The Big Picture: Man of Tomorrow

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mrpeepers86

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I am going to have to disagree with the premise of this video entirely. Killing Zod was exactly what this Superman would have done, and it makes total sense for the Superman movies to come. Consider that this Clark Kent was raised by middle American farmers in the 80s and 90s. This was a Jonathan Kent who said "Maybe" when the choice came between revealing Clark and saving a school bus full of kids. This would not have been a man giving his son an iron clad moral code of "Do Not Kill," but more likely a second amendment advocate who believed firmly in "Stand Your Ground" laws, i.e. if someone attacks you on your property, you have the right to respond with deadly force. Superman did just that; he chose Earth as his home, and defended it with lethal force. In so doing, he killed the first member of his own species he ever really knew. This is why he is anguished after the killing; not because he killed, but because he killed the only other Kryptonian left on the planet, making him truly alone just after finding out who he was in the first place.

As for the question of why not kill everyone going forward, this makes perfect sense as well. Superman didn't have a defined moral code going in to this origin story, but imagine a line like this in the next MoS: "The one time I used my power to end a life, it cost me too much, left me too alone in this universe. I'll never do it again." IMHO, that's a much better reason for a person not to kill than some vague "It's a line I won't cross" nonsense. Superman did kill, and he hated what it did to him, so never again.
 

Parakeettheprawn

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Red X said:
Parakeettheprawn said:
it's Nolan/Synder's vision
Not entirely

From Digital Spy:
'Man of Steel' spoilers: Christopher Nolan disagreed with ending - Movies News - Digital Spy [http://www.digitalspy.com/movies/news/a491150/man-of-steel-spoilers-christopher-nolan-disagreed-with-ending.html]

'Man of Steel' spoilers: Christopher Nolan disagreed with ending - Movies News - Digital Spy
Christopher Nolan was initially unhappy with Man of Steel's ending, it has been revealed.

The Dark Knight Rises director, who produced Zack Snyder's Superman reboot, disagreed with the decision to have Henry Cavill's Superman kill General Zod (Michael Shannon).

"In the original version of the script, Zod just got zapped into the Phantom Zone," Snyder told Empire. "But [writer] David [S Goyer], Chris and I had long talks about it, and I said that I really feel like we should kill Zod, and that Superman should kill him.

"The 'Why?' of it for me was that if it was truly an origin story, his aversion to killing is unexplained.

"I wanted to create a scenario where Superman, either he's going to see [Metropolis's citizens] chopped in half, or he's gotta do what he's gotta do."
Hmm, interesting.

But really, as much as it might not be for most people, that explanation makes enough sense to me, TBH. I mean, sure, some things you're averse to from the beginning, but if Superman deals with the fallout of his actions (while still we finally getting some levity), that could allow room for serious character development. If they actually get it right and don't make us endure another Iron Man 2.
 

Canadamus Prime

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Zachary Amaranth said:
canadamus_prime said:
Wait, Superman kills Zod? That's not right. Superman doesn't kill.
That's Green Lantern you're thinking of. Superman's the best at what he does, though what he does isn't very nice.

That's why he runs around with a skull on his chest and enough technology to take down the US government.
Um... isn't that The Punisher? I'm pretty sure it is.
 

Something Amyss

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canadamus_prime said:
Zachary Amaranth said:
canadamus_prime said:
Wait, Superman kills Zod? That's not right. Superman doesn't kill.
That's Green Lantern you're thinking of. Superman's the best at what he does, though what he does isn't very nice.

That's why he runs around with a skull on his chest and enough technology to take down the US government.
Um... isn't that The Punisher? I'm pretty sure it is.
It was, in order:

Wolverine, the Punisher, and Iron Man (though the technology bit wasn't very specific). That's assuming you leave out Green Lantern.

It was a pretty nerdy and convoluted statement, though.
 

Canadamus Prime

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Zachary Amaranth said:
canadamus_prime said:
Zachary Amaranth said:
canadamus_prime said:
Wait, Superman kills Zod? That's not right. Superman doesn't kill.
That's Green Lantern you're thinking of. Superman's the best at what he does, though what he does isn't very nice.

That's why he runs around with a skull on his chest and enough technology to take down the US government.
Um... isn't that The Punisher? I'm pretty sure it is.
It was, in order:

Wolverine, the Punisher, and Iron Man (though the technology bit wasn't very specific). That's assuming you leave out Green Lantern.

It was a pretty nerdy and convoluted statement, though.
Ah, well I wasn't too far off. I thought that bit about him being the best there is at what he does sounded like Wolverine, I was thrown off by the 'not very nice' part. Don't recall that part of it.
 

Ukomba

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Superman felt bad about killing Zod? Didn't look like it to me, he's kissing and making jokes with Lois like 30 seconds later. Thought he biggest problem I had in that fight was that neither of them showed any battle damage at any point. Their cloths didn't even get ripped.

Not to mention that the collateral damage of their fights in Small Vile and ESPECIALLY Metropolis had to be massive and Sups didn't seem to give two shits about it. I kept expecting him to draw Zod out of the city to some deserted location DBZ style.
 

Seracen

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I think this movie would have worked better in two parts. It really needed an extra 10-15 minutes of buildup for Clark, not Kal-El, and his morals. I'd have loved to have seen an additional 10-15 minutes of acclimatization to the role, or even some buildup scenes for the news reporters to talk about BEFORE Zod shows up.

Having said that, I think the next movie will be more of a return to form that we expect, and am excited to see it. Heck, I can even see Supes' views on killing being affected BECAUSE he killed Zod.

PTSD might be a bit much for the Man of Steel, but I can see him being sensitive to the fears of the people he sees and hears around him (more so b/c he works at a news agency).

Also, while Lois didn't have a lot of ROMANTIC chemistry with Superman, I LOVED her character. True, Lois is sort of crowbarred into the story, sure any romance makes no sense (barring the whole "beefcake saved my life" syndrome).

However, I LIKED her, she wasn't the self-centered annoyance that they constantly turned her into in order to keep her from hooking up with Clark.

As bad as GL was, I am hoping they just mull that over and include him in the JLA movie anyway, even if they have to use a different actor. Hell, they could even make the JLA movie deal with Sinestro and the Yellow Lanterns, it could work. I can already think of a hamfisted way to incorporate the Martians into the equation, seeing as how Hollywood loves to connect EVERYTHING.
 

Redd the Sock

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It's not really that difficult to get around. Just play the "does the hero have the right to play judge jury and executioner" card by Luthor and suddenly the doubt is there. Better still, can we actually talk tacticaly and point out Superman's move here was to fly into the bad guys at super speed for most of the fights. An enemy that can out power Superman isn't viable, but one that out thinks him, that works.
 

jimClassic

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Seriously Bob.....I really look forward to watching your show every week, and I get disappointed when I can't watch Big Picture bc of spoilers.
 

Mosstromo

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LIKE THE SHOW THIS COMMENT INCLUDES SPOILERS:

Strange, I understood that when he killed Zod, he cried out not because he had murdered, but because he had failed. Failed in all he was meant to succeed: Bridging the two species.
If my memory can be trusted to extrac a detail from all that information and sensorial overload, I think Superman never learns at any moment that he is carrying the genetic sequences of all his race, thus when he kills Zod, he has killed the last of his entire species with him.
Although I also felt the movie lacking in passion, I actually thought (maybe just within my personal misunderstanding of it) that this moment was tremendously tragic for all of what he was meant to represent and be, at least in this particular setting and interpretation of Superman.

No doubt films are art, we all take such different nurishment, feelings and ideas from it.
;)
 

Sovereignty

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SonOfVoorhees said:
-Snip-
Even when someone looks at Batman, you think, just kill Joker....how many people has Joker killed, gets locked up yet kills again. A normal person would think "you know what, Joker is always going to kill and escape, better off killing him" Joker can not be changed to be a normal member of the public.
-Snip-

I didn't watch this full episode of TBP (I said I wouldn't if Bob continued to let his accent dip in and out of videos), but with this in particular...

Isn't the whole point of these super heroes not killing their foes, even when said murder would save countless lives, uhh I don't know... The point?

As a rational person sure, killing one evil man to save a million innocents makes sense, but these super beings choose the harder path that is above all of it. They wont push aside their morals for the greater good under any circumstances.
 

TripleDaddy

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I didn't find Clark to be mopey or dreary at all. He's guarded, which is something entirely different. He's relaxed around his mom and becomes relaxed around Lois. Why? Because he trusts them. I mean, it's not like he's been told his entire life that humanity would be afraid of him if they ever found out who and what he really is. Oh, wait...THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT HAPPENED.

The movie ends with Clark finally comfortable in his own skin. Who he is and where he fits in the world. Did Movie Bob not watch the last five minutes of the movie?

Furthermore, it's a huge leap to think that because Superman killed Zod that he now thinks it's okay to kill. In fact, Superman's reaction says something completely the opposite.

I think one of the other posters got it exactly right in that Movie Bob is looking at Man of Steel through Comic Book Guy eyes.
 

Trishbot

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Red X said:
Trishbot said:
So... Superman kills. And the movie tries to say that that's okay because the villain put a lot of people's lives at risk...


So, who's looking forward to the "Injustice" movie Warner Bros. is apparently trying to make?
And as for Injustice? I won't go into the whole alternate universe thing but remember what happened in Injustice is the opposite to what happened in Kingdom Come and similarly in the JL cartoon.

Stop getting it twisted, it's not that Superman doesn't kill, it's that he shouldn't, he should always find a better way, it won't be a perfect way, just a better one. I'm not even a Superman fan and even i can get that :S
I actually was mocking the movie for having Superman kill. Stupid internet sarcasm being so hard to pull off...

My point was, in Injustice, the act of Superman outright killing a villain is what sets the stage for the entirety of Injustice, where Superman is a DICTATOR with the view that killing is okay if done for the greater good of the people... and how diametrically opposed this morality is to the values he once had, and that others like Batman still stand for.

Even the Justice League did this story, where a Superman that is "okay" with killing a criminal if he decides there's no other choice is what creates the "Justice Lords", and the series very smartly ends that arc with the proper Superman put in the situation of killing Luthor to save lives, only to answer "I'm not the man who killed Luthor. I wish to heaven that I was, but I'm NOT."

The movie gets it wrong. VERY wrong. FUNDAMENTALLY wrong. I'm actually quite sad knowing the Transformers/Michael Bay-loving generation is going to just love this movie because of all the action and maybe even cheer when Superman snaps Zod's neck. That's what the public wants. A spectacle. Violence. Grittiness and brutal death (pulls the Gladiator "are you not entertained?!" card). So much destruction, so much violence, that's what makes him SUPER, right?

Hell no. F*** no. What makes Superman "super" is not his powers. His powers are the most generic powers any hero can have. So many superheroes have flight and super strength and even laser vision. What makes him "super" is his morality, his values, his virtues. Superman is not just any superhero. He's the superhero OTHER superheroes aspire to be. He is the best of us, the "hope" of what a superhero ultimately means, the greatest good that humanity (the Kent family) can bring to temper the godlike power of a would-be tyrant. It's why a storyline like "Red Son", showing a Superman not raised with the morals his parents gave him, would be a terrible thing and a completely different person.

The movie utterly, completely fails to be Superman at its emotional core, at its very soul. Sure, he wears the cape. Sure, he flies and punches things really hard. Sure, he flirts with Lois. Sure, he's an alien raised by folks in Kansas. But when it matters most, his very character, what he stands for, it all falls tragically apart.

I'll just leave off with this, from Alan Moore's acclaimed "Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow" storyline:
 

endtherapture

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The thing that will stop Superman killing is that he will feel guilt over killing Zod and then decide never to kill again.
 

ExtraDebit

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You know what I learn from this movie? Krytonian's can't control the laser from their eyes with their eyes, they can only shoot straight and need to move their heads.

Zod could've easily just look right and kill those innocent, instead he look straight. That's why I never liked DC, too much plot holes, too much space magic.
 

80sboy

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canadamus_prime said:
Wait, Superman kills Zod? That's not right. Superman doesn't kill.
Didn't Christopher Reeves Superman also kill Zod in Superman 2? He threw him in a chasm in the fortress of solitude when Zod become weak like human. Yeah! Doesn't seem like much of a rule for me.

Although I agree with Moviebob, but it's not that it's mopy, Superman just doesn't seem to be that well developed. Like Moviebob said, in this movie you don't even get the sense it's a rule until he freaks out for killing him in the end.
 

tzimize

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canadamus_prime said:
Wait, Superman kills Zod? That's not right. Superman doesn't kill.
I knoooooooooooooooow!

I'm 100% on board with Bob on this whole thing. The movie itself was an amazing spectacle at times with out of this world effects...but Superman DONT KILL PEOPLE. The whole POINT of the character is that he ALWAYS does the right thing!

If you're gonna change the one important thing the relatively boring character of superman has....there is no point in making this movie at all.

There are 2 good things about it though.

1: We didnt have to suffer through a terrible reason for Zod to be lured aboard his own spaceship and drawn into the phantom zone again.
2: Superman actually did something original.

But those points are moot when you break the character.

God damnit. A lot was riding on this movie, but DC just cant seem to get it right :|

Trishbot said:
-supersnip-
I feel ashamed snipping this awesome post, but I just gotta say. Thanks for saying what I'm thinking, only better. I agree wholeheartedly.
 

Nghtgnt

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Just saw the movie. I'm glad I'm not the only one that was bothered by Superman killing Zod. Movies never get a vocal reaction out of me, but that one shocked me enough to get a "Jesus!" and I teared up a little. The thing is, the effect that scene has on someone who grew up reading comics will be very different from someone who hasn't. Bob touches on this mentioning that there is little in the movie that shows how important the whole not killing is to Superman's character - I brought 20 years of reading comics and an iron-clad idea of Superman's persona with me into that theater.
 

Johny64

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Bob, the filmmakers deliberately omitted a scene where Superman establishes a "thou shall not kill" rule because he didn't make one. The reason he got upset about killing Zod was because of what it came down to; Choose Earth and finish Zod, or choose Krypton and let Zod live to rebuild it. This was a decision Clark spent the whole movie deliberating about, and Zod made him make a decision he wouldn't have been prepared to make otherwise. In a sense, the events of this film could be a catalyst to his rule on killing. The sequel could easily be about "You might have saved the world but you need to clean up your act..." and then he decides to avoid property damage, save and protect more people in his fights and most of all, decide never to kill again.