Samtemdo8 said:
But let me explain something that people seem to forget about watching the movie.
This is Kal-El's first time being Superman. And besides he did cause any of the destruction of Metropolis. At worst he just shoved Zod's head in a building but the building did not brake down. And you forget that the World Breaker did most of the destruction. And during the Zod fight Zod did more damage than Superman.
You're missing the point, which all the "he's young and inexperienced" sort of excuses do. Superman can collosally fuck up. Thats okay, you can do. Superman can be imperfect, he can even be a bad guy, but the movie has to recognize it. At no point in the grudge match that leveled Metropolis did Superman even think about the millions of people around him. You know what Goku does in Dragonball Z when somebody wants to fight him? He flies to an unpopulated area so it can be fought away from civilians, minimizing casualties. Its incredibly basic and there's no acceptable way that somebody would overlook that unless they just didn't care. And you know what? It would've fine if Superman didn't care as long as the movie recognized it. However, the movie frames him as a caring, benevolent god and thats not who we see. What the movie shows us and what the movie tells us is happening are two separate things, thats the problem. We're seeing Superman show no regard for human life in a city populated by millions - he doesn't even try to take the fight elsewhere. He doesn't even try, and that in itself isn't necessarily bad. But then the movie treats him like a hero we should love and that isn't what we witnessed. What we saw was literally 9/11 times a hundred. I don'tknow how much you know about 9/11, but they were digging people out from under the rubble months later. That was two buildings. The fight with Zod destroyed hundreds. There's certainly hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people trapped under the rubble from the fight and what does the movie do? It ignores it completely. We see no logically reasonable effects of the fight, we don't see Superman try to help people out of the rubble or clean up the city. We see Metropolis instanteously like nothing happened. Thats the problem, the disconnect between what we see and what the movie thinks we see.
There's nothing wrong with a movie about how superheros and supervillains being real would be horrifying, we've had five good movies about that[footnote]Unbreakable, Watchmen and the Nolan Batman trilogy[/footnote], but Man of Steel doesn't think about how any of the regular people on the ground are effected past the first act. The movie forgets about the innocent bystanders so Superman can have a grudge match where, for all we can tell, he isn't even holding back from trying to kill them.
Now I am basing this and my speculation of the sequal. Superman is going to see the destruction of Metropolis and realize that he has to be more responsible and be careful with his powers and will try to not let villains like Zod wreack havoc. I mean in the trailers of Batman v Superman we SEE Superman saving people from disasters. We see him rescue people from a Katrina-like Flood for example. And looking at the fight between Superman and Batman the city looked empty of people. And did he not saved those workers in the Oil Refinary in Man of Steel?
The problem is thats all a token gesture. I guarantee this plotline was originally intended because The Avengers did a better job of addressing far less damage in their own film where the damages aren't even going to become a plotline a whole year prior to Man of Steel. We see him save people a few times, and then what? He brings a grudge match to his hometown him and destroys it. That is all Superman, he literally flies Zod right into the center of town, going through a power plant in the process. If it makes sense, it becomes about stopping bad guys, not saving people. Where is Superman when there's hundreds of millions of people dying slowly under tons of rubble? There's no feasible way that some of those people trapped would ever be saved without the help of Superman. Where is he? He's with his mom, and she's telling him how proud his father would be of him. This while people are being crushed to death. Its complete tone-deafness. Thats the problem with Man of Steel - its not even that Superman doesn't save people, its that Superman doesn't save people while the movie is telling us that he is saving people.
Just imagine for a second if BvS never existed. What would Man of Steel's ending be? Superman is partially responsible for the destruction of Metropolis and doesn't do anything about it. Thats what we were left with for two years, and frankly, a movie should be able to stand on its own legs. I should be able to watch, say, Empire Strikes Back without watching A New Hope, and I can. You can't do that with Man of Steel and still have a superhero. In fact we're probably going to see edits in the future where people put BvS Superman trial stuff into Man of Steel to address this.
All in all I just think Man of Steel is bashed way too hard. Especially when I personally think there are worse Superhero movies that came out later like Amazing Spiderman 2.
90% of Man of Steel is really good. I actually don't take qualms with any of the ideas they did in it. It looked very good (even if Superman's outfit should've been a bit brighter), it sounded good, most of the actors did a great job, the soundtrack is great and I thought some of the controversial decisions were done well, such as cynical Pa Kent. Its just that it screwed up the most important part, which is our hero.. Superman destroys the remaining hope for Krpyton. His reasoning? "Krypton had its chance". Our hero, ladies and gentlemen. Superman fights Zod in a city, ends up flattening the city and killing hundreds of thousands, and ends up having to kill Zod (not that we ever saw him using restraint). How does he react? He feels bad about one death, the guy whose neck he snapped, and none of the people trapped in the city, let alone the millions of others who lives were ruined by the disaster that was his duel. Our hero, ladies and gentleman. If I sound like I'm being harsh its because it deserves it. This is the Phantom Menace level of screwing the pooch, and it such an unbelievably easy fix to make. One minor scene, no CGI or anything like that necessary, just Henry Cavill showing lament for the consequences of his recklessness was all that was necessary to resolve most of the virulent hate for the film.