Super Dark

MovieBob

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Super Dark

MovieBob didn't want to write about Man of Steel anymore, but it went and started a worthwhile discussion, didn't it?

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Deacon Cole

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MovieBob said:
Upfront confession: I don't really want to write another column about "Man of Steel."
Then don't.

Seriously, man. I, for one, am getting sick of it. I saw the movie and was disappointed by it but I'm too disinterested to bother picking it apart. It's just another terrible, terrible Nolan super hero movie. So now I have to wait even longer for a good Batman and now Superman movie. Fuck that guy.
 

RJ Dalton

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I've been sick of gritty reboots almost since Batman Begins started the trend. I liked Batman Begins, mind you, but that tone worked really well with Batman's character. But Hollywood, in typical Hollywood fashion, decided that the new formula was "Dark and Gritty = success and money." Dark and gritty is not automatically good. It's an aesthetic choice that works with some things and not with others.
 

RJ Dalton

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undeadsuitor said:
It looks like history has repeated itself after the last time they misunderstood that "dark and gritty = success" back in the 90s


they never learn
No, they never do. They've institutionalized never learning, it seems.
 

Jetsetneo

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I don't know why people call it 'grim and gritty' when it is most certainly 'Grounded'. Its a more realistic taste, I mean batman isn't killing dudes in cold blood and neither is superman.

Similarly, I don't mind this aesthetic because...I like variety, if anything I'm getting a little sick of 'tried and true' 'bright and happy' marvel films, because only once did I ever see consequences in those movies, and even then it was short lived and no where near the depth the issue needed to be dealt with (Stark's PTSD in iron man 3, fwiw). The irony is that Marvel heroes are the 'grounded' ones with all the 'consequences' at yet the definitely play out like what DC is commonly associated with. And yeah, DC has more or less gone the Marvel route, where, despite the heroes best intentions, sometimes the fallout is negative.

Its a role-reversal, and I think most people with only a casual appreciation of super heroics won't see it.

I don't want ALL 'grounded' films, I still love the Avengers, but it won't be long before these things become paint-by-numbers outside of Origin stories (which are in-and-of themselves paint-by-numbers). Avengers 2 'spoiler' they team up to beat Thanos.

OT: I think Bob hit the nail on the head,Twice. Superman is a polarizing character, you either love him or hate him, Take his 'boy scout' or leave it. So the film already started with legions of angry nerds. Secondly, hes right in that the movie was leading up to something grandiose, and then forgets it completely and goes for the slug-fest all-out battle climatic ending. I didn't mind the ending, or the action, and hey, you might see it as 9/11 allusion, that event is going to inform Movies in general for YEARS to come, whether we like it or not, events like that inform our art whether we like it or not, on purpose or not (and its pretty easy to find other examples). So I just live with it.
 

tohellwithyourcrap

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I totally agree. I wasn't going to see this movie, but now I may. Honestly, it sounds as if it may have been intentional, maybe, to interrupt and/or delay any of the boy scout/cheerful/charming bits about superman, not to mention the great themes and metaphors involved with him assuming his alter ego of 'mild mannered' Clark Kent. Perhaps it was to cause us to hope for these thematic elements and deeper messages in the next movie, or I'm just being optimistic. But Batman Begins was good, and then Dark Knight hit it out of the park and won the world series. But will something similar happen this time? It's not outside the realm of possibility. After all, the teenage boys this movie was allegedly meant for will grow up. Maybe the franchise can possibly grow up with them?
 

Jupiter065

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This would have been a perfect time for a hopeful Superman film. The Donner film was such a success specifically BECAUSE it was released in one of the most cynical times in American history. That film was much more about society reacting to this hopeful good hero than it was about Superman himself. Being a bright light in a dark world has always been Superman's main selling point, right from his initial success in the dirty thirties, to the recession/war shocked 70s, and he could have done it again here.

But no, gotta make this 2/3 whinging, moping drama and 1/3 brainless violence and 9/11 references cause that's what every movie has to be now I guess.

Fuck this movie, I don't even like Superman, but at least I understand the character.
 

Pants316

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I think what makes it disturbing is how it's ignoring it's own violence. *spoiler* after superman destroys the *ha ha* World Engine he embraces Lois gives her a kiss and they both make quips. After all that destruction chances are they are above and around 100s of dead or dying people. They are standing in the middle of a Cormac Mcarthy nightmare, What a perfect time for a first kiss joke! Are Lois and Clark both Sociopaths or is the film confirming that summer blockbusters should never be taken seriously? Max Landis made a good point in a youtube video rant asking what was with everything going back to normal in the next scene. Guy's asking for a date to a football game? The Stadium is gone! The Team is Dead!

Usually a film ignoring actual violence as it happens isn't a big deal but seeing this type of city destruction makes it near impossible to ignore the fact that thousands are probably dead by collateral damage. Want a funny DC Marvel cross over!? Remake Avengers and instead of having the Government launch a Nuke at New York they should send in Superman.
 

Mr. Q

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I'm in the same boat at Bob. I don't wanna discuss it but, the more I think about the movie, the more glaring the flaws become. As I mentioned before, Man of Steel's creation stems not from the filmmakers wanting a "dark and gritty" Superman. Rather, the problem is DC Comics and Warner Brothers being too inept and clueless with the DC Universe and its cast of characters. Aside from having success with Batman, any attempts to have similar results with other characters have failed miserably and their movie track record pretty much proves itself. They've had success with the animated shows but the big wigs at WB felt that people who worked in cartoons wouldn't know how to make a proper live action movie (there's that ineptitude problem I mentioned).

However, I'd like to see a discussion on how both companies can overcome these issues and get in the right track to making proper DCU movies that aren't varying shades of Batman. One major step would be ditching the obsessive fetish towards realism and embracing the more imaginative aspects of these characters. In the Justice League (aside from the moody billionaire with a brilliant mind but major parental issues), we've got two orphaned aliens from dying planets, an amazon princess with ties to the Greek Gods, a man who is literally "the fastest man alive", a merman who rules over the seven oceans, and a guy who welds a ring that can make constructs out of light and will power. Time to give reality its walking papers, folks.
 

Mahoshonen

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I haven't seen Man of Steel yet, but I've been thinking about how I would do a Superman trilogy. Now this isn't any better than trying to rewrite the Star Wars prequels, but I got some time to kill at work so bear with me.

Movie One: Start with Kal-El's baby pod landing in the Kent farmstead. Show scenes of Clark Kent's upbringing, but don't dwell on it too much. Eventually, Clark wanders off to find out who he is. He finds the Fortress of Solitude, finds a bunch of prerecorded messages by Jor-El telling Clark he's the sole survivor of Krypton, and that he needs to save his new home from the fate that befell Krypton. But Clark is kinda scared to see what that actually happened. So instead he goes to Metropolis, becomes mild mannered news reporter Clark Kent, and uses his superpowers to save folks from burning buildings and such. This goes on for a montage until Zod shows up and starts rambing that they need to militarize the entire planet. Superman says that that isn't happening, and the two have a big punch up outside the Fortress of Solitude until Superman punts Zod onto Venus (where the Greenhouse effect traps him.) But in the fights aftermath, Supes finally realizes he needs to see how Krypton was destroyed:
It was invaded by Darkseid
Superman realises that he needs to come up with a plan to defeat this far-off foe. But in the meantime, the movie Stinger shows that Clark Kent has been asigned to cover the Presidential Campaign of one Alexis Luthor.

Movie Two: Lex Luthor is now President. Lex wants Superman out of the picture because he's fundamentally opposed to a Magic Space Alien in Tights being the living embodiment of human behavior ("Our flaws are what make us great!" or some such nonsense). So Lex starts a dust up with someone on Superman's B-list of emenies and requests Superman sort it all out-hoping to arrange that he gets killed in the prossess. The whole movie is an allegory for the importance of overcoming ideological differences, as it ends with Superman and Lex forming a sort of detente.

Movie Three: Darkseid at last shows up. Superman's plan for defeating him? The Justice League. Rather than have separate movies for Wonder Woman, Green Lanturn, and Flash, introduce them here to ease audiences into the interpretation of the character you are going for. Nows the time to go for the big fight-to-end-all0fights rather than blow your load in the first movie. If you are feeling especially frisky, toss Doomsday in and watch the fireworks. In any case, Superman wins gby the smallest of margins.

And that's it from in and impromptu fanfiction.
 

RikuoAmero

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"Hollywood's current fixation on strip-mining geek culture"

Precisely. If you're a fan of Dragonball, it's cool whenever Goku or Vegeta scream, charge up and explode into the next level of Super Saiyan. It works as an animated feature, but when I saw it happen in Evolution?...yeah, the actors just looked ridiculous doing it. Hollywood! There's certain things that we like in one format that simply don't translate at all to the big screen!
 

Diddy_Mao

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It's a flawed movie to be sure with at least one glaring plot hole that I can't rightly ignore. (Why do Zod and his men develop Superpowers?)

In terms of tone...yes it is pretty damn dark but I think it kinda had to be. A prevailing plot in many Superhero stories is that the man only becomes the hero after experiencing some level of loss. To me, the stronger the hero, the greater the loss that pushes him into that transformation needs to be.

I put it to you that "Superman" never makes an appearance in this film until the closing scene. What we see is Clark Kent learning about his powers and his history, somewhat meekly attempting to do the right thing and being forced to use his powers without taking the time to think of the consequences.

Metropolis, Smallville and even Zod are his Uncle Ben or Thomas and Martha Wayne. They're the tragic result of his inability to act and his lifetime of ignoring the responsibilities of his power.
 

Vausch

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Mcoffey said:
The Dubya said:
Mcoffey said:
And as far as the shocking twist (no pun intended), Superman literally had no other options, and he didn't have time to think of one. And doing that destroyed him. He wasn't stoic about it, or making an awkward joke like Iron Man or Capt. America would be, he broke down. I don't mind seeing Superman pushed to those lengths, as long as it is clearly shown that this is something that will never be okay for him. I firmly believe that will be the last time we see Superman pushed to such lengths in this series.
Tony Stark's wise-cracking is mostly a defense mechanism. He hates showing signs of weakness and vulnerability to anyone (other than Pepper Potts, really), so even in the worst of times he tries to reassure himself up with his humor, results may vary whether it works or not.

...wait, are you implying that Captain America "makes awkward jokes"?? Erm...which alternate universe Captain America are YOU talking about? I mean he may say uplifting jokey stuff to lighten the mood a bit, but Tony Stark he is not.

As for the scene in question:
That neck snap scene didn't really even matter because not even 10 minutes earlier he barely batted an eye when destroying the ship full of Kryptonian Matrix eggs thingys. Even going as far as saying "Krypton Had Its Chance" before blasting away. Honestly throughout the WHOLE movie he doesn't seem to give much of a fuck about Krypton anyways, especially at that point. But when it gets to the end, NOW suddenly he's all hesitant and Weepy McWeepster over having to kill Zod? So what, it's easier to mass murder faceless lives you can't see than it is to have to do it with your bare hands? Is that what they're going for? As long as I don't have to put a face to the person I'm killing, it's okay for me to throw caution to the wind?

Or was it just forced lame writing? Imma have to go with lame writing...
Capt. America very bravely and very stoically kills tons of people in his movie and Avengers. I should've thrown a "respectively" in there somewhere.

And as far as the Krypton egg machine things, those weren't living breathing people. They can be used to make kryptonians, but that's far cry from "mass murder", as you put it. It wasn't about Krypton, it was about taking a life that he felt so much disgust and remorse about.
That's a bit of a false equivalence there. Captain America was a soldier in World War 2/fighting off an invasion army of what appeared to be automatons, and it was never a part of his character to never kill people. Sure, he often tries to find alternatives but he's not above it.

I just don't want this to set a trend. If we get a Wonder Woman movie that turns out like that NBC Pilot...*shudders* Or worse, a mopy dark Flash. Some of the happiest superheroes in the DCU more than willing to use their super speed for personal gain but never willing to put themselves over another? Can't have that, let's have 2 hours of them debating whether or not Barry is worthy of having such a gift!
 

abell

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You know, I still really didn't see the complaints. So, I think Bob's concern is that Superman isn't a 'pleasant good guy' character in this. And I think, as an origin, that works really well. He's raised as a nice kid by good parents who's constantly in fear of harming those around him. He spends his early adult life dicking around doing manly things which aren't that hard for him (putting his strength to use as subtly as he can), but, he can't stop himself from getting involved and saving people. Because it's the right thing to do. So, evil aliens show up demanding he turn himself in, and he does, still to protect people by sacrificing himself. He finally realizes that it won't work and he has to act as a protector by fighting back. At movie end, he's a lot more happier, politely reminding the military that they have literally no power over him, and integrating himself into human life by joining the Daily Planet, etc. He starts out as ashamed of what he is, and trying to hide his true nature (a good guy) and ends embracing it and becoming a hero/member of society. Doesn't that leave us exactly with the sort of Superman Bob wants?
 

Ace Morologist

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I have a very similar opinion on Man of Steel to Moviebob's, with one tiny difference: the comparison to Dragon Ball Z. See, there's one very large difference between Goku and this version of Superman. Goku almost always tried to -defeat- rather than kill his various nemeses throughout his life. Vegeta especially (the closest parallel to General Zod). Goku soundly defeated him but let him live. (Same with Yamcha, Tien, the androids, Piccolo, Piccorro, whatever. Uub...) And gave Vegeta a chance to adapt to his new life and reform. And even made Vegeta an ally. Possibly even a friend, not least because they were (among?) the last survivors of a dead planet.

With just a little tweaking, Man of Steel could have done that too. Instead of having Superman snap Zod's neck, he could have just choked him unconscious. Then that pointless confrontation scene over the broken drone could have instead been about Superman saying to the military something like, "Don't torture this guy, don't kill this guy. If you do, you're going to have to deal with a very angry me."

--Morology!

PS: And Superman should have backed off from Lois's untimely kiss saying something like, "I'm sorry, this isn't the time. People need my help. I can hear them crying out all over the city..."