MAN OF STEEL
Directed by Zack Snyder, 2013 Warner Bros.
I’m a child of the 70’s, therefore a long time Superman fan. Â I’m also a fan of Zack Snyder’s The Watchmen. Â I wasn’t sure if those two worlds should ever meet, and to be honest, after seeing a preview screening of Man of Steel, I’m still not sure.
The Good:
Michael Shannon as General Zod. Â Rather than copy Terrance Stamp’s Zod, Shannon’s is grittier, more passionate. Â His motivations are different. Â Rather than revenge, this version of Zod seeks only what is best for the Kryptonian people. Â As a general, he was born, bred, and trained for nothing but the betterment of his people. Â Unfortunately, this is at odds with the interests of Earth.
Also great was Henry Cavill as Kal-El. Â Nobody will ever forget Christopher Reeve, but Cavill’s talent, chiseled looks and physique will certainly have people forgetting Brandon Routh. Â Cavill’s Superman was 100% flawless.
And finally, Russell Crowe as Jor-El. Â I’m a not a Russell Crowe fan, not in the slightest, but he was great. Â His Jor-El had a much larger role than the Marlon Brando incarnation had. Â Jor-El is the architect of everything that unfolds.
The Bad:
I have problems with the wanton destruction. Â Kal-El’s prime motivation is always the safety of others. Â Yet he, Zod, and Zod’s henchmen pretty much destroy all of Metropolis and reduce it to dust. Â Even though Zod seeks and needs Kal-El, our hero doesn’t use this to his advantage. Â He doesn’t, say, fly to the Pacific Ocean to battle Zod. Â Or Antarctica. Â He stays right in the middle of Metropolis and is a party to damn near every building coming down!
I also didn’t like the look of the Kryptonian technology. Â It was too monochrome and Cybertronian for my tastes. Â (Yet, somehow Kal-El ends up with the only blue, red and gold suit on the planet?)
The Ugly:
I left the theater with a booming headache. Â I don’t know if it was the 3D or the overly loud sound mix, but my head hurts. Â To sum up the experience, the last hour of the film had too many missiles, airplanes, spaceships and carnage flying around. Â The brain can’t process that much information. Â I didn’t feel that the 3D really enhanced my experience. Â (My brother in law Martin said the movie felt like a Michael Bay film, with all that crap blowing up.)
Man of Steel had a decent story, that begins where Superman and Superman II did, but then goes in its own direction. Â In many regards this movie is Superman: Â First Contact. Â It’s funny how often we forget that perhaps the most remarkable thing about Superman, is that he’s an alien! Â Living among us! Â Plotwise, the McGuffin here is something called the Codex, which contains the genetic blueprints for an entire generation of new Kryptonians. Â As Krypton’s last defender, Zod wants it. Â But his interests and Kal-El’s are at odds, since Zod plans to exterminate humanity and move in here!
I have to admit I’m surprised that Snyder got such great performances out of this cast. Â Not that the cast are a bunch of hacks; they’re not. Â Amy Adams was fine, and so was Diane Lane. Â But let’s face it…we’ve seen other directors in the past get wooden performances out of Lawrence Fishburn and Kevin Costner. Â Fishburn amounts to little more than a background character, but Costner’s role as Jonathan Kent is much more important than the version in Superman. Â He filled the role appropriately. Â My mother always said that Costner is best when he’s playing a farmer.
Much like The Watchmen, Snyder tells stories in multiple timelines simultaneously via flashbacks. Â In Man of Steel, these flashbacks are all critical moments of character development. Â This was done very well, with Cavill playing Clark Kent’s evolution perfectly. Â At the same time, I’m surprised Snyder didn’t use more popular and classic rock music. Â He did use a little bit, but certainly not on the scale of The Watchmen or even Suckerpunch.
I noticed two Battlestar Galactica alumni:  Tahmoh Penikett had probably 1 second screen time, but Alessandro Juliani had a bit more.  Why were they in it?  Because Man of Steel was partly filmed in Canada!
Although I will probably buy Man of Steel on blu-ray to “have the whole collection”, I don’t have an immediate craving to see it again.
Man of Steel opens today. Â Time for an Advil.
3.5/5 stars

