Tuesday, 27 June 2017

Guilty by Association: A case for Man of Steel

With the release of Wonder Woman, the DC Extended Universe (DCEU) has finally delivered its first great film, rightly receiving both critical praise and (at this early stage) serious commercial success, which will hopefully result in at least one sequel. Wonder Woman proved to be the perfect answer to the missteps of both Batman V Superman and Suicide Squad and will hopefully guide the DCEU going forward.

There have been four DCEU films so far. Wonder Woman; an undoubted home run and one of the best comic book films out there. Batman V Superman; a trilogy of films condensed into a tonally chaotic mess that has Batman using guns. Suicide Squad; the lesser of 2016’s two evils and Man of Steel; the film you don’t remember correctly.

But don’t worry, you are not alone.


“Man of Steel is a bumpy ride for sure. But there's no way to stay blind to its wonders.” Peter Travers – Rolling Stone

Because quite simply, Man of Steel is nowhere near as bad as you think it is, if anything, it is guilty by association. Which is being associated with Batman V Superman. It may not belong among the genres greats, but does not deserve the derision it receives.

Before we get to the negative, lets talk about the positive and the parts of the film that worked unequivocally, as the later far outweighs the former.

Krypton. Oh, how that sequence just works, yes there are few strange zoom shots of Jor-El flying a giant dragon/butterfly creature, but other than that, it just gets it right. The film treats Krypton seriously and instantly introduces the smaller character stakes (Jor-El trying to save his son) and the bigger, world stakes (Jor-El trying to save his planet) and continues to ramp them up, right until the final shot. Russell Crowe and Michael Shannon bring their characters to life in such interesting ways that they instil their relationship and the world with so much history, that when he catch up with them later, interacting with Superman, it feels like a direct continuation of Kryptons final moments.

“The casting is impeccable, beginning with Cavill as an uncommonly brooding but refreshingly deep Superman. The script doesn't give him much to say, but it doesn't need to.”  Peter Howell – Toronto Star

While I’ve touched on Crowe and Shannon and what they brought to the film, it’s hard to find a cast member who didn’t deliver in Man of Steel. Like Batman Begins and Superman: The Movie, all of the roles are filed with top level actors and they all bring an immediate history to their roles, especially Kevin Costner, who draws on similar fatherly characters he has played in the past, but brings in a confusion and doubt that we rarely in him as he struggles to come to terms with keeping his son safe, but also helping him become the man he could be.

“[Cavill is] a superb choice for someone who needs to convincingly convey innate modesty, occasional confusion and eventual strength.” Kenneth Turan – LA Times

Henry Cavill takes over the iconic suit, but is the first person since Christopher Reeve to play the character on screen in a different way. This Superman isn’t instantly sure of himself and has doubts over who he is and what he can be. Cavill plays it with frustrated restraint of someone who knows physically what he can do, but knows that he has to keep it secret even though he can’t help but help the people he comes across. Its only when we see him in the suit that he begins to see the man both his fathers hoped he would become, a man sure in his beliefs and someone who wants to do good.

“David S. Goyer's screenplay benefits from Goyer's ambitious script structure, a thing of interwoven flashbacks and memory-triggered leaps into Superman's past.” Michael Phillips – Chicago Tribune

Like the best origin films, it focuses on its central character and keeps the plot under control and Man of Steel does that. After the Kryptonian prologue, the first half of the film follows Clark/Kal-El through the years, much like Batman Begins did with Bruve Wayne, from painful formative moments in childhood, to later points in time closer to he will become where the character discovers important information about himself that inform who he is (The Kryptonian ship in Man of Steel and the League of Shadows training in Batman Begins). The second half then focuses on the threat from Zod and his army as we finally get to see the hero cut loose, for good or bad and discover what he is capable of.

“There’s very little humor or joy in this Superman story.”  Richard Roeper – Chicago Sun Times

The central criticisms that were raised against Man of Steel from its release up to know were, the level and depiction of the destruction during the finale and how Superman didn’t save as many people as he should have and the lack of fun and joy in a story about a character who traditionally has belonged on the brighter side of hero spectrum.

“The crowd at a "Man of Steel" preview the other night exited the theater not excited, not chatty, but quiet, vaguely shellshocked. Was it the ridiculously loud volume levels? Or the pounding inflicted by the most protracted action sequences? Or both?” Michael Phillips – Chicago Tribune

The criticism of the finale is one I can understand as Zack Synder approached the battle between Superman and Zod in a “realistic” way. Buildings collapsed, people died and everything was coated in a ghostly concrete dust, no doubt calling on images and memories from 9/11 and warzones around the globe. For some this imagery could be too much and while it wasn’t upsetting for myself, it would be stupid and cold-hearted to not see that some people could be affected by it. It was no doubt intended, but was it intended to deliberately offend and upset? No. It stayed true to the tone of the world and the story it took place in.

Let’s not forget that the final confrontation is two near-invincible beings knocking twelve bells out of each other in the middle of a densely populated city, where one of the near-invincible beings has made it clear that he is going to kill a lot of innocent people, making them suffer along the way, unless the other near-invincible being stops him. Zod, by this point has lost everything, has nothing to lose and wants to punish Superman as much as he can by hurting the people he has adopted as his own, choosing them over the Kryptonian people. 

Superman is left in a no win situation, no doubt deliberately engineered by Zod, he can either save the people from crumbling remains of Metropolis after the failed terraforming, or go after Zod, the tangible, immediate threat. Unsurprisingly, Superman Zod, without much attention given to the people of Metropolis. While this isn’t a complete misstep, it was a missed opportunity to show off Superman’s full potential. But the fight shows us that this is all new to him, where an when an experienced Superman would have acted differently. The moment that stands out the most for me is the fuel truck that he easily floats over, allowing it to crash into a building. It would have taken nothing for Superman to stop it, but he chooses to avoid it, focusing on himself and Zod, causing needless destruction and putting lives at risk. Even an inexperienced Superman wouldn’t have made this decision, in this moment, he is angry and wants to stop Zod and it would have, at least to me, felt more natural for him to use it as a weapon. But also, this is only second real fight Superman has been in and it is against a much smarter tactician in Zod. Superman making mistakes and learning from them was something that we would have seen looked at and explored in a sequel I’m sure. If we had gotten one that is.

Timing didn’t help this style of finale, a year earlier The Avengers had used a very similar style of climax, where the number of civilian casualties is meant to be dramatically lower, there are several scenes that show The Avengers saving civilians from the alien invaders. I don’t remember seeing any innocents being hurt, never mind killed during The Avengers finale, but in Man of Steel there is undeniably a high body count as the gods do battle in the skies above. I’m not arguing for against either one, both of them fit the tone of the story that has come before and feels like a natural progression and culmination of those stories.

As I mentioned before and what was an important thematic element for the film is that Superman is till coming to terms with who he is and understanding what he is truly capable of. From his discovery of the Kryptonian ship through to the end of the battle in Metropolis, a matter of days pass and while he has tested his powers, he has never been tested on a scale anywhere near what he experiences in the second half of Man of Steel.

Putting the timescale into perspective, within days of finally discovering who you are, an army of your own people turn up and threaten the planet and people that have taken you in and where you have made your choice. Every question you ever wanted to ask to better understand yourself could be answered. Also, there are moments of joy and fun and upbeat, they are just used moderately, in keeping with the tone of the story. Clark learning to fly as his father talks to him (also one of the greatest Superman moments in a film), is a scene steeped in it. Then final scenes where Clark tells Martha that he knows what he is going to do with his life and where we, the audience finally get the feeling that Clark knows who he is and where he belongs.

But in between those moments, is a man trying to come to terms with what he is and who he is, while the fate of the world depends upon the decisions he makes. Realistically, not a situation conducive to a story over flowing with joyful moments, it is a story of inner struggle (and yes, “Gods” knocking each other about) and self-discovery.

I won’t be so blind as to say that nothing could have been done differently or changed for the better, there are few that I regularly think of when Man of Steel pops into my head. I’d have liked to have seen the Superman and Lois scene in the interrogation room go on longer, the hand held style at points didn’t work for me, although that isn’t specific to Man of Steel, it is just a style that I find is very hard to make work. Although it did give Man of Steel a visual style that sets it apart from the rest of the genre. Finally, the finally, for me would have been stronger, if it was a bit shorter, but also if there was more of Henry Cavill and Michael Shannon fighting practically during the finale. I realise with these characters, some aspects just couldn’t have been done, but for me the best parts of the fight is when we get up close and personal with Zod and Superman (like the construction site and the train station).

I’ll drop into spoiler territory for this paragraph. But the way that Superman stops the fight came in for a bit flack, although that was mainly from people arguing “Superman would never kill”, or “Superman wouldn’t do that”. But this is a new Superman in a new world and the threat that he and humanity face is unique, spectacularly aggressive and near unstoppable. The prior battle has shown us what destruction Zod can and will cause and faced with the situation at the end, between Zod and innocents. Superman makes the only choice he could. Zod knew what he was doing, he created the situation, Superman was running out of time and options and made the choice he felt he had to.

Where the character would have gone after he comes to terms with effectively killed off the last his species was a great weight, thread to explore and dive in to in the next film. But it never truly found out the effect this had on Superman and that is perhaps the true cost of getting Batman V Superman, for all the early hype and people exalting that we would finally see the two greatest superheroes meet and fight on the big screen, was that we were denied a true sequel to Man of Steel

While Batman V Superman may have touched on, or used part of these questions or ideas in its film, that was such a wide array of directions they could go in and consequences and developments that could be explored. The ones that were used, but all to sparingly or prematurely dropped was the Senate/House hearings, the developing relationship between Lois and Clark and the world in general adjusting to having a god amongst them. But also, they could looked at the potential religious angle to Superman appearing and the forming of a church or belief structure devoted to him, how world leaders and politicians would respond to a powerful force they can’t control. Hopefully, one day we will get a sequel that puts Superman front and centre again, it may be the upcoming Justice League, but I’m not holding out much hope.

Superman, also wasn’t a financial failure, it made around $668m worldwide, which isn’t bad for a reboot of a character that needed  bringing into the modern world. Batman Begins by comparison made $374m and Iron Man $585m, although they both received more critical praise than Man of Steel, $668m surely shouldn’t have been that bad of a performance to cause Warner Bros. to panic and press the Batman button.

Ultimately, what we got from Batman V Superman was a trilogy of films (Man of Steel 2, a rebooted Batman film and then a Batman/Superman film) which has kneecapped the Man of Steel series and gave us a portrayal of Batman that was closer to The Punisher than Batman. Although, it did give us Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman and that is something to be truly thankful for.

Hopefully, the Wonder Woman team will be given the time, patience and support that The Dark Knight team were given and allowed to make at least one more film that focuses on Diana and her world, it’s rich enough and unique enough to do that, without trying to jam in any other Justice League characters.

So go and see Wonder Woman, if you’ve seen it already, go see it again and let the people in charge know that we want another Wonder Woman film that puts her front and centre. Then, go and watch Man of Steel again. You’ll be surprised.











Saturday, 29 April 2017

The Best Films of 2016

From now on, I'll be keeping it short. I probably don't do the films any favours by trying to describe in a paragraph. In what ultimately comes down to me telling you how good they are. 

Just go and see them.


7. Hell of High Water
Writer: Taylor Sheridan
Director: David Mackenzie

6. Midnight Special
Writer/Director: Jeff Nicholls

5. Hunt for the Wilderpeople
Writer: Taika Waitit, Te Arepa Kahi and Barry Crump (novel)
Director: Taika Waititi

4. Suburra
Writer: Giancarlo De Calato, Carlo Bonini, Sandro Petraglia and Stefano Rulli
Director: Stefano Solima

3. Moonlight
Writer: Barry Jenkins (screenplay) and Tarell Alvin McCraney (story)
Director: Barry Jenkins

2. Tower
Director: Keith Maitland

1. A War
Writer/Director: Tobias Lindholm



Note. Originally, Moana occupied the seventh spot. However, this was before I'd managed to catch up with some of that years award season films.