' audiences don't necessarily need some moral guidance - specially coming from summer blockbusters -since they can have their own ways of living and look at life.

At most the moral would be that in real life there are no black and white/absolute morals. Or that in real life there are hard decisions and even if you make the right one, things are going to be be difficult and unpredictable.

But it's rare that the hero makes the wrong decision for the wrong reasons and it makes the hero act out of character.

Many decisons in life are hard, but one of the things about SUperman is that he makes the hard decions and puts others ahead of himself.

ANd unfortunately, when it comes to SR, his actions toward Lois contradict this aspect of the character.
 
I think the moral has something to do with him believing he was alone, Krypton being a graveyard; losing Lois, losing Jor-El and the crystals,...etc

And then when all hope was lost, Lois tells him Jason is his son... and he feels a renewed sense of purpose.

I think those are more like themes.

But just to comment, so his renewed sense of purpose is that he gets to watch from afar a son he should be raising himself?
 
We dont know how Superman will be involved in Jason's life; that's for the upcoming film to explore obviously.
 
We dont know how Superman will be involved in Jason's life; that's for the upcoming film to explore obviously.

OUtlook doesn't look to good from where I'm standing. Otherwise the echoing of Jor-El's bitter sweet speech losing its meaning.
 
But it didn't and neither did Lois really, she was just mad at him because he ditched her.

THe rest of the world seemed to accept him back immediately.

I would say the moral of the movie was, sometimes when you makes mistakes you have to learn to live with them because somethings you just can't fix.


But the appearance was initially that Lois had moved on pass their relationship to have a family.

And Ma Kent had moved out of Smallville in the original version.

And Lex had gotten out of jail. Not how Superman left it.


I also agree with your moral, too.

And of course. Lock the Fortress!:woot:
 
I think the moral has something to do with him believing he was alone, Krypton being a graveyard; losing Lois, losing Jor-El and the crystals,...etc

And then when all hope was lost, Lois tells him Jason is his son... and he feels a renewed sense of purpose.
so he has never treated earth his home, he never like us... :csad:
 
The moral of Superman Returns is that if you are going to leave your true love for a long period of time, be sure leave them a note that you'll be returning!
 
Oh come on, the obvious point of Returns is that Superman goes all the way into deep space looking for his family, and then finds out he had one on earth all along.
 
he thought he had to go searching for what he was looking for when he had it all along.
 
he thought he had to go searching for what he was looking for when he had it all along.

The blue bird tale. Superman being the blue bird AND the one looking for the blue bird.
 
Oh come on, the obvious point of Returns is that Superman goes all the way into deep space looking for his family, and then finds out he had one on earth all along.
so, the moral is to find something, look around, don't look beyond. is that right?
 
Oh come on, the obvious point of Returns is that Superman goes all the way into deep space looking for his family, and then finds out he had one on earth all along.

Also, the world doesn't need a savior, just a light to show them the way.
 
Oh come on, the obvious point of Returns is that Superman goes all the way into deep space looking for his family, and then finds out he had one on earth all along.
That's irony, not a moral.

The plot is that Superman "lost" his family on Earth because he was out seeking one on Krypton, so the moral should be a lesson learned through tragedy: cherish what you have, not what you don't, because fate may not give you a second chance.

Of course, this is Warner Bros., so the SR moral is meaningless; they're all about giving people a second chance. :rolleyes: :p
 
If you don't have what you like, like what you have.
 

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