I really enjoyed the movie; it wasn't perfect, but neither was '78 Superman. I really like shaking it up with Lois. I enjoyed we got to see her investigative skills. She had a starting point with "Joe" but she traced him back to Clark Kent real quick. I liked that because, to me, Lois Lane is supposed to be a fantastic investigative reporter. And she did more than just wait around to rescued - she was in the thick of things for a while, and that was good. It's very interesting to me, starting with Lois in the know from Superman's first appearance. Hopefully she won't get mind-wiped in the sequel.
The military aspect, the entire aspect of Superman not being universally embraced at first, was interesting. Not really typical Superman. I had considered the idea of people in the future (sequel) being sort of "this never would have happened to us if not for him being here" but I might prefer that to be a very small subset of people, as it seems to me Superman has traditionally been a hero loved by the population, unlike some of the others.
I like that Perry knew Lois was snowing him when said she came up empty. He's a competent professional.
Jor-El was kickbutt (a bit too much so, IMO). Scientist and fighter and so on. Krypton was visually quite interesting. I did like Jor-El expressing the sentiment that he and Lara were part of the failed order - I mean, it was interesting. I don't agree with the idea that people such as themselves couldn't have broken free of that order. Indeed, I'd almost say they did so in having their child. But that they think that way is indicative of his point, I suppose. And, of course, it rolls in well with Zod's speech later. Also liked Jor-El's ghostly-hologram's extreme calmness.
Small bits I liked - introducing the bully, and only after his introduction revealing he was Pete Ross. Woodburn - that was his name, right? That amused me.
Things I didn't like - Jonathan saying maybe Clark should have let people die, Jonathan's death (he went back for a dog, and then just stood there and let himself die without even trying to save himself after he motioned for Clark to stop) just felt contrived and didn't work for me, and the extremely long fight sequence(s) starting in Smallville and going to Metropolis. I got bored with the endless action (which is less visually interesting to me than when Spider-Man fights, but more interesting than shootout movie). I need dialog and character moments and such. I actually appreciated the different sort of action when Supes was trying to destroy the machinery - nice break from people getting thrown through buildings/buildings falling down. Lastly, Lara could have had more to do.
Minor questions (some serious, some sarcastic)
When did the Supersuit actually get made? Jor-El AI made it when leading Clark around and so on?
When did the S-emblem-thingamabob change hands? Did Clark give it Lois before he left and her try to give it to him on the ship? Or did he just give it to her the first time on the ship?
How many people in Smallville know Clark is Superman? I mean, Pete, Lana, some of the other now-grown kids from the bus have to know. Or at least have figured it out after this happened. And the cop that brought Lois to the Kent home. The military knows he grew up in Kansas, that Smallville got attacked, and has a narrow window on when he'd have graduated high school - will they figure it out?
Why did Superman tell them he grew up in Kansas - he shouldn't volunteer info.
Why did Jor-El tell Zod that he had a son and so on - again, don't volunteer info to people you don't trust.
Will Lois actually take three weeks off - I think she has a pretty big story to write immediately (or as soon as they can get something published)?
Why did Zod pick Earth - originally, I mean, not after Clark fought back? He can terraform planets, why pick that one? I know Earth is closest, but if you can terraform any of them, why not pick an unpopulated one? Then they might even have had Kal-El's cooperation.
there are plenty of things luthor can exploit to stir up fear and hatred towards superman. but no one on that planet will turn against superman for the reason of him having killed zod as a means to save all life on earth. he's best off exploiting the consequences of superman's presence and the power he's demonstrated being capable of.
Too true. Just him being here caused so much of this, caused Zod to come here. And so many people had to have died, given all the building collapses. Great for Lex. BTW, is it at all possible, do you think, for Lex to actually be associated with the military (maybe as a civilian expert of some sort?) in the sequel. They already want to know about him, and if Lex want to know, he could try and see what they know. He could maybe discover Kryptonite. He would be in a good position there (or as a consultant to high-level government officials) to influence opinion against Superman. Not saying I want that route to happen - just an idea. But what should spark Lex against Superman in this version, do you think?
I felt Jonathon Kent was a confusing character. He never really imparted his son with any great wisdom or guidance. Clark’s parents are supposed to be the source of his moral compass, but we never really see that being passed on. We see them concerned for his well being and urging him to be cautious of his abilities and to cope with his reality. But there is no great moral wisdom passed on. Clark’s moral compass is mentioned a few times in the film, but we are only told about it, it’s never really on display. Martha’s attempt at guiding her son through hard times was pretty cheesy and forced. Jonathon’s death was almost humorous. Trying to save a dog in the middle of a twister while refusing Clark’s help was pretty anti-climactic and non-sensical.
I agree with this aspect of the review. Clark was good, heroic, because he was. It wasn't anything taught or imparted. I get that his parents loved him - we saw that. We didn't see them teaching him to be a force for good or to save people or even just to help when he able or anything like that. That was just him. And Jonathan's death really was cringe-worthy.