No. In SII he HELPS Lois the only way he can at that poin. In SR he HURTS her. Diametrically opposed intentions.
Well, that's not something that's been discussed much, but it is really neither here nor there.
If you care about somebody and love them, you say goodbye in that situation, period.
No just acknowledging that when I say apples you see oranges and when you say oranges I see apples.
Proving he is being portrayed out of character, b/c Superman in ALL his incarnations is able to make the tough decision and overcome his fear and NOT hurt Lois.
Apples.
SOmetimes, perhaps, apples and oranges you know.
After watching the Donner cut of Superman II I would say 'Yes.' LEster and co had to come up with a new ending for SUperman II and they just weren't up to the task to have a really fantastic ending (not that turning back time was fantastic, just better than the amnesia kiss.)
However, they effectively portrayed that Supreman amnesia kissed her to aleviate her pain and undo the damage he was responsible for. No utlerior motives, no hidden selfish reason. That is not Superman. The end of Superman II is just not really good writing.
Duh, but he's also a character written by people sometimes really well and sometimes not so well. The itentions were good, it was just goofy and 30 years later raises a lot of questions that people wouldn't have asked when it was first released.
Yet he clearly knows it is wrong in SR to not say goodbye to Lois, otherwise it wouldn't have been 'difficult' to do.
[/quote]He had not bought into the mission yet.
THat's what Superman II is about.
It's a point early in his career where he hasn't bought in wholesale to what Jor-El has been preaching.
And yes, if he wants to he can quit at any time and give up his powers and lead a normal everyday life, just as he did in "What Ever Happened To The Man of Tomorrow?"
Without all the facts (Phantom Zone Villains running loose), it was a mistake, but otherwise there's no reason he can't give up his powers and live a normal life if that's what he wants to do.
CHicken and egg. World was going along fine until Superman arrived and Luthor pulled the nuclear missile gag.
So why can't he quit if he wants to again?
I've always had some problems with the Donner films, but they are completely different from my problems with SR. I still see SUperman in character in the Donner films, but not in SR.
WHen you see oranges in the Donner films you also see oranges in SR. I see apples in the Donner films, but oranges in SR.
No, it's the script and the approach to utilize vacant stares in lieu of actual meaningful dialogue.
Especially that part where he leaves for 5 years and doesn't say goodbye. That really shows how much he cares for her and the fruits of their relationship.
YOu know, so my wife will know that I love her as much as SUperman loves Lois, I'll away for a week on business and not call or tell her anything. Then when I come home, I'll say, "I'm sorry. I couldn't have gone away for a week if I'd come to say goodbye first. Oh and I'm always around, so don't feel bad."
Cares so much that in fact, he never tells Lois WHY it was so hard. He chickens out and lets Clark do it.
Ironically, the average person would have no-brained the goodbye thing. And Superman blew it.
Enough you have become tiresome!
THe difference is that the intentions of the filmmakes are diametrically opposed. Singer doesn't intend for his actions to be OK. He is purposely having Superman do the wrong thing and it is clear that Superman KNOWS it in the movie, thus the filmmakers knew. It is the opposite with the SUeprman II. It is not presented as a mistake, yet it is presented as a mistake in SR.
That's the problem. Singer didn't have any sugary intentions.
Because that is what's there, the worst.
But I don't think they are comparable. Apples and oranges, remember.
Wrong. He saves people. Mistakes are not a core part of his characer. And he didn't correct them in SR. His mistakes in SR are uncorrectable. Bingo! We have a winner!!
He might sometimes. As he was raised as one and might forget. I think it might be complicated for him (psychologically and emotionally).
Angeloz
For the sake of discussion don't we need to define the term.
Certainly he is not of this Earth, and his physiology is not of this Earth, hence the effect of the yellow sun. Are you limiting your definition of human purely to that aspect?
If so you are correct, argument is pointless; the facts speak for themselves, however he was raised by humans(damn good ones in fact) in an environment that is the classic American rural setting of Smallville a rural and bucolic environ, the breeding ground of strong "human" ideals.
Do you espouse that he conciously rejects any notion or concept of the influence of his upbringing, and that he in no way(intellectually) considers himself human?
Is nature that dominant over nurture?
Well since I do special effects, and especially with the global radiostiy they were using for the effects in SR, yes they could have. Sony just did a bad job.^I disagree, as i believe it is much harder to render a realistic flying human than it is a flying 'Ironman' so to speak, but to each his own.
OK, I'll bring the camera![]()
DOn't be so blatantly rewriting the intentions of the filmmakers!In SII he hurts her too, don't be so blatantly blind.
But he's not EVERY human being, he's Superman, he has powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men, so his solutions are not going to be your run of the mill solutions.And manipulating her memory is not, by a long shot, the only way to help her. He could have quit the Planet so Lois could deal with her pain in a more easy way, as every human being does.
In fact it is pretty much there in the movie. Of course than ignoring those things allows you to reply.
But if you care most for your duties, then you do what you have to do. Your girl is not the priority.
When you say apples, I say Oranges because a, b and c.
Lately I say Oranges and you go "You're wrong, apples, period."

He didn't know she would die, but as you recall he righted that situation and saved her life.In STM, Superman allowed her to die.
In SII, Superman hurt her by regaining his powers and re-embracing his mission.
So what you are unable to see is that he RIGHTS the situation with the amnesia kiss. Duh!
So what you say is not true.
I guess I should have been more specific, he ALWAYS finds a way to right the situation.
El Payaso, you can't be so dense as to not see that I'm not spoonfeeding you and simply refering to an argument I've already made concering the fact that we see S:TM and SII completely differently.Yeah, unable to reply.
No, I don't. I'm always able to reply properly.
I guess you really do need to be spoonfed.
Now I'll be generous and assume you get the filmmakers are the ones who made changes, not Superman. And not inside the fiction certainly.
They portrayed the amnesia kiss as Superman's best intentions because they relied on the fact that as long as you see Superman onm screen you won't be able to assume he was having bad intentions. Merely that.
I think you're starting to get it...
Nevertheless the implications of Superman's actions remain intact in spite of what filmmakers intended.
ONly as we view it now, not within the context of the movie or the world at that time.
That said, I see you don't apply the same trust in Singer, who portrayed Superman's mistakes as naive ones, things he really coudln't handle, but this time - in oprder to hate - it's a no. Sudedenly, implications are more valuable.
No it's clear that in SR he knew it was wrong to leave w/o saying goodbye and explaining himself. He KNEW the difference, something that was not in S:TM and SII. It's completey different.
Yes SR is quite inconsistent with S:TM and SII and the comics.Quite inconsistent.
Meh. So in 30 years SR will be ok I assume?
Intentiuons or not, actions are there and this movie is based on a Superman able to do those very actions.
As wouldn't have to manipulate minds in SII.
I have never denied he knew it was a mistake. I point out he has often knew when he was making something wrong.
But the fact it's difficult shows he cares, as opposite to the oblivious attitude you claimed he was having.
Yes he is. Since he put that blue and red costume he is. Since he firstly saved Lois and the chopper, he is.
For Superman II everyone knows him and he's all into his mission. That's what SII is about. The adventure continues, not the adventure starts.
Yes he has been bought, he started saving people, protecting the innocent and saving kitties from trees as Jor-El had told him to.
In fact by the point where he reverses time it's the first time he does NOT listen to Jor-El, as opposite as before.
Of course he can. He can EVEN when he's warned it's not the right thing to do.
And time proved Jor-El to be right.
I'm in the need to reply the same since you conveniently ignored what I said:
If it wasn't Zod, it was Lex Luthor, who had fled from jail by the time. If not Luthor, Robert Vaughn character, etc. Common criminals, etc etc. The world will be needing Superman always.
Then Superman has always been uneeded, which makes the character pointless.
Great move, mego.

Because innocent people will die if he does. Thought you knew something about the character.
The point is nobody's forcing him to quit or to regain powers.
But that's just because you can condone Superman killing Zod,
manipulating Lois' mind without her permission, having a personal revenge over a human and not doing his best to save people but only to save Lois.
And then you can't forgive he didn't say good bye. Hilarious.
I know. If the sky being violet helps you to make a point you will claim it to be violet. For the sake of filmmakers intentions when it's convenient to or for what Superman's actions implies, using one perspective or the other, depending on the convenience for your argumentation.
The explanations you claim are not there, are there in fact, I have quoted them. You chose to ognore Matha said she thought Superman will never come back. If Superman had known he was going to be back in 5 years he would have told Martha, therefore if she didn't know, he didn't know.
I'll glad SR didn't go into spoonfeeding.
I thought we already know Superman cares for his mistakes AFTER he makes them?
Until the day youi're Superman and Superman is married tio Lois, that example is pretty much pointless and useless.
Yes, he did. In the roof.
Because the average person wouldn't be going to a trip to space from which he didn't know if he was coming back or not.
As you replied to the rest I'll assume this is yet another incorrect statement.
Even when I know you have never been inside Donner's, Lester's and Singer's mind or - for that matter - you didn't even had a chat with them via MSN, so you can't conclude what their intentions were but merely what your interpretation of those are, it's clear that Singer was more honest than Donner and Lester because where Superman made the same kind of mistakes, Singer didn't make him go for the mind manipulation or time reversing to make Superman satisfy himself by undoing what's done.
Meaning, you choose not to give Singer the benefit of the doubt you give Donner and Lester. You prefer filmmakers to be more hyprocitical about Superman's action. Donner and Lester had Superman hiding the dirt under the carpet.
Man, if your life is so horrible that you can only see the worst in people, I feel truly sorry for you.![]()
Yes, don't bother to tell me why you think so. Instead use some fruit euphemism.
SR Superman's mistakes are as uncorrectable as the ones from STM or SII. The only reason why Superman didn't correct them in SR is because he didn't reverse time or give some amnesia kisses.
One good time reversing and he wouldn't have gone to Krypton in the first place.
Well i think it depends on what 'costume' he is in so to speak, Clark or Superman, he acts more human as (edit) Clark, but sometimes human nature does creep through into Superman as well.
Oh he acknowledges his upbringing often definately, hence why he feels he owes an obligation to earth, but i dont think he looks in the mirror and sees a human. He knows he is different, that is obvious. Thats my personal take on it.
I though you thought him nearly perfect mego joe?
Angeloz
So he's so human he's capable of making human errors, but he doesn't consider himself emotionally human?
He doesn't feel an obligation, he genuinely CARES for other people and uses his powers and abiltities to help them. It's not about obligation, he CARES! That is his motivation, not obligation.
Well since I do special effects, and especially with the global radiostiy they were using for the effects in SR, yes they could have. Sony just did a bad job.
DOn't be so blatantly rewriting the intentions of the filmmakers!
But he's not EVERY human being, he's Superman, he has powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men, so his solutions are not going to be your run of the mill solutions.
Too bad it's a throw away line ...
If you really love her, you don't do it at her expense...
I've given my reason over and over, unfortuntately you're wearing glasses with oranges etched into them!
He didn't know she would die, but as you recall he righted that situation and saved her life.
So what you are unable to see is that he RIGHTS the situation with the amnesia kiss. Duh!
I guess I should have been more specific, he ALWAYS finds a way to right the situation.
El Payaso, you can't be so dense as to not see that I'm not spoonfeeding you and simply refering to an argument I've already made concering the fact that we see S:TM and SII completely differently.
I guess you really do need to be spoonfed.
I think you're starting to get it...
ONly as we view it now, not within the context of the movie or the world at that time.
No it's clear that in SR he knew it was wrong to leave w/o saying goodbye and explaining himself. He KNEW the difference, something that was not in S:TM and SII. It's completey different.
Yes SR is quite inconsistent with S:TM and SII and the comics.
No, b/c his character was not motivated by the same intentions as is in S:TM and SII.
Unable to do what? Save Lois's life and aleviate her pain at the end of SII? No he does that. He's just not clairvoyant.
But not cared enough to actually do the right thing. It's hard to distinguish between the two scenarios.
Only superficially. He didn't really believe it until he saw the consequences of what would happen w/o him around as Superman. Otherwise he would never have given up his powers to be with Lois.
It's all one story. Part 1 and part 2.
But he doesn't have an implicit understanding of it until he faces the decision between the mission and Lois and sees what happens when he is no longer Superman.
IT's called foreshadowing and leads into part two, Superman II. It's the beginning of his doubt in Jor-El's plan.
Only within the context of that specific story. So in "WHat ever Happened to The Man of Tomorrow?" it's "wrong" for him to have given up his powers?
Just like Singer, rehashing the same thing, over and over...
It's the quirkyness of comic book characters. Rarely do the worthy villains come along first.
Yes it is one of the oddities in this type of fiction that ony an astute mind can pick up on.
He can't save everybody either- thought YOU knew something about the character. And if you really understood SII, you'd realize that the movie is about WHY his can never be with Lois and why he MUST have this mission as opposed to the notion that he is a selfish mistake prone character that is his own worst enemy.
Did I indicate anything different? The point is he has to totally understnad and buy into the mission to really be Superman. THe film tells a compelling but very different story from the comics to get the charcters to the same status quo.
No, YOU think he killed Zod, I think it's a poor filmmaking sequence in which it is left inresolved. If you knew anything about the character, you would know he would not have been depicted killing at the time.
You have to separate bad filmmaking from the actual intentions of the filmmakers and what is actually in the story.
Actually, what's hilarious is that you completley misunderstand the point of S:TM and SII.
Well, you're the one who can't seem to figure out that Superman in S:TM and SII is actually the good guy.
SO that is some sort of absolution for Superman not being honest with Lois? OH yeah, I forgot, nothing says "I love you" like disappearing w/o a trace forever.
Of course not, that way YOU can make up your own meaning to the movie.
Actually, if he knows it is wrong before hand he DOESN'T do it. That's the point. And mistakes are not what drive the character.
No doubt that you would think that, but people that actually REALLY love each other act that way. And that is the way they act. It's not about me and my wife it's about people that actually love each other and actually care more for the other person than themselsves. ANd if you can't see that that is the CORE of the Superman character, you are more dense than you let on.
He told he why he left, not why he couldn't say goodbye.
Becasue no soldier ever leaves for war and thinks he may not come back. It's common sense and common decency there's no defense for it. Period.
YEs, almost everything you say is incorrect when it comes to Superman and the Suerman films.
No, Singer just didn't get that IF Superman made such mistakes he would never let them stand.
No. How is not saying goodbye to Lois a sugary intention, when it's clear that SUperman KNOWS it was wrong in the film?
My life is actually wonderful and once again your inability to be creative in a response is underwhelming, just like SR.
OK, Aristotle, I'll spoon feed you from now on.
No, the only reason he didn't correct them in SR is b/c the vision of the directors was diametrically opppsed in the approach to Superman and his character.
All he had to do was say goodbye.

Now this I actually agree with.I'll admit I was disappointed by the "Iron Man" trailer. The visual effects look alright but not the rest of it (writing mainly). I hope the clips improve but fear they'll be worse.
Angeloz
No i dont think Superman thinks he is human, I think he knows he isnt in fact BUT, he acts like one because he was raised as one, i dont see how thats an inconsistency.
Plus i think he thinks he owes human an obligation to protect them BECAUSE he cares.![]()
It's not an obligation to humans or Earth, but an obligation b/c of powers to help all sentient races.If a human were raised by wolves, he would act like one, yet he still wouldnt be a wolf would he?

Yes, but you're the guy who thinks Superman IV was good.![]()
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It was certainly better than Superman III and SR. It's overall quality is still not that good, just better than the above mentioned films. It's basic concept was one of the best of ALL SUperman films, its execution was just lacking greatly.
Mego Joe said:But he would act like a wolf and identify himself as a wolf, just like Tarzan always identified himself as an ape. A different kind of ape, but an ape none-the-less. And Tarzan returns ot the Jungle b/c it is his home and despite his genetics he is still an ape inside.
In Superman Returns, we got Superman as an analogy for Bryan Singer's personal angst.