It sure
isn’t Superman…
It was with
a mix of elation and trepidation that I realized two iconic Pop Culture figures
from the previous American Century would be resurrected this summer: Superman
and The Lone Ranger. Though such figures do not normally fall
under the purview of The Jade Sphinx,
both have had such a long-lasting and profound impact on the way we view
ourselves and our culture that attention must be paid.
But the
America of 1933 (the birth of the Lone Ranger) and of 1938 (the debut of
Superman) are very different places from that of 2013. Could both figures survive the transition
into what we laughingly refer to as modernity without losing some vital
essence, the very things that made these figures what they were?
Well, in
the case of Superman, the answer, sadly, is no.
We do not often go to big budget junk pictures, and it is rare that we
find them satisfactory. However, Man of Steel, directed by Zack Snyder,
must hit a new low for a genre with a decidedly low bar. Never have I seen a blockbuster film so
cynical in its conception, so ham-fisted in its execution or so bleak in its
worldview. What should have been an
exhilarating romp that left one with a sense of wonder instead is a grim and
dour computer game, devoid of life, sentiment, wit, intelligence or fun.
This
creates an interesting aesthetic conundrum.
For those who know the core of the Superman mythos (and surely he is as
mythic to modern America as Theseus was to the Ancients), the story runs thus:
on the planet Krypton, scientist-statesman Jor-El realizes that the planet will
soon explode. He unsuccessfully tries to
convince the powers that be that doom is imminent, so he builds a rocket to
send their infant son, Kal-El, to the distant planet earth. The ship leaves just before the planet
explodes and lands in the cornfields or rural America (usually Kansas, in most
tellings). He is raised by the rustic
Kent family, given the name Clark and taught American virtues and a sense of
honor and of duty while growing to manhood.
He moves to the big city (literally a Metropolis) and becomes a great
protector and savior, a symbol of courage, honesty and purity by which all
humanity can aspire.
The
aesthetic conundrum at the core of The Man of Steel is simply this: how can
Snyder and his producer/writer (Christopher
Nolan and David S. Goyer,
respectively) take this same material and fashion out of it a film so grim, so
lacking in warmth, so devoid of hope and so ugly to look at? Every artist brings something of themselves
to whatever theme they approach, but surely some themes are, at their core, immutable? Surely the fundamental message of great myths
– be it hope or despair, transcendence or degradation – would shine through?
Apparently
not. Every choice made by Snyder and
company was calculated to leech Superman and his mythos from any sense of
grandeur, any sense of fun, any sense of transcendence.
First,
let’s look at Krypton. In both the
comics and the films, the planet is often presented as a kind of paradise. The comics showed us a primary-colored
super-science wonderland worthy of Flash
Gordon. And the latter Superman
films with Christopher Reeve opted for a futuristic Greco-Roman splendor, with
a sparse purity often associated with Greek drama.
In Man of
Steel, Krypton is as ugly as the nightmares of H. R. Giger. Its inhabitants
wear gray latex drag while moving through what looks like a massive digestive
track. Snyder and company have Jor-El die
when he is stabbed in the gut by the film’s villain, General Zod – saving the
explosion for Superman’s mother.
We then see
the grown Kal-El finding himself while bumming through the US. Reporter Lois Lane has a run-in with him, and
soon investigates the story of the mysterious man with strange powers. But soon General Zod and his cadre of Krypton
survivors come to earth, looking for Kal-El because it seems that Jor-El
downloaded all of Krypton’s genetic information into his infant son. With this information, Zod hopes to recreate
Krypton on earth… leaving no place for humanity.
Where to
begin? First off, Snyder shoots the film
with a near complete de-saturation of color.
Imagine a black and white film poorly daubed with a waxy crayon and you
get the effect. Worse still, the
thudding, repetitive and unpleasant score by Hans Zimmer is more reminiscent of the antics at a stoner’s rock
concert than a glorious science-fiction romp.
As for the
special effects – they are not that special.
When Superman and Zod battle at the climax (seemingly forever), it is
blurred motion and fast-cutting, more computer flummery than cinema.
The
performances are nearly invisible. Henry Cavill may be the handsomest man
to don the blue-and-red suit, but he lacks the charisma of Brandon Routh or Christopher
Reeve. (Or George Reeves!) His Superman
is a cypher. No one else manages to make
any impression at all except for Kevin
Costner as Pa Kent – and a film is in trouble when the most energetic
player is … Kevin Costner.
But the
fundamental problem with the seething mess that is Man of Steel is one of tone
and artistic vision. It seems that
Snyder and Nolan wanted to do an “adult” take on Superman, but to them “adult”
can only mean gloomy, negative and nihilistic.
I weep for the intellectual and emotional maturity of both men if that
is indeed their yardstick of adulthood, because it is both horribly restrictive
and blinkered. Transcendent joy is as
much an “adult” aesthetic as the cheapest form of tragedy, but try telling that
someone with the emotional sense of a 15 year-old.
The
filmmakers nail their own coffins finally with their vision of Superman,
himself. For more than 70 years,
Superman was the “good guy;” the man we looked up to, the person we all aspired
to be. This vengeful, glum and, finally,
not terribly bright man may be many things, but he will never be … Superman.
Tomorrow, a special Fourth of July
message.
5 comments:
As soon as I saw the muted colors in the suit I knew it was going to be a colossal bust in terms of art and story telling grace. Now I know I am right to avoid this cold mess.
Many thanks for the kind words, Sherry. I just spent the last hour looking at your informative blog, and found it smart, trenchant and always interesting. Sphinx readers would find much to savor at: http://historiesofthingstocome.blogspot.com/.
I jumped to your review from the comments page at Greenbriar Picture Shows, where I added my own urging to John McElwee to avoid this stinker. All I can say here is: Amen, James! I couldn't have said it better -- in fact, I tried, and failed. (My own review was posted not on my blog, but in my other capacity as critic for my town's local alt-weekly.)
Agree with you 100%, James. A miserable experience. The new "Lone Ranger" is even worse. I guess Hollywood doesn't believe in heroes anymore.
The muted color palettes of both movies annoyed me. "The Lone Ranger" even achieves the impossible - it makes Monument Valley look drab.
Thanks for following from Greenbriar Picture Shows ... one of the best movie blogs on the Web.
I keep coming back to the muted colors of Man of Steel, as well. It almost seemed as if the filmmakers were afraid of exuberance, of color, of fun. And then... what is the point?
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