No. You don't get to discard data that don't support your position. So, you don't have any better support for "it's out of character" than "I don't like that he does it."
Fine.
It remains a fact that Superman killing Zod is something he's done repeatedly for forty-plus years.
Sure it was revenge. Clark Kent civilized version. The audience demanded it.
Film in and of itself has nothing to do with it. Superman is a character with 80 years of history. The character has been changed to fit the times over the decades. You've had the racist version of the '30s and '40s (No he didn't start out as a paragon of virtue), and at one point he evolved into a near boy scout, etc. There's never been one absolutely consistent version of the character.And to me, that is merely restating the problem. Too many comic-book superheroes have been compromised in their screen adaptations by being forced to conform to the expectations of American action movies, in which protagonists are frequently driven by revenge and self-interest rather than helping and protecting people as an end in itself.
Of course, TV superheroes aren't immune to this too -- look at how practically every season arc on The Flash and Legends of Tomorrow is about the heroes trying to clean up problems they caused in the first place. This is why I'm not crazy about the modern season-arc structure in general -- it tends to focus the heroes too much on their own selfish problems. The episodic shows of the past were more about the protagonists helping other people with their problems, so they were more selfless, more like true heroism and less like the endless self-absorption of today's soapy season arcs.
Film in and of itself has nothing to do with it.
So?
So, you're drawing an equivalence between Clark humiliating a bully and killing a man in the same paragraph that you rejected what you considered an unreasonable equivalence?
That's entirely inconsistent and illogical. It can't be defended.
I discount Superman 2 because of the deleted scene (and blindingly obvious tone), and the CW shows because Lois later corrects Winn, so that leaves one 33 year old comic story that has been retconned multiple times over and one movie that I felt had him out of character through half the story.
You obviously haven't read a lot of the Fantastic Four. They've always been presented as a family first group, and Reed Richards is often reckless with his experiments and yes while he will usually end up saving the day; If he wasn't so reckless the world wouldn't have been in danger in the first place. Most times saving the world isn't the first thought they have when they're in combat or when they're trying to correct the situation they may or may not have caused themselves.That's why the climax of the 2005 Fantastic Four is all about the Four saving themselves from Doom instead of saving the world (in fact, they literally endanger the entire world to protect themselves, the diametric opposite of what superheroes are supposed to do).
And yes oftentimes movies do make what fans considered bad changes for the sake of the film; and that's unfortunate, but honestly overall, Kevin Feige and the people behind the MCU films do a lot less of that, and that's one reason the MCU franchise is so popular.
I was picked on a lot in school too, and I have to opposite reaction. For me there's nothing more satisfying than seeing the victim get back at the person who was tormenting them.That's exactly what's wrong with it. As a victim of extensive bullying in childhood, I don't think bullying should be treated as a funny, positive thing. The tone is not a defense when the tone is the whole problem.
I was picked on a lot in school too, and I have to opposite reaction. For me there's nothing more satisfying than seeing the victim get back at the person who was tormenting them.
If the punching downward thing is that much of an issue then he should never fight anybody but other Kryptonians.
He wasn't using his full strength. Superman could have really hurt him worst if he wasn't holding himself back.But not when it's Superman. Not when he has an unlimited power advantage and is punching way, way downward. That changes everything.
The whole reason superheroes have always appealed to me is because, as a perennially bullied child, I deeply valued the idea of people who had great power and only used it to help and protect, never to assert power over others as an end in itself. And Superman is, or should be, the ultimate embodiment of that.
Humour. It is a difficult concept.I already said I reject that false equivalence. He wasn't saving a hostage or preventing a murder, he was getting revenge on someone who'd embarrassed him. The problem is that he was using his superior power for selfish motives instead of selfless ones. That's a fundamental difference, the difference between a bully and a protector.
I already said I reject that false equivalence.
He wasn't using his full strength. Superman could have really hurt him worst if he wasn't holding himself back.
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