In that summary, you lose the fleshing out of General Zod which would be pretty significant and makes him come across as a stereotypical villain with no depth to his character. Moreover, you lose out on why the Council let the planet rot (implying that no one gave a damn about saving Krypton, which we know by Lara and Jor-El's actions, are not true). The summary loses out on a lot of things, that I'm not sure that it's worth cutting. Even if you use an alternate method and change the Krypton sequence to a flashback sequence during Jor-El's conversation with Kal-El, it's an awkward one due to transitioning between the rocket's launch to the rocket's landing on Kansas. Implying that Jor-El knew where the rocket was going to land, when that actually isn't the case (he only knows of the planet rather than the country that the rocket lands).
^ This. I'd have remove Zod from the opening proceedings and give him a dramatic entrance by introducing him via the You Are Not Alone Message. Have Kal-El interact with Zod more. Have Kal-El understand Zod's motivations, even sympathize with them. Give Kal-EL a stronger attachment to Krypton so the ultimate decision to save his adopted planet at the expense of his own people is more powerful. And the killing of Zod more tragic.
Imagine if Kal-El and the audience's first link with his true heritage was with Zod. Perhaps Zod can take on a sort of mentor role. They'd be less hostile from the beginning... Then when Kal finds Jor-El, he (and the audience too) learns the full truth of it. Sometime like that would be really cool.
I don't care about the content of the Krypton stuff, it's the way it was presented that I thought was lacking. It was just kind of... there. Like all the flashbacks, they were long and over explanatory. In film you can say a lot with minimal, visual language and this film just went overboard with it all and that's why it dragged a lot to me.
Who's story is this meant to be? If it's Clark's then we're fleshing out the wrong characters and focusing on the wrong planet. Why did the council let Krypton rot ? My answer to that is who cares? That doesn't add anything to Clark's story, the whole thing should have been a journey for both him and us, as it stands you already know everything before he does. As for Zod, there's nothing in that prologue that couldn't have been explored later on in the film. The Krypton sequence works in its own right, it just doesn't work as part of a whole.
haracters motivations and intentions.
Here's 2 examples:
1. A criticism I've heard leveled at the film is that Zod's entire plan is dumb, as he's giving up having superpowers, and being a god on Earth.
2. Jor-El's Phantom Drive plan as explained by Lois and Superman. Why did no-one pipe up and say 'uhh you want to open a black hole inside Earth's atmosphere, are you ****ing insane?!'.'.
Here goes.
Zod's character doesn't give a crap about superpowers, he cares only for his people and their survival. This was one of the pivotal platforms of his character. He is not a power hungry type. He is a General who serves primarily to keep his race going.
Wow that second point is like super picky and you could level that sort of thing at frankly any movie you've ever watched. It was clear that in order to sustain the phantom zone opening it needed to be powered, cut the power and you cut the portal. Once the engines were sucked into the hole the power was cut. Pretty sure you don't need the script writers to have everything spelled out to everybody do we.
My major complaint with the film rests on one of the scenes that reeked of Goyer's recurring case of bad dialogue and resultant tonal disruption: the
"he's hot" scene. It added nothing to the story, disrupted the tone - from reflective to dirge comedy-and rang horrible with the line. I wish they had cut it out; if they had, I would have given the film a 10/10; however, since it is included, my final rating is a 9/10.
It derails a thoughtful and beautifully rendered ending; it's as bad as one of the terrible cutaway gags from Family Guy.
I would have made a Superman that didn't enjoy his powers so much. The trucker scene and his first time flying(while he was laughing and giggling) are two that come to mind. I feel those were scenes that weren't needed.
If anything I wish he would have enjoyed his powers more.
for me.This is rather specific and a small nitpick that bugged me during the end fight but at one point Zod shoves a large gas tanker towards Superman and Supes just floats above it and doesn't even attempt to stop it and stares ahead as it completely blows up a majority of the skyscraper behind him. It just made me think WTF? There's people running around clearly during the fight and he can't even try to stop some of the destruction? Something small like that turned into something reallyfor me.