mduncan50 said:
I call BS on that article, starting with the very premise of it. I have literally not heard a single person say that Snyder hates Superman.
I didn't read far enough in the thread to see if someone has pointed this out to you, but Devin Faraci has very much said this.
I'm not too familiar with Superman to really have a much of say on if Snyder hates him, but there's that sort of hopeful and just vibe that I keep reading about with the original character that gets completely lost with Snyder's interpretation. Maybe these changes didn't happen out of hate but more out of some executive meddling on trying to get the franchise to be darker than it needs to be.
And if they want to make a darker, grimmer Superman, fine, but you have to contextualize that better. Reading the Forbes article, I'm baffled by his reading of the movie. Nowhere in any of the two movies shows Superman as a symbol of hope. You've pretty much said it yourself.
The main complaints by far are that the story is a disjointed and boring mess, and that the characters are bland caricatures whom lack any depth or personality and have spotty motivations. And the argument that Superman is feared and hated by so many people because the movie is telling us they are wrong to do so? Where the heck did he get that from? There are people that fear and hate him because he has unstoppable power and people have seen the destruction he could wreak when he hasn't even tried to, and he is answerable to nobody. He then goes on in this movie to try to impose his will when he sees fit to do so. If Zach was so very loving of the character then we could have seen Superman in these movies rather than Batman 2.0 (now with powers and a different colored suit).
There are more complaints I have with this movie, but I'm baffled by how some people like it. What are they getting out of the movie? This Forbes article is, honestly, downright weird. Hope? Justice? This movie is depressing as fuck! And not just because it turned out as bad as it did. I have no idea why they're trying to do this with the franchise. Yeah, maybe it can act as an antithesis to the more fun tone the Marvel movies have been providing, but, like I said, you have to contextualize it better. What's the grander theme of everything? Why does the movie need to be so dark? What is the message this movie is trying to convey? It wants to be dark and cynical for the sake of it, but that just doesn't work. The new interpretation of Batman and Superman are just whiny assholes who hate it when they realize that someone else gets to have fun in destroying the city they're supposedly trying to protect. We're supposed to be cheering for these guys by the end of it...
What the hell?