Because of the implication that Superman=good just because.I have no idea why you think that.
That is all. And if I misread then I apologize.
Because of the implication that Superman=good just because.I have no idea why you think that.
It should be noted that in those future visions Superman is under Darkseid's mind control.Christopher said:Superman wrestles with doubt and loneliness in many stories. But that isn't the same thing as wrestling with the temptation to murder criminals or turn Earth into a fascist dystopia. And there have already been way, way too many stories about alternate-reality Supermen turning Earth into a fascist dystopia -- the '88 Superboy series, the DC Animated Universe (twice), the Elseworlds Superman: Red Son, the Injustice video game fanchise, the future visions in Batman V Superman.
I feel the same argument is being made on the other side. Except somehow that carries some kind of weight of realism that we are just supposed to accept at face value.Because of the implication that Superman=good just because.
Which, IIRC, he succumbs to because of Lois Lane's death -- which is standard issue for the bullshit tropes Christopher mentions.It should be noted that in those future visions Superman is under Darkseid's mind control.
I don't find either particularly realistic.I feel the same argument is being made on the other side. Except somehow that carries some kind of weight of realism that we are just supposed to accept at face value.
Chris Evan's Captain America is about as decent of a human being as you can get, and he was well-received by audiences. Was he perfect? No. But neither should Superman be either. Nobody wanted Dark Evil Angsty Captain America, so why is it that Superman gets treated as an impossibility?
I don't find either particularly realistic.
"Accept this!"
"Why?"
"'Cause!"
That's why I question it.
"He suffers the same human failings and fears as we do, but he doesn't succumb to them"? Never? This would only make Superman seem like a trope to me, not a fully rounded character.
Wanting Superman to be "good" all the time is an unrealistic desire, as it divorces him (a character who consciously places himself in dangerous situations for the purpose of stopping something/one) from any relatable experience and behavior common to humanity.
Of course, this kind of conversation in recent years stems from the overreaction to Man of Steel's Superman killing Zod, when the latter was mere seconds away from incinerating a family (yet in a contradictory position, have no issue with MCU Captain America--sold as the most moral, justice-minded of all superheroes--deliberately trying to kill the Red Skull, Thanos and in fact, slaughtered innumerable Hydra agents, and others).
As created, Superman was once a mirror of the feelings of readers--particularly American readers--about crime, terror and other societal problems. He was not shy about being violent or lethal if the situation called for it, but we also know Superman would be severely watered down from that Great Depression warrior of his early years.
Did I say that? Pretty sure I didn't say that. I was looking at it from a metatextual point of view, trying to grasp the sheer amount of importance put on to this character and his presentation.
This was reinforced by Zack Snyder offering a version of Superman that was embraced by the people who only respect "dark" heroes, and intensely scorned by others. It intensified the polarization that already existed.
It's all about tone. Man of Steel presents a nihilistic tone in which a dark and fallen world is going to remain dark and fallen even if the bad guys are defeated, and that's the best we can hope for.
No. People are saying Superman is good. Period. To me that sounds like asking for blind acceptance. That this is baked in to the character and above questions. Any other take is cynical.And I find that a deeply unrealistic caricature. Nobody is actually saying anything of the sort. You're just making up a cartoonish straw man because it's easy for you to knock down.
To some extent, I'm okay with that idea.
I don't necessarily think Superman should be a psychologically realistic character. Just like the Joker is not a psychologically realistic character but is instead an archetype embodying madness, malice, and/or anarchy, I think Superman works best as a hopeful, optimistic, aspirational archetype embodying a children's fantasy of benevolent power.
Part of the issue has to do with tone rather than with the question of whether the hero should kill per se.
The film Man of Steel presents to us a Superman who is angsty and resentful and whose parents urged him to let innocent people die, then depicts the Kryptonian invasion as representing violence on a nearly-incomprehensible scale of horror, and then presents Superman's killing of Zod as itself a horrible tragedy (while ignoring all of the people who plausibly would have been killed by Superman's tactic against the Kryptonians). In the world of Man of Steel, the social order is inherently a morally dire Dionysian order rather than a morally justified Apollonian order; villains represent an acceleration of that darkness that rather than a deviation from it. Superman may hold back the worst of the flood, but everyone is still wading knee-deep in water everywhere they go.
By contrast, the MCU movies do not present us with the kind of nihilistic tone that Man of Steel uses. Instead, they present us with a hopeful, optimistic tone in which Dionysian adversaries represent departures from a morally just, Apollonian order and whose deaths are morally justified rather than indicators of fundamental tragedy and failure on the part of Captain America. Indeed, Captain America: The First Avenger actively frames the killing of Hydra members and Nazis as a moral good to be celebrated.
This comment strikes me as very misleading. Snyder's Superman was embraced by those who only respect "dark" heroes? You know this as a fact? Because this feels as if you're trying to compartmentalize all DC fans in a rather rigid manner.
Similarly, Superman II (whatever its other flaws might be) does not present Superman's killing of Zod, or Lois's killing of Ursa, as a morally ambiguous event or as a moral failing. The deaths of the Kryptonians is presented as a moral good to be celebrated.
I wouldn't mind a return of Superman-as-social-justice-warrior like his early comics.
No. People are saying Superman is good. Period. To me that sounds like asking for blind acceptance.
Both sides are right about some stuff, and wrong about others. There, solved.![]()
While the inevitable back-and-forth on this point promises to be incredibly tedious, derailing the thread for the next several pages with much stupid from the usual suspects, this is as succinct and accurate a summation as one could ask for.All we see of the end of the Phantom Zone villains in Superman II, is that they disappear into a mist in Superman's Fortress. There's no sound of hitting water or ground: they just vanish. To assume that Superman and Lois (who knocked Ursa into the mist) killed them in cold blood once they were powerless is in no way consistent with the tone and previous events of the movie.
Anecdotally, I never saw or heard the interpretation that Superman killed them until much later, usually in conjunction with an argument supporting Byrne and Snyder depicting Superman as killing.
All we see of the end of the Phantom Zone villains in Superman II, is that they disappear into a mist in Superman's Fortress. There's no sound of hitting water or ground: they just vanish. To assume that Superman and Lois (who knocked Ursa into the mist) killed them in cold blood once they were powerless is in no way consistent with the tone and previous events of the movie.
Anecdotally, I never saw or heard the interpretation that Superman killed them until much later, usually in conjunction with an argument supporting Byrne and Snyder depicting Superman as killing.
All we see of the end of the Phantom Zone villains in Superman II, is that they disappear into a mist in Superman's Fortress. There's no sound of hitting water or ground: they just vanish. To assume that Superman and Lois (who knocked Ursa into the mist) killed them in cold blood once they were powerless is in no way consistent with the tone and previous events of the movie. Anecdotally, I never saw or heard the interpretation that Superman killed them until much later, usually in conjunction with an argument supporting Byrne and Snyder depicting Superman as killing.
They didn't kill anyone. There's a deleted scene showing that the depowered villains were fished out of the water and carted off by the authorities at the end. The argument that nobody could realistically have survived a fall into freezing water makes no sense in Superman II's cartoony universe where the powerless Clark is somehow able to walk through the most forbidding parts of the Arctic twice, even though the whole point of the Fortress of Solitude is that it's inaccessible to anyone without superpowers. And when supervillains are defeated by falling a great height, they always survive and come back; that's been part of the rules of comic books since the earliest days of Superman and Batman.
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