If only superman were truly an epic.Unrelated to the debate at hand, but I've always seen it more of a Moses thing. Sent away by his parents, raised by another culture, leads people to freedom...
If only superman were truly an epic.Unrelated to the debate at hand, but I've always seen it more of a Moses thing. Sent away by his parents, raised by another culture, leads people to freedom...
Covar = Pontius Pilate. Guilt mostly.I have to wonder what makes you so angry about the jesus metaphor.
Reread his posts on the previous page where he shows significant differences between the two that might give you insight into your question.I'm just wondering if it's an overraction based on religious beliefs, IE "how dare you compare a fictional character to our lord and savior".[DOUBLEPOST=1355340227][/DOUBLEPOST]I have to admit that most of my favorite Superman stories are ones in which Superman himself isn't even present for most of the story and deals more with other people's situations around him. For example "The man who has everything" and the death and return of Superman.
Since 1971. Which is actually the most important piece here - it was written at the height of Superman's supers and at a time when (so far as I know) comic writers couldn't do much more than hint at suggesting that their heroes might have a sex life. And, so far as I can find, it was intended as satirical.Maybe. Maybe not. But now it's been out there for decades, it's pretty much considered canon. I've had a friend who always brings it up.
No assumption - he literally tells Chloe that he's developed better control and can freely make with the sex in season nine or so. Directly related to him schtupping her cousin Lois Lane, awkwardly enough.I think it *has* been used in some non-main versions (there's a smallville episode where Clark is *afraid* of something bad happening, my assumption is that eventually he develops better control/assurance).
The two arent mutually exclusive.I'm fairly sure the Death/Return story wasn't a metaphor so much as a cash-grab.
Timing issue actually. They wanted the wedding to sync up with the wedding in Lois & Clark.I'm fairly sure the Death/Return story wasn't a metaphor so much as a cash-grab.
If you haven't read the New 52 Aquaman, you should. He and Mera are crazy badass, and the first issue or two he deals with people in the DC Universe who think he's a joke hero. The book does a great job of dispelling some stupid jokes like "talking to fish" and such."Aquaman is useless"
ftfyI'm fairly sure Superman isn't a metaphor so much as a cash-grab.
I have, actually, and quite recently. It was fantastic. It was like the old Geoff Johns that I knew and loved; the one that wrote the amazing run on Flash some years back.If you haven't read the New 52 Aquaman, you should. He and Mera are crazy badass, and the first issue or two he deals with people in the DC Universe who think he's a joke hero. The book does a great job of dispelling some stupid jokes like "talking to fish" and such.
God I love me Johns's Flash run. TO THE PIRATEBAY!I have, actually, and quite recently. It was fantastic. It was like the old Geoff Johns that I knew and loved; the one that wrote the amazing run on Flash some years back.
So, basically, you don't like the metaphor, not that you deny it exists.Timing issue actually. They wanted the wedding to sync up with the wedding in Lois & Clark.
Now the Jesus comparison a very forced metaphor whose links are weak at even the most superficial level. I hate it because the attempt to make it is responsible for a far to high amount of shitty Superman stories as well as being the reason you have people who insist that Superman is too boring and perfect.
http://www.amazon.com/Flash-Geoff-Johns-Omnibus-Vol/dp/1401230687God I love me Johns's Flash run. TO THE PIRATEBAY!
It's the first time I've looked forward to DC releases in a very long time. I was really surprised how much I enjoyed it. Hell, they made Black Manta interesting, even.I have, actually, and quite recently. It was fantastic. It was like the old Geoff Johns that I knew and loved; the one that wrote the amazing run on Flash some years back.
Superman Returns a good movie to me.
Did someone page me?Superbeard.
I did, and included more of an explanation why. I have no reservations saying that it was good...to me. I know that I'm in the minority with that opinion and I'm OK with that.Wait, I missed that, who said Superman Returns was a good movie?
LOOK: I love Superman. I fucking tear up when I hear the John Williams theme. I was the ultimate Superman Returns apologist. My brain twisted itself into a pretzel trying to find ways to say the movie was good for at least a year or two after it came out.
But it's not. It's really a horrible, horrible movie for so many reasons.
Oh, it had some awesome moments. The space shuttle scene was fantastic. The guy LOOKED great. The movie LOOKED great. No doubts about that.Superman Returns had that scene with Superman's eye and the bullet, that was pretty cool.
YES.Superman Returns suffered because it's a terrible movie that tries to hard to reproduce a movie that was made in the 70s and what original stuff is in the movie is absolutely horrifying, illogical, and inconsistent.
THIS.No Superman Returns suffered from a director jacking off to a 1976 movie he watched as a kid.
And again, someone gets it exactly. It's a matter of grinding against how you tell a story.I wouldn't confuse people being critical of a movie with "raging", I think thats just a way to dismiss actual critique.
Superman Returns, from a basic filmmaking standpoint, had serious issues. An unlikable protagonist (this was the biggest issue, if you don't like the protagonist then you probably won't like the movie and Supes came off as weird and creepy to people), a boring and meandering plot with little clarity, the villian was a chunk of land.
It also had some strong things going for it: Amazing VFX work (seriously, whoa), fantastic sets and costumes, Kevin Spacey.