Indeed. Perhaps I've misunderstood all along.
Nah.![]()
Faster than a speeding bullet...more powerful than a locomotive...able to decapitate douchebags with a single twist...
Indeed. Perhaps I've misunderstood all along.
Nah.![]()
Saving a kitty from a tree is JUST LIKE facing an army of hostile Kryptonians.After years of instruction from Jor-El, and he eased into things as Superman with very easy undertakings before facing his first major test.Guess what? In the original Superman film, we also got Superman on his first day on the job. This bears repeating. His. First. Day.
It was his first day in a suit.Saving a kitty from a tree is JUST LIKE facing an army of hostile Kryptonians.After years of instruction from Jor-El, and he eased into things as Superman with very easy undertakings before facing his first major test.Guess what? In the original Superman film, we also got Superman on his first day on the job. This bears repeating. His. First. Day.
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The writers fucked Superman up. It wasn't the character's fault.
Wow, really? Thanks for that astonishing insight. It's almost like that's exactly what I fucking said.There is no character to be at "fault." It's a fantasy; he doesn't exist as an entity to whom blame can be assigned. Superman exists only through the imaginations of the writers and the actor.
What "How It Should Have Ended" forgets is that Jor-El only came up with the phantom drive collision solution AFTER he plugged in to the ship. Without that act, it would be like Superman coming up with a solution that does not follow anything we saw previously. Also at the time Superman had no reason to mistrust Zod or his intentions. It was only after Zod used the dream machine on Supes did Clark learn of his sinister plan.
It was a creative choice to have Superman fight the world engine and for Metropolis to be pancaked by the gravity beam. What is the alternative to that?
But, they could've found creative choices to do something else....
Yes, and that would have been rote and facile.
Let's have yet another Superman story without human consequences, because Superman can fix anything.
Hey, he can spin the world backward and un-destroy Metropolis!
2. If it was rote and facile, then they weren't doing their jobs.
Wow, really? Thanks for that astonishing insight. It's almost like that's exactly what I fucking said.There is no character to be at "fault." It's a fantasy; he doesn't exist as an entity to whom blame can be assigned. Superman exists only through the imaginations of the writers and the actor.
Wow, really? Thanks for that astonishing insight. It's almost like that's exactly what I fucking said.There is no character to be at "fault." It's a fantasy; he doesn't exist as an entity to whom blame can be assigned. Superman exists only through the imaginations of the writers and the actor.
Not really, no.
They also took the fight in to outer space, ya know.
Considering I'm the one who wrote it, and I know exactly what I said and what I meant, yes. Yes it really was.Wow, really? Thanks for that astonishing insight. It's almost like that's exactly what I fucking said.There is no character to be at "fault." It's a fantasy; he doesn't exist as an entity to whom blame can be assigned. Superman exists only through the imaginations of the writers and the actor.
Not really, no.
Mister Fandango said:And, again, it's the writing people are complaining about. The writers created the situations. The writers decided he was going to kill Zod. The writers fucked Superman up.
2. If it was rote and facile, then they weren't doing their jobs.
That's an assertion up there with the pitching coach's instruction to "throw strikes and don't give 'em anything good to hit."
They did their jobs by making a really different choice. It worked.
Since I appreciated the movie as it was I haven't given any thought to what I'd have done differently.
Now that I think about it, I just about never look at someone else's work and say "this is how I would have done it."
What "How It Should Have Ended" forgets is that Jor-El only came up with the phantom drive collision solution AFTER he plugged in to the ship. Without that act, it would be like Superman coming up with a solution that does not follow anything we saw previously. Also at the time Superman had no reason to mistrust Zod or his intentions. It was only after Zod used the dream machine on Supes did Clark learn of his sinister plan.
Because he didn't talk to the guy that KNEW Zod. Which seems kind of silly, right? Why didn't he talk to Jor-El?
It was a creative choice to have Superman fight the world engine and for Metropolis to be pancaked by the gravity beam. What is the alternative to that?
He could've taken on the one in Metropolis... tried to save lives while fighting Zod, etc.
I think for me the problem with the third act was that it just went SO far, that it became relentless grim. And not seeing Superman TRY to save people just... it felt like a video game of punch, punch, punch, building fall, thousands murdered and then... "Hey everybody, look at me, I'm a reporter!"
I think, in the end, if there was an emotional recognition by the movie of the thousands that were killed... Supes had more tears for Zod than the thousands that died... I needed something more than that glib moment with the satellite or whatever it was at the end with the General.
1. You don't know that.
2. If we was rote and facile, then they weren't doing their jobs.
Let's have yet another Superman story without human consequences, because Superman can fix anything.
I'm not suggesting a story without human consequences. The How It Should've Ended cartoon, of course, does. But, it's also meant to be funny. I brought it up because i'm tired of hearing, "there's no other way!" Um. It's a fictional construct. Of course there are other ways. This was a choice.
Hey, he can spin the world backward and un-destroy Metropolis!
Sure. That's a bad idea, but, yeah. That's a way. I would say it's been done, it doesn't seem to fit his powers, but, that's one way. Are there others?
I know you're a writer, are you saying there are absolutely no other creative solutions that still has human consequences yet addresses many of the concerns people have?
Now, I know you like the end of the movie, you are satisfied, but, what if, the studio comes to you and says, we want a rewrite of the third act. We like some of it, but, we want Superman to feel more heroic. What would you do, as a writer hired to do a job?
Even work you don't like?Since I appreciated the movie as it was I haven't given any thought to what I'd have done differently.
Now that I think about it, I just about never look at someone else's work and say "this is how I would have done it."
So now you want us to judge a portion of your post now and not the actual post you wrote? Well that sure is convenient.Considering I'm the one who wrote it, and I know exactly what I said and what I meant, yes. Yes it really was.Wow, really? Thanks for that astonishing insight. It's almost like that's exactly what I fucking said.
Not really, no.
Mister Fandango said:And, again, it's the writing people are complaining about. The writers created the situations. The writers decided he was going to kill Zod. The writers fucked Superman up.
Try reading everything except the last sentence which I excluded above, since, apparently, that's fucking throwing you two.
.....we know.Because, yes, that's clearly saying that it's the character's fault and not the writer's.
You're
All I've said is "no, not really".the ones trying to rationalize it from the character's point of view, as if he had no option but to do what he did.
Why does it sound like you're having an angry cry? Take a deep breath, son.Not me. I'm blaming the god damned writers, because the character has nothing to do with it.
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