And one of the lightest and least brutal ones is also one where he doesn't kill. (Batman & Robin)I find it a little ironic that pretty much the darkest and most brutal Batman movie, is one where he explicitly does not kill anyone.

And one of the lightest and least brutal ones is also one where he doesn't kill. (Batman & Robin)I find it a little ironic that pretty much the darkest and most brutal Batman movie, is one where he explicitly does not kill anyone.
Almost like whether Batman kills or not has no affect on the quality of the movie itself.And one of the lightest and least brutal ones is also one where he doesn't kill. (Batman & Robin)![]()
I find it a little ironic that pretty much the darkest and most brutal Batman movie, is one where he explicitly does not kill anyone.
Nobody said the audience can't accept a Superman who kills. People are just expressing their *preference* for the alternative
your insistence that modern audiences could never buy a superhero who doesn't have to kill, which stuff like theNolanReeves Batman shows just isn't true.
A few members have and continue to aggressively argue why Superman "never" kills (a long debunked notion that killing is not a part of the character's solutions in any way) and should not in any adaptation, despite the necessity of carrying out the act in specific situations.
You are among their number, as you seem to think Superman must have his character cemented to a version the comics purposely jettisoned over five decades ago, which ignores the desires of both comic book creators and readers to have Superman react as a more believable version to an evolving genre not only in print, but in film.
A Superman story can be light, dark, all-ages, adult, whatever. The only thing it *needs* to be is good. That said, of course it's fine and normal to express one's preference and why. You prefer a Superman who kills? Cool.
Too late to correct your sweeping claim about Batman.
Adam West R.I.P.
Those people are overreacting, but at least they're still just talking about what they personally will accept and not trying to speak for the general audience. .
Dean Cain is a hard line republican Trumper.
Superman builds the wall.
Dean Cain is a hard line republican Trumper.
What would happen if Dean today got to write and produce his own redstate Superman Show?
Superman builds the wall.
Superman uses his speed and vision powers to recount all the elections where the Republicans had been told that they had lost.
Superman uses heat vision to put holes in all the condoms planned parenting is trying to give away.
Superman blows up all the Needle exchange depots.
Superman blows up the VA... Wait a minute?
It's a pity that Dean Cain is a hard-line Republican who cannot appreciate a more multi-dimensional Superman. Because I thought he did a good job in portraying Clark Kent/Superman as an individual with emotional needs and one capable of making the occasional mistake.
I rewatched Dean's series a month ago, and Luthor was a decent boyfriend when nothing was on the line, and then for no reason, even though Lois is in love with him and is going to marry the billionaire playboy, Luthor blew up the daily planet, framed a friend of Lois', and scattered her friends across the city/world.
So she agreed to marry a dude she didn't love because her first choice was unavailable? That paints her in a much worse light than Guy's description.I don't recall Lois ever being in love with Lex in "Lois & Clark". I do recall her finding him attractive and that's about it. She was in love with only Superman at the time. But when the latter had made it clear they would never be together (lying, of course), Lois caved in and accepted Lex's marriage proposal.
I disagree they're saying the general audience agrees with them.
In any case, even if they do say that, it would just mean you're both wrong, from opposite directions. The audience can buy into a Superman who doesn't kill AND one who does -- as long as it's well-executed.
I don't recall Lois ever being in love with Lex in "Lois & Clark". I do recall her finding him attractive and that's about it. She was in love with only Superman at the time. But when the latter had made it clear they would never be together (lying, of course), Lois caved in and accepted Lex's marriage proposal.
Anyone so doggedly railing against one movie with one scene--constantly referring to what they feel is the "right"/"accepted" version is assuming that is what the entire culture desires.
Incorrect again. My position is that the character has a foundational history of killing on occasion and when necessary. Those who rail against that point from history have jumped to the erroneous conclusion that it means Superman will kill as a default reaction / position, when no one ever entered the neighborhood of that kind of thought to any degree, but that is the fist-shaking conclusion one reaches when the argument is launched from any thought other than rationality.
So do you agree that modern audiences can buy into and accept a Superman who doesn't have to kill?
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