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I've occasionally seen people praise CBS's Supergirl at the expense of Man of Steel by pointing out how in Supergirl, Kara explicitly has a no-kill rule, as opposed to "neck-snapping" Clark Kent in Man of Steel.

But let's unpack that for a second.

Supergirl does have killing. It's not Supergirl herself who does the killing, but members of the DEO, including Alex Danvers. I have yet to go through each episode and compile a total kill count, but the DEO is responsible for at least the deaths of Dr. Morrow (the creator of Red Tornado) and a number of Fort Ross prisoners, and no one sheds a tear for any of those deaths.

So it's hard not to feel like criticizing Man of Steel for killing a criminal, while ignoring the fact that criminals can and do die in Supergirl, is hypocritical.

Is the difference supposed to be simply that Superman and Supergirl should stand for something larger, and therefore "shouldn't" kill others, therefore Supergirl is superior to Man of Steel? In that case, why is it okay for humans to kill each other in Supergirl (at least in certain cases), if the overall message is that we should be inspired not to use violence and that every life is precious? (Also, Superman kills a fellow Kryptonian in Man of Steel and not a human.)

It's also important to note that the same rationale is used for killing in both Supergirl and Man of Steel. In, for example, the cases of Dr. Morrow and Jemm in Supergirl, both criminals ended up dead after they caused massive havoc and destruction and the protagonists needed to resort to extreme measures to stop them. Same in Man of Steel. What many who don't like the ending don't address is: what exactly would humanity have done with Zod if Superman merely subdued instead of killed him? At the time, no one knew about kryptonite. There would have been no way to imprison Zod effectively. Zod repeatedly told Clark that he would commit genocide if Clark didn't stop him, and he certainly had the power to do so. The phantom drives were all used up to send the other Kryptonians back to the Phantom Zone, so it's not like anyone could have sent Zod anywhere so that he couldn't come back to Earth.

I'm not trying to bash Supergirl. I love both Supergirl AND Man of Steel. But I feel like we should at least be honest when looking at the fact that characters do die in Supergirl and it isn't quite the pacifistic utopia some people make it out to be. Plus, Clark kills a criminal who threatened (and also attempted) to commit genocide and cries about it afterward. More people should remember that.
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http://glyphcreator.manofsteel.com/

I found this yesterday and thought it was super fun. I tried to get a house of Zod crest (which hilariously led me to try to answer the questions by asking myself, "What would Zod do?"), but sadly the house crests of most of the Kryptonians in the film (El, Zod, Ul) don't seem to be attainable.

All Kryptonian crests )
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Man of Steel and Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Two movies that seem to get compared somewhat frequently, for reasons both obvious and not so obvious. On the obvious side, there's the fact that Superman and Captain America are seen as DC-Marvel analogues of each other: both are nice-guy characters whose adherence to “doing the right thing” is so steadfast and consistent that sometimes they seem like “boring” characters to certain people. On the not so obvious side, MoS is its protagonist's origin story, and indeed the first entry in the shared DC cinematic universe, while CATWS is Captain America's second solo film (Cap's third film if you count The Avengers) and the ninth entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. So in some senses, it's not completely fair to compare the two.


There's also the fact that the two films are usually compared to talk about the superiority of CATWS and the inferiority of MoS, usually to bridge out into a broader conversation about how DC's focus on "gritty" and "dark" is going to doom the company, while Marvel are brilliant geniuses who create cinematic masterpieces, etc. etc.


Now, I’m a big fan of Captain America and did not like Man of Steel at all the first time I watched it. But after several more viewings and doing some hard thinking, my stance on both films has changed. CATWS did not ruin Superman for me, as a number of people have claimed it did for them. Rather, for me, Man of Steel ruined CATWS.




I. Does destruction only count when it’s shown?


One of the most frequent criticisms of Man of Steel is that it's "destruction porn." That way too many people die and way too much real estate is destroyed in the name of using flashy CGI to impress the viewer.


I've said before that the amount of destruction in Man of Steel doesn't feel that gratuitous when you view the movie as being about humanity facing an alien threat they can't hope to win against, and there's something to be said for the fact that Man of Steel doesn't sugarcoat the violence and destruction. It's downright disturbing to see Metropolis wrecked and to watch characters die. But then again, shouldn't it be disturbing? The fact that the climactic battle was able to elicit a reaction in many viewers—especially discomfort and horror—meant that it did its job. We are not meant to feel comfortable with the aftermath of the Kryptonians' attempted invasion. We are shown that many people lost their lives, whether they sacrificed them willingly, or whether they were casualties, and humanity was saved, but not without collateral damage.


Man of Steel’s approach contrasts sharply with that of CATWS. CATWS also features immense destruction, caused not by an alien invasion but by guns and the technology of war. And yet, CATWS barely even shows its destruction at all. The first time I watched the scene where the Winter Soldier and his Hydra posse shoot up a freeway while trying to kill Natasha and Steve, I remember thinking: "Didn't a lot of civilians die?" The characters shot at a crowded freeway in downtown DC in the middle of the day. They shot at vehicles. Innocent civilians were fleeing in all directions in a panic. There was simply no way that scene happened without innocent people getting injured and killed in the crossfire. And yet, we don't see a single dead body.


In this sense, CATWS is dishonest. It wants high-stakes action scenes (how else do you explain why the movie chose to have a lethal assassin, so skilled that he's considered a "ghost" by the intelligence community, shoot up a downtown freeway in broad daylight?), yet it doesn't want to show that there are consequences for those action scenes, consequences to Steve's struggle with Hydra. It can keep its hands clean in a way Man of Steel purposely avoids doing.


That scene is the most egregious one to me, but it's not the only one. The car chase between Fury and Hydra, which also involved shooting into crowded streets, also should've had innocent bystanders getting injured, if not killed. And then the climax, with the helicarriers shooting each other out of the sky? It was pure luck that none of the helicarrier debris fell on a busy street or a building. If the helicarrier that ended up crashing into the (conveniently empty?) SHIELD building had drifted at a slightly different angle, it would've caused massive destruction in the city.


None of the risks are so much as thought about in the movie. Again, CATWS presents a world in which people doing the "right" thing conveniently escape causing collateral damage so their image can stay squeaky-clean.


As escapist fantasy, CATWS is fine. As a "feel good" movie, CATWS is fine. But the way the movie sweeps its destruction under the carpet, to me, is a pretty huge suspension of disbelief, and I find its minimization of costs and consequences more than a little disturbing.




II. Does killing someone “for the greater good” make you morally bankrupt?


Another difference I've seen in comparisons of the two movies is in the handling of the climactic one-on-one battle. People praise Steve's surrender to Bucky, while criticizing Clark's killing of Zod.


The thing is, if you think about this comparison in anything beyond a superficial way, you'll realize the two situations are not remotely similar. In CATWS, Bucky was merely the gun while Hydra was pulling the trigger. He was not legally responsible for his actions. And, he was Steve's best friend. Zod, on the other hand, was completely acting of his own free will when he decided to build Krypton on top of humanity's bones. Moreover, Bucky had already failed his mission. He was no longer a threat to anyone except Steve. In Man of Steel, Zod had explicitly said to Clark that he would destroy every human being on Earth if Clark didn't stop him. And he was clearly capable of carrying out that threat. Yet somehow, Steve's decision not to fight Bucky is hailed as "brave" while Clark's desperate decision to kill Zod in order to stop him, made when he had no other option and was begging Zod not to make him do it...is viewed as morally "over the line."


A better comparison to make is between Clark’s killing of Zod and Fury’s killing of Alexander Pierce. Both Zod and Pierce are the Big Bads of their respective movies. Both are killed in order to save another person(s). Yet whereas no one spares a thought for Pierce once he’s dead, Clark is haunted by his choice to kill Zod, even though Zod had planned to commit genocide.


It’s strange to me that, if you normally ask people whether someone who has the ability to kill a genocidal dictator should do so, basically everyone would say “Yes, of course!” But Clark’s decision to kill Zod is somehow viewed as “morally cynical” and “condoning murder.” Fury’s decision to kill Pierce is no less morally problematic than Clark’s killing Zod, but somehow Pierce is an acceptable, even justified casualty of war, but Zod, a genocidal and unstoppable alien invader, isn’t.


So really, where’s the moral superiority in CATWS? Especially when you consider that Steve has probably killed at least a few (if not a bunch of) Hydra mooks over the course of the movie (though once again, we never see any dead bodies), while Clark has never killed anyone until Zod came along? Do people really think that “it’s okay” to kill faceless guards who get in the hero’s way? Is that an attitude we should leave uncriticized?


And if you want to argue that Superman has a "no kill" rule whereas Captain America doesn't, that's a pretty weak argument to make. Because the central premise of that argument is that it's okay for heroes to kill unless they have an explicit rule against doing so. Think about that. It's a pretty disturbing thing to say. (Not to mention it's also factually inaccurate, so, it’s not a supported argument in any case.)




III. Captain America doesn’t have to make the hard decisions; Superman does


Building on my previous point, it’s disingenuous to act like Captain America took a moral high ground that Superman refused to adhere to, because the narratives of the two movies are structured so that Captain America can take the high ground, but Superman can’t.


Steve has the option of not killing Bucky because he doesn’t have to. Clark doesn’t have the option of not killing Zod—unless he wants an innocent family to die. Steve has the option of razing SHIELD to the ground because the narrative doesn’t show the potentially very negative consequences of dumping all of SHIELD’s classified information on the net. Clark doesn’t have the option of not causing damage if he fights Zod—because the narrative did not want to portray a fight between two god-like beings as having no collateral consequences.


To put it another way: the only way the movies would be comparable would be if the narrative structures were the same. If, for example, Steve had to choose between killing Bucky or saving the world; he couldn’t do both. Or if Steve had to decide whether or not to dump all of SHIELD’s information on the internet, knowing that a close friend is a deep cover SHIELD agent and whose life would be threatened if this information was made public. Or if Steve decided to blow the helicarriers out of the sky, and the falling debris ended up costing a number of innocent civilians their lives. None of these scenarios happened—because the narrative is constructed so that Steve doesn’t have to make difficult moral choices.


Steve has the option not to compromise. Clark doesn’t. Man of Steel is a world with shades of gray and no right answers. Not so with CATWS, which portrays a world in which the bad guys are bad and the good guys are good—the only complication is figuring out who is who when the bad guys pretend to be good.


You can say that forcing Clark to choose between the lesser of two evils is a fundamentally cynical narrative choice—and that’s an idea worth debating—but it’s false to say Steve was able to exercise some kind of moral agency that Clark turned away from. Because it’s the narrative structure of CATWS that allows Steve to keep his hands clean; Man of Steel deliberately chooses not to do so for Clark.




IV. "You need us" vs. "I'm here to help"


In my previous post, I mentioned that Man of Steel bucks the trend of the "authority-defying rebel who single-handedly saves the day because they knew better than the rigid, out-of-touch Powers That Be" narrative that is often very appealing to American audiences. CATWS, on the other hand, does follow that narrative pretty closely. CATWS is all about how The Powers That Be are corrupt, and therefore only a handful of rebellious mavericks can save the world. Be careful whom you trust, the movie makes it clear—except for the heroes, whom you have no choice but to trust.


In CATWS, Natasha Romanoff (who is in essence speaking for herself and Steve, since Steve, in a strange display of cavalier disrespect, decides not to even show up to the congressional hearing) says to the government,


"You're not going to put me in a prison. You're not going to put any of us in a prison. You know why? Because you need us. Yes, the world is a vulnerable place, and yes, we help make it that way. But we're also the ones best qualified to defend it."


Natasha, supported by the narrative, makes the claim that the government can't prosecute the Avengers because without the Avengers, there will be no one around to save humanity. In CATWS, heroes are necessary. But what if the government wants to hold the Avengers accountable for the destruction they caused, or if the assumption that the Avengers aren't corrupt is challenged? Well, too bad. The Avengers are too valuable to be controlled or eliminated.


Man of Steel provides a very different view of heroism. Clark, a Kryptonian with powers beyond the wildest dreams of humanity, would seem to be indispensable. But that’s not how Clark views himself. He tells General Swanwick,


"Look, I'm here to help. But it has to be on my own terms."


Earlier, he also says to the general,


"You're scared of me because you can't control me. You don't, and you never will. But that doesn't mean I'm your enemy."


Unlike Natasha, Clark makes it clear that he's willing to cooperate with the government—he doesn't want to be controlled by them, but he expresses respect for humanity. Over and over again in Man of Steel, he entrusts his fate to human hands, even when he has doubts about doing so. He even goes out of his way to try to make humanity feel safer around him.


The differences in the climaxes of Man of Steel and CATWS are illuminating: in CATWS, Steve, Natasha, Fury, Sam, and Hill decide, by themselves, to take down all of SHIELD and dump all of its information on the internet, without consulting the SHIELD employees who may be harmed by such a decision. In Man of Steel, on the other hand, Clark teams up with the American military and Lois Lane to defeat the Kryptonians together. Humanity needs Superman in order to win against the Kryptonians, but they do not need Superman in order to fight for what’s right and stand up for what they believe in.


Clark does not view himself as humanity’s savior, but as a collaborator (“I’m here to help,”), whereas Natasha's statement ("You need us") carries an implied superiority ("we're...the ones best qualified to defend [you]"), combined with a disturbing lack of regard for accountability ("You're not going to put any of us in prison...Because you need us"), and a certain disinterest towards the wishes of the people whom the Avengers are saving. Which, in my opinion, is more than a little troubling from an ethical standpoint.


CATWS asks the question: who should you trust? The answer is Captain America and the Avengers—but you don’t have the option of not trusting them. Man of Steel asks the question: who should you have faith in? The answer is yourself—and where you falter, Superman will be there to help you. Therein lies the major difference between the two movies.

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Man of Steel gets a lot of things right when it comes to its female characters, but there's another aspect of the movie that makes it surprisingly feminist-friendly and a definite contender for most feminist superhero movie pre-Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice—its portrayal of Clark and his attitudes towards women.

Clark respects women on a profound level, which is clear based on his interactions with female characters throughout the movie:

- Faora: Clark is never once surprised to see that Faora is Zod's second-in-command, he never questions her credentials or her skill, he fights her as an equal, and he has no sexist resentment about getting "beaten by a woman."

- Martha: Let's talk about Clark's relationship with Martha. Let's talk about how he has a close and healthy relationship with her: she is his anchor, his heart, and when he's finally figured out where he's from, he comes home to her, and promises no one can take him away from her.

- Lois: Clark always respects Lois's agency. From the first time he saves her on the scout ship, he waits until she consents before taking a look at her wound. He never once tries to tell her not to board the Kryptonian ship or stay out of the battle for Metropolis for her own safety—because he respects her choices as a grown, intelligent woman and wouldn't demean them by presuming he knows better or can act in her own best interests.

It's something that's so easy not to notice because it's an absence rather than a presence of doing something, but it's incredibly important. How often do we watch a superhero movie and we see male superheroes making decisions for their female love interests in order to "keep them safe" and act in their best interests? It's patronizing and it strips them of any agency. And sometimes, to make things even worse, the narrative punishes women for ignoring the man's attempts to keep her safe (*cough*Amazing Spider-Man 2*cough*). So it's frankly amazing that Clark not only avoids overriding Lois's interests to "keep her safe," but she also isn't punished by the narrative for exercising agency, either—both times when she willingly heads into a dangerous situation, she ends up playing a crucially helpful role with her knowledge and ingenuity.

Heck, Clark doesn't even tell Lois what to do even when his secret is at stake. When Lois finally meets him at the cemetary and tries to interview him, he doesn't tell her, "You can't run my story." Instead, he poses questions to her, to get her to think about his perspective. "What if I don't want my story told?" "What do you think?" In the end, he trusts her—he trusts that she will take the information he's given her and make the right choice on her own.

- Chrissy, the waitress: The obvious is that Clark was willing to stand up for her when she was being sexually harassed, and no one else did. The not as obvious is that he respected her wish for him not to get into a fight and ended up walking away.

He respected her wishes not to get into a fight. This is why Clark isn't a chauvinistic, knight-chivalrous faux-protector of women: because listening to the woman who is affected by his actions is more important to him than beating up a guy for disrespecting her.

Basically, Clark is an amazing role model when it comes to respecting women.

Also, let's talk about Clark himself. In certain ways, he doesn't really fit the "ideal" of masculinity—he's quiet, introverted, soft-spoken, and kind. He's openly affectionate with his mother. He doesn't like violence. He expresses grief, and anguish, and he seeks comfort in Lois after he kills Zod. He presents an alternative to traditional masculinity; indeed, he embodies a healthy kind of masculinity.

To me, it's incredibly thrilling that the current cinematic Superman is one who embodies healthy masculinity and respect for women, and it's amazing that Man of Steel is one of the most feminist-friendly movies to date.
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This is one of the most common criticisms of the movie. It's somewhat understandable, as there is quite a lot of destruction in Man of Steel, but to blame it all on Clark is...well, factually inaccurate.

Overall, the thing that sticks out to me most is: Clark is not a physics expert. He can't predict whether he's going to crash into a building from a flying tackle that starts miles away. It's doubtful to me that Clark even necessarily has a grasp on the fact that when he punches someone, that someone is going to fly through several walls, because Clark has spent a lifetime restraining himself and not punching people, he's not clear on what his own limits are, and he is not a physics expert (especially when it comes to Kryptonian capabilities rather than human capabilities).

1. The Battle for Smallville

- Some people blame Clark for bringing Zod to Smallville, to which my answer is: Why do we assume Clark meant to bring Zod to Smallville in the first place? All he was probably trying to do was get Zod as far away from Martha as possible, and after flying for several miles they ended up crashing into Smallville.

- After the Kryptonians pick up Zod and Clark faces Faora and Nam-Ek, there's no reason to suspect Clark wasn't going to try to get them out of Smallville—until the military shows up and causes complete chaos.

- Clark is clearly outmatched when facing both Faora and Nam-Ek alone, and especially when facing them together. Most of the fight is him either getting pounded into the ground or being used as a wrecking ball.

- Clark does warn the Smallville residents to "get inside, it's not safe," he saves a pilot by tackling Faora out of the air, he saves the soldier who falls out of the helicopter (and then immediately shoves him away to get him clear of Nam-Ek), and lastly he saves Colonel Hardy from Faora.

- Like when he tackled Zod, there's no reason to suspect Clark was purposely tackling Faora into the iHop; it's more reasonable to assume he was trying to get her as far away as possible, but didn't make it far enough.

- At one point, Clark does take Faora and try to fly away with her, presumably to get out of Smallville—but Nam-Ek tackles them and brings them back down to the ground.

2. The Destruction of Metropolis

Well, Superman wasn't there because he was trying to stop the World Engine on the other side of the world, so...it seems unfair to blame the destruction on him.

3. The Battle in Metropolis

ManOfSteelAnswers.com does a good job breaking things down in their video:



Saying the destruction was "unnecessary" implies that Clark somehow unreasonably prolonged the fight or was capable of ending it sooner—but, as this video quite clearly demonstrates, Clark was completely outclassed throughout the entire fight and was doing all he could to keep up with Zod. People also often say Clark should've lured Zod to a deserted area, but (a) Clark was not at all in control of the fight (you see him trying to punch Zod out of Metropolis, but that doesn't last too long before Zod has enough of that), and (b) Zod made it quite clear that he intended to "make [the humans] suffer," so there was no guarantee that he would blindly follow Clark out of the city if Clark retreated—he could just as well have started murdering everyone.

(And even if they were out in the countryside, they'd probably end up destroying agricultural fields and mountains, and possibly small towns as well. It's not like even the more rural parts of the US are completely deserted. As awful as it sounds, at least Metropolis's skyscrapers and buildings severely limited the extent of some of their damage.)

There are a couple of things that I wanted to add to the video's analysis of Clark's final battle with Zod and why the destruction may have been extreme, but not unbelievable:

- Clark and Zod are both the equivalent of gods on Earth. There was essentially no way they could have a no-holds-barred beatdown without causing this much damage.

- Clark does mostly try to limit collateral damage and human casualties. The only really egregious moment, in my opinion, was when he smashed Zod's face against a skyscraper, but at most, he caused non-structural damage and scared the people inside. If you pay close attention to the fight, you can notice:

> Clark gets smacked to the ground by Zod when the LexCorp truck blows up the parking garage because he's distracted by the explosion. I strongly believe he's so distracted because he's trying to see if there was anyone in the parking garage who might be injured or killed by the blast (because he deliberately fully turns around to look at the explosion).

> Clark gets smacked by a construction beam when he tries to close off his heat vision—either to reduce collateral damage or avoid seriously injuring Zod.

> When they're in outer space, Clark intially tries to catch the satellite Zod throws at him—so it won't fall to Earth and potentially kill people with the debris.
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"Flight" is probably my favorite track from Man of Steel. Hans Zimmer's work is as exquisite as usual, and "Flight" has an amazing balance of triumph and gravitas, sorrow and beauty that characterizes the whole film pretty well.

*

The first time I watched Man of Steel, I had drunk pretty heavily from the MCU koolaid, I had read all the reviews that criticized the movie for being too "dark" and "gritty" and eagerly hopped on the bandwagon. To me, the whole movie was forgettable, just a several-hours-long experiment in how many buildings could be blown up via CGI.

Fastforward a year later. I was disillusioned by the MCU and many Marvel fans, had read alternative takes on the movie, was excited by the initial teaser for Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, and decided to give Man of Steel another go.

And my opinion of the movie ended up changing pretty dramatically.

*

Man of Steel is not the same kind of popcorn flick that MCU movies by and large are. It is a different kind of movie, and has goals and execution that are very, very unlike what Marvel tries to accomplish in the MCU movies.

From the beginning, the opening scene captures the balance of triumph and sorrow that sets the tone for the film. The film begins with the beauty of new life, set amongst the tragedy of a dying world. The only way for Jor-El and Lara to save their son is to send him away, knowing that they will never see him again, knowing there is a chance he will die in space, alone, but that sending him away is the best chance they can give him of survival. That sense of bittersweetness and sorrow is echoed again in the finale—in the immense destruction left in the wake of the Kryptonians' attempted terraforming, and Clark's anguish over having to kill Zod just to stop him from murdering a family. [*Sidenote: Anyone who thinks Superman has a "no-kill rule" or that Superman killing Zod is a shocking thing is not an expert on Superman and should not claim to be.] This is a movie in which characters sacrifice much for the greater good, and nothing can be achieved without a cost.

In the first half, the film is like a puzzle, the various elements from Clark's life, captured with a micro-focused lens, slowly coming together to paint a portrait of what kind of man he is. And the film does it well: from Clark's very first scene saving the workers on the oil rig, we have a sense that he is a bit of an outsider, that he seems isolated from other people in certain ways, and yet he has a fundamental desire to help humanity. We see that Clark is an invincible being of immense power, and yet he is human and vulnerable, too. That as a boy, he suffers from his overwhelming gifts but also from regular schoolyard bullying, and as a man, he's still trying to figure out where he belongs. And that's something that anchors the film: Clark's own humanity and his respect and love for the rest of humanity around him, in spite of the negative side of human nature.

The negatives are plenty. Lara and the Kents' fears for Clark are very real—he could well have been captured by the government and dissected or locked away as a lab rat, if not outright killed. Clark gets bullied, both as a kid and as an adult. He encounters douchebags like the truck driver who sexually harasses a waitress. The government is more than willing to sacrifice him to Zod if that will make Zod go away. And the thing is, these reactions all feel so real. "People are afraid of what they don't understand," Jonathan says—and it's true. Just like how in the Nolan films, the police initially reacted with fear toward the vigilante Batman, it's hard to imagine people wouldn't react the way they do in Man of Steel in the face of a powerful alien being.

*

Can I take a moment to talk about the female characters in the film? Because the film's treatment of female characters is above-average, and gets bumped up to "pretty great" when you start comparing it with other superhero films.

Lois Lane is the deuteragonist of the film. Her quest for the truth about Clark is interwoven with Clark's quest to find the truth about himself, her faith in Clark inspires him, and she ends up playing a pivotal role in helping to destroy the World Engine.

Lara Lor-Van and Martha Kent are both pretty darn cool. Faora-Ul is a badass. She's Zod's second-in-command and an absolutely terrifying combatant. The American military includes several women shown in its ranks. Jenny, the Daily Planet intern, is pretty significantly featured for a secondary character. Not to mention, Clark himself is extremely respectful towards women and has a great relationship with his mother. And not a single woman is gratuitously sexualized or fridged in the film.

*

"You'll just have to decide what kind of man you'll want to grow up to be, Clark, because, whoever that man is, good character or bad, he's—he's gonna change the world." - Jonathan Kent

It's easy, as an audience member who knows the basics about Superman because of the enduring cultural currency the character has, to watch the movie with a sense of blasé security about the kind of man Superman will grow up to be, but that's not the best way to view this film. It strikes me how precarious young Clark's situation is in the universe of the film, because here you have this being who is more powerful than anything that exists on Earth, and if he wanted to, he could conquer the world and become a global dictator (*cough*Injustice*cough*).

That's what makes Clark's story all the more amazing. He could become a god—as Jor-El suggests—but instead, he doesn't. Clark respects humanity. That's why he, in his own words, "let his father die": because he loved and respected Jonathan Kent enough to honor his last wishes, even though the choice obviously caused him great pain. That scene gets criticized a lot, but for Clark to have ignored Jonathan's express command would have been an act of disrespect. It would've been a statement that Clark knew better than him what was the "right" thing to do. And sure, the image of the authority-disobeying rebel who turns out to know better than the rigid, uncreative authority figures is often attractive to American audiences. But objectively, is the idea that authorities are all idiots and disobedience makes someone a hero really a positive one? Man of Steel makes it clear that it's not.

It's why when Zod broadcasts his ultimatum to Earth, Clark decides to hand himself over to the government, so humanity can receive the credit for cooperating with Zod. Lois and Clark even explicitly point out that that's why he lets the government put him in handcuffs—not because they actually do anything, but so humanity can feel safe around him. He surrenders himself to mankind. If he wanted to, Clark could've flown into outer space and taken on Zod himself. But he doesn't. Even though he expresses mistrust of humanity to the priest, he doesn't. Because he views himself as (partly) human, not above humans, and he has respect for his fellow humans. So much so that he cooperates with the American military in order to stop the World Engine, instead of just trying to save the world himself. The film is not about a solitary savior who views himself as above humanity, but about Clark coming together with humanity, as an equal, to face a shared threat together.

*

"You are weak, Son of El. Unsure of yourself. The fact that you possess a sense of morality, and we do not, gives us an evolutionary advantage. And if history has proven anything...it is that evolution always wins." - Faora-Ul

Man of Steel reminds me of Pacific Rim in a way: both movies are about humanity facing an enemy they cannot hope to win against.

Zod, Faora, and the other Kryptonians are way beyond humanity's league. They are stronger, faster, bulletproof, technologically lightyears ahead, and have no weakness except the Sun's ultraviolet rays and Earth's atmosphere—and even then, with just a bit of concentration, those become a nonissue. They manage to cause so much death and destruction because humanity can't stop them. It's not "grimdark" to explore what would happen if humanity's worst nightmare for sentient alien life—alien beings who are physically and technologically superior to humanity—decided they wanted to invade Earth.

The Kryptonians are even beyond Superman's league. It's hard for me to wrap my head around why people seem to hate the mass destruction in Man of Steel, considering that the film does the same thing many films do: have a villain who far outclasses the hero. And that's what Zod and Faora are to Clark. Somehow, people seem to forget not just that Clark has never saved the world before, but also that Clark has quite literally not even so much as thrown a punch before fighting them. He's spent his entire life not fighting. Now he's fighting enemies who not only match him in terms of abilities, but who also, unlike him, were genetically engineered to be perfect soldiers and spent their entire lives honing their combat skills.

(Which, in case you missed it, Zod explicitly hammers home by yelling at Clark: "Where did you train? ON A FARM?!?")

If people want a film where Superman faces a villain who actually gives him a run for his money, a villain who can actually punch him back, it's not "grimdark" to show the consequences of that confrontation and the collateral damage to a planet that was literally not meant for beings of such power to exist.

*

"The symbol of the House of El means 'hope.' Embodied within that hope is the fundamental belief in the potential of every person to be a force for good. That's what you can bring them.
[...]
You will give people an ideal to strive towards. They will race behind you. They will stumble; they will fall. But in time, they will join you in the sun, Kal. In time, you will help them accomplish wonders." - Jor-El

People who call Man of Steel "dark" and "gritty" are using those terms in an overly broad way. Man of Steel is about consequences and loss, but it is far from "gritty."

People point to the destruction in Metropolis as evidence of Clark somehow "not caring" about saving people. Even though while Metropolis was being flattened, he was on the other side of the planet, trying to save the world. Even though he spent the entire movie saving people, from the bus full of his classmates to the workers on the oil rig to Lois Lane to the American soldiers during the fight in Smallville. The essence of Superman is still there in the movie.

Yet while the movie is about Clark's immense power and his capacity to save humanity ("You can save her, Kal. You can save all of them," Jor-El later tells him), it is also, equally, about how Clark helps people to save themselves, to rise to the occasion in the face of unimaginable odds. Like The Dark Knight before it, Man of Steel believes that in spite of the flaws, human nature is a powerful force for good.

This is evident in Clark's first scene. The scene shows Clark on a fishing boat, unaware as a metal cage is about to drop on top of him. We, the audience, know that Clark wouldn't be hurt. But the other fishermen don't know that, and one of them risks his own safety to push Clark out of the way. It is an amazing inversion of what you'd normally expect would be an introductory scene for Superman: instead of Superman saving a civilian, a civilian saves Superman. It's this facet of human nature, this instinct to help and do good, that Clark reciprocates, that inspires him as Superman, and that he inspires in turn.

Humans aren't lost, frightened sheep to be herded to salvation in the movie. The American military constantly takes charge to defend the United States and American citizens. When Metropolis is being flattened into dust, policemen are frantically redirecting people to safety (without Clark's direction, unlike in The Avengers). Lois does her darndest to save herself from Zod's ship. Jor-El's choice of words to Clark is crucial: not "you will accomplish wonders for them," but "you will help them accomplish wonders."

Over and over again, Man of Steel shows that every ordinary human being has the ability to become a hero. We see it in Lois Lane's decision to drop her story about Clark because it's the right thing to do. We see it in Colonel Hardy and every American soldier who goes to fight the Kryptonians, knowing that they are hopelessly outmatched, knowing that they may have no chance, but they are willing to lay down their lives if that is what it takes. We see it in Perry and Lombard trying to help Jenny out of the rubble, even though they know they will probably die trying, and staying with her so that she wouldn't have to be alone. And the film deliberately shows Perry's act of heroism as parallel to Clark's attempt to destroy the World Engine, because even ordinary people are capable of extraordinary heroism.

And that's a profound statement of optimism if I've ever heard one.

*

My point is not to convince everyone that they should love Man of Steel, or to demand that the haters change their opinion. It is fine not to prefer the tone of Man of Steel as a movie about sacrifice and facing consequences. And obviously, Man of Steel isn't a perfect movie, if such a thing even exists. (Personally, I really, really wanted an explanation as for why the Superman suit just happened to be on a really old Kryptonian scout ship.)

However, I will say that much of the criticism of Man of Steel is framed in quite baffling ways. The most common things people say are either factually inaccurate (i.e. "Superman didn't care about dying civilians," "Superman failed Metropolis," "Clark had no good reason not to save his father," "Superman is supposed to have a no-kill rule") or have an underlying current of moral superiority, often when comparing Man of Steel to Marvel movies (I swear, if I see one more comparison between Man of Steel and Captain America: The Winter Soldier or The Avengers, I will destroy a power plant). People are obviously free to disagree with the artistic and narrative choices made in a film, but it's equally obvious that just because you don't agree with a choice, doesn't mean that choice is necessarily inferior.

I think it's worth trying to watch Man of Steel without any preconceptions about what a "Superman movie" should be. When you accept the movie for what it is and what it's trying to do, rather than trying to compare it to Marvel or some hypothetical "ideal Superman movie," it can be a rewarding experience.


[BONUS: Man of Steel Myths: Superman Saved No One, Fighting Zod Was Easy - Kal Caused Collateral Damage, Metropolis Was Annihilated]

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