One of the things that
Batman Begins evokes (and was grossly missed by the more 'professional' film critics) was it's archetypal nature. The thing about climbing that mountain to attain enlightenment is a classic literary symbol for man's struggle to find truth; the blue poppies is in itself a symbol for inspiration and the
metaphysical striving of the infinite . The entire shot of a young Bruce Wayne, pre-adolescent, falling into the mouth of a 'cave' and then facing his future totem were central initiation rites dating back to the Paleolithic period (and hell, becomes archetypal in art and myth). When Bruce returned to the cave he had to crawl through and then attains true being (becoming the bat) by overcoming his old fears. Again, the whole set piece is archetypal in this sense. But the most impressive one in Begins (and it remains a theme throughout the series) is the one around the
Dying God/
Fisher King . The archetype (which almost all hero myths adhere to, whether consciously or not) was about the old king becoming too impotent to care for the Earth, and that his impotence turned it into a waste-land. In
Begins this sentiment is echoed through Ra's Al Ghul and Batman, and their 'throne' being that of 'justice'. Ra's is from an older, more visceral school of justice, opting for vengeance and destruction, but the 'super-hero', the 'Batman' proposes a new mode of justice where extremities are reached, but morality is never removed. So when Ra's "dies", he has come full-circle, he the fisher king who has to die out and let the new king, Batman, take his place as provider of justice. In
The Dark Knight Bruce faces his equal, but opposite in the Joker; he faces the chaos of the cave and is, to some extent, becoming futile on his own until he decides to sacrifice himself to save Gotham City. The sacrifice throws him into the next level of being, and thus the chaos is averted, again, like the tale of the Fisher-King. So when I'm hearing about
The Dark Knight RISES (note how 'rising' was a part of that cave-metaphor, the initated kid had to 'rise' from the depths of the cave in order to be the hero) I can't help but imagine TDK being that cave and TDKR being the next step in Batman's story. The comparison is even more interesting when you consider the choice of villian: Bane, a guy who (like Lex) has that self-serving messiah-complex (okay maybe not all of Lex). Bane could be coming to Gotham posing as the next 'hero' after Batman, and the Dark Knight has to go ahead and face his own futility as a provider of justice in the world. So it all works out well in Nolan's world.
So what does this have to do with
Man of Steel? Well, for one thing, that archetype of the hero/dying god was already covered in
Superman,
Superman II and
Superman Returns, only less carefully handled (the Jesus aspect was overtly done). It worked for Batman because he comes from earth and has that sense of mythical past, but can the same be done for Superman? Moreover, by now there should be a different way of telling the story anyway. He's Kryptonian, and there are other hero-archetypes that can be used (if they must). To an extent
Captain America was so close to its comic-book source that the very concept of the superhero is in itself seen as an archetype. And if we agree on that, then we should also agree that Superman is, foremost, the archetype of the superhero. These are important things that David Goyer and Snyder should keep in mind before telling the ultimate tale of the "greatest superhero of the world".