The point? Elevating the characters to a different level that has not been explored by the comics. I don't want to see something I've read a million times before.
Just keep it in character. Superman was completely out of character in SR.
Young enough to make the mistakes of youth but old enough to know better.
Ok.
But that's the point of a dramatic arc. When you put someone into an emotional story arc you can't have them start where they need to end up. "Rising above" is when you have the maturity to accept you've made a mistake and are able to move past it and work towards becoming a better person. All of which he does in this film.
But it does not necessarily mean that he had to not say goodbye. You would get BETTER drama if he had said goodbye and Lois and the world STILL moved on. You also get empathy b/c he didn't screw up. He just did the right thing and he still has to come back to the same issues, but NOT because he left the wrong way.
SUperman is already supposed to be an example of the best of us and his mistakes are not going to be the ones made by immature high schoolers. THat doesn't make sense with the character- in any incarnation.
Why not? Because you say so? One thing I've learned is that I'm always learning. Just when I think I've figured things out, I'm pushed and made to grow. As a human being, we will always make mistakes and have the chance to learn from them.
No, because it WAS a coming of age story. That's what it was. The situation that is shown in SR is about BASIC common decency it's not about the finer points of maturity it's BASIC COMMON DECENCY which SHOULD be a given for SuperMAN.
Depends I suppose on how exactly the relationship was prior.
Well, they were involved sexually and I think that's all you need to know, otherwise Singer would have included it.
And this is all prologue to the movie. It's the starting point to show his growth as a character.
Which is why the movie is so ridiculous. THe set up is out of character. The story should never have happened b/c he wouldn't act that way. There is no solid story to make the viewer believe that he would ditch Lois like that and leave her in the lurch w/o a compelling and believable reason. Singer's reason? He's lonely and an emotional coward. That's just not Superman.
Yeah. Pretty sure the title says Superman. Despite you wanting to discredit as such, it is. You don't think grown men make those kinds of mistakes?
Sure they do. But they are not genuinely good caring mature and responsible- all things SUperman is supposed to be.
In a similar situation? You mean when Superman decided to go back and save Metropolis instead of Lois? Or when after saving Metropolis, he flew back to save all three of them? Or how about, even after he almost died, he still flew back in his weakened state knowing that the island itself could possibly kill him?
See, he finally became SUperman by the third act. The problem is he should have been Superman for the WHOLE movie not just the third act.
All wrong? Not really. It gives you a point-counter-point. It allows you to explore the character. It humanizes him. It also helps show why he believes humans are heroic and that he belongs with us. It's a perfect counter-point to show that despite all his power he can still make mistakes but he is also able to move past it and grow.
No. It was all wrong. If you don't understand that aspect of the character you don't understand the essence of Superman.
But hey, it seems like you like your character perfect and fairly one-note. Which is why you have such an obvious hard-on for Spider-man. This is also the problem I have with the majority of comic books. Few rarely explore emotional depth and different aspects of a character. Probably because there are hundreds of anal retentive fanboys who can't stand their characters doing something they don't agree with.
WHat makes you think I have an erection for Spider-Man? I think my wife would be quite surprised to hear that!
No. SUperman IS a fully developed. You don't have to have contradictions to be fully developed and 3-dimensional. It just seems that you have a problem with a Superman who REALLY is who he appears to be. Superman is not a character with skeletons in his closet. He's not conflicted morally. The point is he KNOWS what is right and what is wrong so the stories become explorations of how does Superman operate in a grey world and and adhere to his morals and ethics when people all around him are not.
The essence of the character is that when he first puts on that cape he has full conviction and understanding of his morals and ethics and understands common decency. He's not going put himself first, otherwise he would never have put the cape on in the first place, and secondly he's not going to screw over the woman he loves just to protect his own feelings.
So here's a great compromise. You keep reading your comics where the character is pretty much stagnant and just like the way you like him.
Guess you don't read comics then if that's what you believe.
I'll take my chances with filmmakers who try to do something fresh with the characters and explore spaces and emotions not done in the 4 color world.
If it's going to be about out-of-character deadbeat dad Superman then you can have him- it's not really Superman anyway.
