I am on the outside looking in, and it seems everyone that gets involved with Superman just doesn't get the character as is. There is always some aspect of the mythos that they don't like or don't buy. Be it Clark, Lois, Daily Planet, the glasses, or something else.
I agree. I think the essence of Superman that too many in Hollywood don't get is the innate goodness of the character. I wouldn't say that Superman is perfect but I think he's a much more decent human being than Batman or Spider-Man. But it seems like Hollywood has forgotten how to make movies about good people struggling to do the right thing for the right reasons. Instead, they want to make him dark like Batman or angsty like Spider-Man or give him a tortured past like Wolverine.
If Bay can make two movies about alien robots that turn into cars, planes, and automobiles, then surely someone can make a Superman movie.
Just because Michael Bay is doing these things doesn't mean that we should be letting him.
Have him fight someone in his weight class with contemporary SFX effects.. someone like Doomsday, Darkseid etc.
I think this is a major element that the Superman movies have missed so far. The existing movies have a very limited imagination in terms of how to challenge Superman. They end up either falling back on Kryptonite (Superman: The Movie, Superman III, Superman Returns) or pitting him against someone with identical powers (General Zod in Superman II, his clone created from Kryptonite contaminated with tar in Superman III, Nuclear Man in Superman IV).
Also, I have a fear that WB will cave into fans' demands of an "all out slugfest" of a Superman movie and then those very fans that campaigned for that will complain that it lacks depth or substance. Just wait.
Superman is more than just throwing a punch.
That's quite possible. The same thing happened with the Hulk franchise. Hulk (2003) was too artsy. The Incredible Hulk was an action packed movie with no soul. If you could fuse the two, you'd have something ideal.
Similarly, the Superman movie franchise is plagued with imperfections. I dare say there has never been a perfect Superman movie.
And after Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, Michael Bay getting Superman would probably be one of the worse things that could happen. He's such a middle of the road, industralist hack like Brett Ratner or McG.
I don't mind Brett Ratner or McG. Rush Hour was fun. X-Men: The Last Stand was doomed long before Ratner was attached to it. And Terminator Salvation, while not the future war film I wanted, was OK. Certainly there's nothing on either of their resumes that stinks as bad as The Island, Pearl Harbor, or Transformers.