The problem with Superman Returns was it wanted the general audience to remember a movie and it's sequel from 1978. No one besides diehard fans would remember all that. They'd probably remember the helicopter rescue but that's it.
I dunno... From what I recall, the film provided enough exposition that it could stand on its own if you hadn't seen the earlier movies it referenced. I mean, countless movies' plots are driven by events in the characters' past that are explained to the audience along the way, so that's not a dealbreaker.
If anything, I might have liked SR better if I didn't remember the Donner films. One of its problems for me is that it felt like a rehash and didn't offer the kind of fresh perspective on Superman that I was expecting from Bryan Singer after what he achieved with
X-Men.
Then the movie was tepid with Superman. He didn't even throw a punch at anyone. People were expecting some brawling.
Speak for yourself. I'm more excited by seeing Superman as a rescuer than a "brawler," and SR had some pretty cool rescue sequences. I'd rather see a superhero story celebrate the saving of lives than the inflicting of pain or destruction.
No, the problem with SR, aside from its unoriginality, was how
languid it was. Everyone's performance was so muted and subdued, like they were all mildly sedated. Singer was trying too hard to be solemn and thoughtful and didn't remember to have fun. I thought for years that Brandon Routh was a poor casting choice for Superman, until I saw him as Ray Palmer in the Arrowverse and realized he would've been a
fantastic Superman if he'd been allowed to be more expressive and upbeat.
I said at the time that the problem with
Superman Returns was that it was a big-budget blockbuster trying too hard to be a small indie film, while the problem with
Batman Begins was that it was a small indie film trying too hard to be a big-budget blockbuster.
"Man of Steel" started over. It did the origin again which hadn't been show on the big screen in 35 years.
I liked the Jor-El parts. If anything, one of MoS's problems is that Jor-El is more the hero of the film than his son is.
In "BVS" Snyder seemed to understand some of the criticism and we got bits of dialogue from news reporters like Anderson Cooper
"Thankfully the work day is over in the downtown core, it's nearly empty"
It felt like the movie was TOO aware of the criticisms of "Man of Steel" and it was distracting
Which I still felt was a copout. Again, what I like to see is superheroes rescuing people. The purpose of power should be to protect, not to destroy. When characters fight, we should see the people they're fighting for, because that gives it a purpose beyond mere chaos.
The Avengers was great at focusing on the human-level impact of the battle and the heroes' ongoing efforts to protect civilians. The Metropolis battle in
Superman II was also great at that, even if Lester's reshoots added a lot of distracting slapstick. MoS mostly ignoring the issue of civilians -- and having Superman mostly ignore it -- was terrible, but BvS merely removing civilians from the arena wasn't much better, because it just made it a fight for its own sake with little attention paid to what they were fighting for. At the very least, they should've shown the heroes taking steps to move the battle away from civilians or evacuate the area at superspeed -- have the emptiness of the climactic arena be the result of their protective actions rather than just a lucky happenstance.