That’s what I’m going with but I’m wondering if the writers were thinking the same thing.Sometimes kryptonite from alternate realities are harmless to Superman, sometimes not. As this is an alternate reality from MoS, it’s the same thing.
That’s what I’m going with but I’m wondering if the writers were thinking the same thing.Sometimes kryptonite from alternate realities are harmless to Superman, sometimes not. As this is an alternate reality from MoS, it’s the same thing.
Sometimes kryptonite from alternate realities are harmless to Superman, sometimes not. As this is an alternate reality from MoS, it’s the same thing.
I remember that story. Bought the issues when they came out (LSH was my first regularly collected title starting in 1973 and I was curious how the post-Crisis LSH would be explained). It’s what prompted my earlier post. Can hardly believe that was almost 40 years ago.During John Byrne's 'Superman' run, he traveled to the alternate timeline/reality where he had been Superboy growing up, which led to the formation of The Legion of Superheroes. When that reality's Superboy was killed by the Time Trapper, Lex Luthor accidently released the three Kryptonian supervillains, who ended up destroying that world, Superman killed them with that reality's version of Kryptonite, which was harmless to him.
It seems that the armor was preventing him from flying, and that he wanted to fight Kal-El on equal terms.It is definitely a change from MoS. If Kryptonian armour were as powerful as depicted in The Flash, Zod would not have shed his entire armour for the final battle in MoS.
But in either case, MoS or The Flash, the Kryptonian metal is from the same reality as the Kryptonians.Sometimes kryptonite from alternate realities are harmless to Superman, sometimes not. As this is an alternate reality from MoS, it’s the same thing.
Any cut with Cavil would require paying him more, and that's not likely to happen any time soon.It's bullshit (but predictable because studio politics) that they didn't release the two original non-Clooney endings, the first with Keaton/Calle and the second with Keaton/Calle/Cavill/Gadot.
But then, it's bullshit those were ever replaced with the stupid Clooney ending in the first place.
Clark seemed visibly hurt when the drone attacked him though.It doesn't prove anything either way, but it's perhaps worth noting that the security drone on the ship (in MoS) is also made from Kryptonian metal, and Clark pulls that apart with his bare hands.
Did it? How so? It's not like carrying heavy things prevents Superman from flying.It seems that the armor was preventing him from flying, and that he wanted to fight Kal-El on equal terms.
Only when it used some kind of energy weapon on him (A laser whip?) though. It didn't seem to harm him with 'just metal'.Clark seemed visibly hurt when the drone attacked him though.
As for Returns, it's a mess. Apparently Burton wasn't too satisfied with the first film, which was probably his most conventional, commercial film, but BR lets him cut loose with the grotesquerie and bizarreness to the detriment of a coherent story, and trying to tell three villain stories at once (counting Shreck) makes it cluttered.
In particular, having him quote "You wanna get nuts? Let's get nuts!" made no sense. That wasn't a catchphrase, it was something he said in a specific situation to provoke the Joker.
It worked better here than it did when Red Death said it in the final season of The Flash. Now THAT is shoe-horning something completely unrelated into a script.
I don't mind that so much, since in the context of the story, the Red Death wasn't using it as a quote; it was just something she said in the moment that could only be recognized out-of-universe as a reference to something else. So it wasn't implausible within the narrative itself. (And I didn't even recognize the quote at the time, since it had been so long since I'd seen the movie.) In The Flash, by contrast, Bruce was repeating something he himself had said before, and it doesn't work for me to treat it as a recurring catchphrase of his, because in the original film it was specific to that particular context.
I mean, that was a moment when he was confronting a deranged criminal who was attempting to abduct his girlfriend, whom he discovered moments later was the man who'd killed his parents, and who then attempted to murder him. It was not a pleasant moment that he would want to commemorate later in life with a glib catchphrase. If anything, it was in rather poor taste for The Flash to have him use it that way.
I remember that story. Bought the issues when they came out (LSH was my first regularly collected title starting in 1973 and I was curious how the post-Crisis LSH would be explained). It’s what prompted my earlier post. Can hardly believe that was almost 40 years ago.
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