Oponn Relationship, on 02 April 2016 - 04:24 AM, said:
amphibian, on 02 April 2016 - 03:29 AM, said:
This reads like George Will writing about baseball of the halcyon days.
This is true. Lots of bemoaning.
amphibian, on 02 April 2016 - 03:29 AM, said:
It's a bad article because it kinda assumes a monolithic audience and perspective on Superman that I believe never existed. I think Superman has appeal to many groups for a variety of reasons; decency isn't particularly high up there among those now (and I believe it never really was, that this is a fiction assembled over the years by nostalgic white dudes who want it to be true).
It's also kinda telling that the language used to describe the 70s in the cities nearly get to dog whistling.
I'm not sure this is. I do think Superman is a monolithic figure of fundamentally decent, boyscout-helping-grannies-cross-the-road American idealism. He's had that reputation as milquetoast do-gooder even next to Batman, despite Batman's own never-kill-anyone principle, and frankly it's the latter who appeals to the make-America-great-again crowd imo (except perhaps this brooding iteration of Supes). Maybe there's a little Leave It to Beaver-ism inherent with Superman, but I don't necessarily think the desire to keep him unsullied is equivalent to white back-to-the-50s yearning. Maybe outside my experience (none of the bigger Superman fans I know personally are white) his image is inherently that kind of thing to a lot of people though, and I just haven't seen it.
I'm also not sure about the 70s dog whistling, but then again when I think of "cocaine and disco" I think of Studio 54 style self-indulgence and conspicuous consumption. Maybe that's a whitewashing of disco culture generally, but in the sense of a real phenomena that hijacked disco in the 70s. Also I hate disco, so I'm gonna psychologically stick with the worst associated phenomena.
Maybe there's more interesting stuff in the comments than in the article itself. For instance one person writes
"
In a post 9-11/War on Terror world, Warner Bros. has convinced people that Superman cannot exist.In a post 9-11/War on Terror world, Marvel has convinced people that Captain America not only can exist, but *should*."
And there's discussion of Superman as (essentially) a pacifist, someone whose tendency is to open his hand rather than make a fist, as well as the significance of Cap's "weapon" being a shield. Of course Cap is even more of a "traditional All-American" blonde, corn-fed boy w/ all the visual reinforcement that entails. But his principles still tend to reflect actual idealism rather than the self-serving farce that so often gets dressed up as "realism".
All that said, I don't actually care if Faraci is a good writer or not (I don't know who he is other than this one thing). I was mostly wondering if people who saw the movie agree with the premise that Zack Snyder has intentionally inverted the character to suit a far different agenda than his usual man-of-principle depiction. Has Snyder destroyed Superman and rebuilt him as something else?
I largely agree with Apmh actually.
The ideal that some people have in their head of who Superman is and what makes him up is: Alien godlike being is rasied in the 1930's Midwest and that upbringing tempers him into the white-hatted, boy-scout, do-no-wrong so that this guy with omnipotent powers doesn't seem like a SCARY alien, but a benevolent one. Come to save us, from ourselves.
Right?
Okay, but here's the problem. That's a bigtime fantasy not set in a fantasy world. It's set in ours. And in our world, the ideologies of 1930's America simply isn't a believable thing anymore. What's more, it's bloody boring. Oh, look over there, the guy who does no wrong saves the day again. Wonderful. For a ten cent dimestore novel for children of that same era.
In 2016? Not even a little bit. In fact, Snyder has gone for the hard view. That to make this guy BE even close to that boy-scout hero he has to be run through the same human paces that everyone else does. Start that off with a father who fears that the world will react to him poorly and nab him or try to imprison him ect. Say what you will about Jonathan Kent in MoS...that is a FATHER. A man who wants to do everything in his power to keep his son from the harm he assumes might come his way if people know about him. Are parental choices like this good or thoughtful and do they even make SENSE? Nope. But it is what it is. Any parent worth their salt could easily make the same choices as Kent did. No one is saying they are the right ones (or even if the right ones exist)...but they are believable. So then you move that young man into his adult life and then throw (arguably) the most vicious criminal his own planet has ever seen..and give him the same powers, and this young untrained man has to try to deal with it. All goes mostly wrong, but he DOES succeed in the end (at the great personal cost of snapping Zod's neck) and saves the world and even MOST of Metropolis...(anyone who says they destoyed the city wasn't paying attention...the city shot after the fact shows about 1/4 of the city was damaged). Is it perfect? God no. Is it starting to temper this guy? Yeah...but that evolution occcurs as slowly as ours does.
Then you move onto BvS. The guy is now more comfortable saving people, but is still facing the mob mentality in the country (which again, is EXACTLY what would happen in 2016....exactly) He would have already been tried in the court of public opinion and found wanting. Yet he's TRYING to rise above it, but his life on earth has given him human doubts and human depression, and basically a mental health issue. This is the reason for the scene with his mom. "Save these people, or don't. You don't OWE them anything." and that's goddamn right. He doens't. Snyder isn't giving the easy answer here. We don't get to hit a button and have the boy in red and blue come round...yet. This is a guy who is so intent on saving his girlfriend from a thug that it blinds him to the power with which he takes a guy through a wall. Is that a smart choice? Nope. And he knows it after the fact as he walks calmly into the senate and accepts what's about to happen to him. This is a guy who is STILL learning how to naviagte his own emotions and reactions...while also trying to figure out his place in the world.
Captain America is a different guy. Whoever said that in the comments doesn't understand these two characters at all. Cap is FROM the 1940's. He's from the so-called Golden Age. He literally IS a boyscout from the era of the first Superman comics...brought INTO our time. His values are that of 1930's-40's America. That is why he is like that, and why the difference exists. This Superman in these movies was born in 1980. The global socio-dynamic is wholy different. They were raised in two different worlds. Notice that EVERYONE in Marvel U treats Cap like he's an old fuddy duddy, a relic.
I think some of the most vocal comic fandom expect the 1930's Superman (Mark Waid...old white guy) himself stood up in the theatre in MoS and shouted at the screen and then ranted afterwards that "This Isn't Superman!"....and when I challeneged him "This isn't YOUR Superman, but it is A Superman"...he basically told me I was wrong and don't understand a comic character I've been reading since I was a wee kid. I like Mark Waid's writing, but the guy has an attitude a mile wide, and he's a traditionalist. And that to me is anathema to good storytelling. IP characters like Superman should be malleable. They should be allowed to grow. Especially if they are ones born in our era and have to deal with our humnaity and our fears. Anything else would just feel fake.
Snyder's Superman is organic and still developing. And there are many out there who refuse to wait for that to bloom...and a few more who think he should come on the screen fully formed...which is asinine.
EDIT: Going to see it a second time in a few hours.
This post has been edited by QuickTidal: 02 April 2016 - 12:48 PM
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