That you cannot imagine the character might not be relatable to some viewers (readers) in no way means that they are “failures” (and what an arrogant position to take).
It is not reasonable to take offense at rhetorical language that clearly is not meant to be personalized to the individual reader or groups of readers.
Clearly this isn’t school and no one is required to do anything with material presented online anonymously. In any case, I don’t endorse the whole thing (particularly the point to which you object) but the article is hardly limited to that one point (I’d argue it’s tangential at best). However, I mostly posted it because sci seems to refuse to accept that not all movie viewings are cinema studies assignments,
I don't expect all films to be cinema studies assignments. We all have only a limited amount of time on this Earth, and it is a waste of the audience's time if your creative choices do not serve an artistic purpose. So I do insist that if a film presents the audience with set-ups, it has an obligation to give the audience pay-offs. I do insist that if you use the filmatic language of deconstruction, you ought to arrive at a deeper truth you can express. If you go digging in the ground, you ought to find a skeleton you can show everyone else. If you do not, then your creative choices were arbitrary and you have wasted the audience's time.
And if you're going to pretend your movie has depth but the no one can actually articulate that depth, then it's just inconsistent and annoying. We all have stories we subjectively enjoy that lack depth (I adore the Bette Midler film Hocus Pocus), but we can do that without pretending there's anything deeper to them. If your only point is, "I like the Snyder Superman because I enjoy the aesthetics of juxtaposing Superman with a modern, cynical society and that's only as far as it goes," then fine -- but please just acknowledge that Snyder also tries and fails to use complex cinematic concepts.
TREK_GOD_1 said:Sci said:And that makes for a lovely premise, but that is not a fully-developed theme. Set-ups need pay-offs. To what artistic end does Snyder depict the world distrusting Superman? What does this set-up reveal about the world and about Superman?
It is as clear as day in MoS, where adult Clark;s solo journey has him running from any location where he's close to being discovered--echoing the dangers predicted by his adoptive father.
Again, that's not a fully-developed theme. Are you saying that Man of Steel is about running away from responsibility? Are you saying it's about the symbolic act of "killing your father" via Clark needing to overcome Jonathan's false teachings? Are you saying it's about acknowledging that we have moral responsibilities to other people whether or not we want to?
You're presenting half-developed premises; you're not presenting a fully-developed theme.
Dawn of Justice is largely about Superman being seen as a menace not only by Luthor, but by Batman and Congress based on (in part) the destruction and death caused by his battle with the Kryptonians--that is the heart of the film, which Snyder so perfectly set up one film earlier. The people are not universally celebrating him as in earlier adaptations, because they see him for what he is--a super-powered, unstoppable alien with no blood allegiance to mankind.
That's not a film's heart, that's a plot set-up. It is, again, not a fully-developed theme; that set-up could lend itself to any number of themes. It is about humanity needing to let go of fear of the Other? Is it about the need to take responsibility for the unintentional consequences of our actions? Is it about how pain can drive us to inflict suffering on people who do not deserve it? What conclusion is the film coming to?
Complaining about Superman being "hopelessly silly" makes about as much sense as complaining that there's no grim and gritty version of the Care Bears. Superman is at his core a story for children
Wrong. Superman was created as a Depression-era character who--in many of his early years comics--often used his power to play a hard judge and jury to those who were committing crime, and not in the infantile, slap-on-the-wrist manner that later plagued the character in the Weisinger/Plastino/Swan comics and ridiculous adaptations such as the George Reeves TV series and the Super Friends cartoon franchise.
Early Superman represented a period of American history where vigilante justice was not completely condemned, but seen as necessary--welcome when crime (whether on the personal, local level, or in government) appeared to have the edge over the innocent. The public responded positively to innumerable characters cut from the vigilante mold, the reason why early Superman mirrored many a real world feeling--taking delight in criminals being brutalized or dying--a behavior one would associate with Batman or Golden Age Captain America, but Superman shared that view of criminals. It was that version who became a breakout hit / revolution in publishing. Contrary to another member I will leave nameless, Superman of this period was not (to paraphrase) some embryonic, shapeless character in the hands of those who did not know what to do with him. No, his identity and methods were the result of conscious creative decisions, and that did not include the Daddy / camp counselor some have conned themselves into thinking was the creators' intent all along..
Yes yes yes. Anyone who's ever looked into the history of the character knows this. It's all true. You know what else is true?
They were still stories intended primarily for children. There is no contradiction between the two.
And stories written for children can be very good, well-written stories with depth and sophistication! "Written for children" does not mean it's been stripped of all death of pathos. Just watch The Lion King if you doubt this. It's got murder, a fascist coup d'etat, racism, an oppressive species hierarchy, a child watching his father die in front of him, psychological trauma, shame, victim-blaming, survivor's guilt, running away from responsibility, sexuality, the works! It goes to very dark places. Yet The Lion King is still a film for children -- because being for children does not mean "lesser than."
crookeddy said:If you need a 4 hour video to explain why something is bad, perhaps it really isn't that bad?
Or maybe it's got so much that's wrong...!
TREK_GOD_1 said:Its the result of obsession--excess. Going overboard to condemn a film clearly not understood by the host of the video. This is a trait common to those who had Wesinger/Swan/Plastino-colored glasses bolted to their eyes before seeing one minute of the film(s) in question. When the expectation of Daddy/camp counselor Superman was not met, their perceptions were rattled, failing to realize the time for the worst of Superman's comics, George Reeves, the Super Friends, etc., had passed and was rejected. Similarly, the Donner tribute sequel Superman Returns did not generate a groundswell of anyone wanting to see more Donner-esque tributes. They are not the Superman audiences desire.
Siiiiiiiiiigh. I've already had one person complain that I was supposedly insulting his intelligence, yet the only person I've noticed here who actually insulted the other people in the debate is @TREK_GOD_1 .