We can't indict the character without visual evidence. Otherwise it becomes a "fill in the blank your complaint here", scenario. We can ascribe all types of aspersions and vitriol in that case. Or we can stick to what we see on screen. Just the facts, Jack.When inhabited skyscrapers are subjected to sudden destruction, people die. There's no way he didn't accidentally kill someone unless the movie is breaking from realism.
That was the end of the fight. Supes and Zod crashed into that grand central station building. Supes then gotten Zod in a headlock.Well you've already cited one.
Almost as implausible as the MCU's 9/11 in NYC only having 74 fatalities. Ultron's attack in the floating city of Sokovia killing only 177 people. Sanitized mass destruction.That is extremely implausible.
Listen. If you want to fantasize that all of downtown Metropolis can be demolished in the course of two hours in the late afternoon without it killing someone, fine. But that's not at all a plausible scenario.
I didn't say people didn't die. I just said that Superman himself did not kill any civilians as he battled Zod.
Besides, Snyder gave us a death toll for Metropolis. 5K was his number. The monument and names of the fallen can be seen in BvS and ZS JL.
On the plus side, we know what happened to MCU Peter Parker's Uncle Ben.

Fair enough. Upon retrospect (crazy to think it's been 9 years since the movie came out), I think Snyder should've altered where Superman was during the finale. Focus all their efforts on stopping the Black Zero ship in Metropolis and leave the world engine to pancake the Indian ocean coast."Blame?" He's a fictional character. I'm saying it would have been better if Snyder had included that scene because the sheer amount of collateral damage in his film was so much higher than in other versions.
Because the heroes in TDK and Avengers 1 and 2 had no control over the villains activities. If they did, there would be no story. No chase or puzzle to solve for Batman. No globetrotting adventure film for the Avengers. Capped off obligatory 30 minute finale to give the Avengers something to punch before the credits roll.The difference was that Zod was specifically targeting Superman as an individual at first, and then later in the battle decided to deliberately inflict collateral damage on civilians. That's not a comparable combat scenario to these -- the Joker's modus operandi is to operate in secret without Batman knowing where he is, and Chitauri and the Ultron Bots were both armies trying to secure control of the cities they were attacking, not super-powered individuals fixated on one other super-powered individual.
That's fair. Blow up African countryside instead.They did lure Thanos and his hordes out of the city.
If only Superman were so lucky to have a supporting cast capable of migrating a population the size of NYC out of their homes and away from danger. So Supes can have a knockdown, grand slam fight in an unoccupied space.Thor did lure Hela away from the people -- he lured her into the empty city while the surviving population was being evacuated.
Heimdall did a lot of the heavy lifting of protecting the people of Asgard in Thor Ragnarok. Thor, Loki, Banner and Valkyrie just kind of show up at the end for the final fight.
That's the point I'm trying to make. It's silly to suggest a hero can always just lure a bad guy someplace else. The Brotherhood wanted to get to Alcatraz to kill the mutant Leech and destroy the cure. The X-Men could only play defense. Hela wanted to return to Asgard. As it is the place that magnifies her power. The occupants Asgard and the occupants of the 9 realms would all be her victims if she wasn't stopped.I mean, I don't really give a shit about that terrible movie, but I seem to remember that the Brotherhood were trying to obtain territorial control of the island and would not have been vulnerable to being "lured." And also, it's a large group rather than one individual.
Where do you suggest Superman lure Zod to, to avoid collateral damage? Keep in mind, the battle against Supes and Zod went all the way into orbit and it still came back down to Metropolis. Zod was pretty determined.
And hey! X3, terrible? After the disaster what was Dark Phoenix. I thought we all agreed that X3 was "the good" Phoenix movie.


I genuinely can't believe it. Simon Kinberg wrote both X3 and Dark Phoenix. 13 years apart and he failed to stick the landing TWICE! At least X3 has DOFP in front of it. To make it retroactively better.
Some heroes.They would have if they had the ability.
The 9/11 crash in STID was Damon Lindelof's idea. He said something to the effect that he felt the movie just needed a scene like this to cap it off. Punctuated by a foot chase and a fist fight. Yeah... Those jokers should never touch Trek again.
Eh... I wouldn't call that an emotional connection. Not like Tony with the kid in IM3 or Peter with the kid in TASM 1 and 2. It's a good line. But I'm with you on adding something like that in the future. I've even come up with my own idea! It would work.Sure they do. "I hope this hasn't put you off flying. Statistically, it's still the safest way to travel." Rescuing the kitten, etc.
Roger that.Of course not. That's not who Batman is or should be. But it is who the best versions of Superman are and who Superman in film always ought to be.
Superman may be badass, but he should be wholesome before he's badass.
Let us combine our resources and voices to #RestoretheSnyderverse. I want to see Superman put the hurt on Brainiac and Darkseid. So he can show the world that he is the Man of Steel for the Men of Tomorrow!
That guy was in the neighboring building. It was hit by Zod's uncontrolled heat vision. I don't know why he didn't leave either. Everyone was evacuating and Bruce called and told people to leave.Nah, that stupid Wayne employee was still in there for one. I still don't get why he didn't leave.
Guess the old man felt it was his time to go.