Man of Steel

Superman has numerous powers.
Too many, right? I once thought so.
But that’s a surface-level misunderstanding – one born of parody, not canon.

Detective Comics

DC doesn’t write books by listing new powers like bullet points. Clark’s core abilities are constant. They exist to serve the story, not overwhelm it. And that story – the real one – is deeper, richer; more substantial than most people are acquainted with.

I thought I knew Superman.

Faster than a speeding bullet!
Able to leap tall buildings in a single bound!
More powerful than a locomotive!

“Look! Up in the sky!”
“It’s a bird!”
“It’s a plane!”
“No, it’s Superman!”

Those are the lines.
But they were never the point.
The story is the point.


The Rotten Tomatoes Disservice

Man of Steel remains one of the most unfairly dismissed films of the past decade. Its Rotten Tomatoes score – 57% – has branded it “rotten” from the outset. But that score doesn’t reflect its quality. It illustrates a misunderstanding of what the film is trying to do.

Many critics resorted to vague complaints about “tone” and “direction,” often struggling to identify specific failings. Some disliked the film’s intensity, citing the destruction and danger as “too much.” The sound of automatic gunfire, the collapse of buildings, the terror of watching humanity scramble against impossible odds – it all felt too heavy, too loud.

But that weight is exactly what gives Man of Steel its power.


The Necessity of Consequence

If Superman is to exist in a grounded, realistic world, then the world must feel real when he fights. The destruction isn’t gratuitous – it’s logical. You don’t have an alien invasion without consequence. You don’t face off against Kryptonians in the heart of a city without collateral damage. If skyscrapers fall, it’s because they would. If soldiers fire their weapons, it’s because they must.

The film doesn’t flinch away from this. And why should it? The point isn’t devastation for its own sake – it’s scale, stakes and truth.

Superman isn’t just powerful. He’s responsible. Man of Steel honors that weight.


A Grounded Reimagining

A film about choice.
Clark doesn’t stumble into heroism. He earns it – through loss, hesitation and moral decision-making.

The film builds a myth that respects intelligence. Jor-El and Lara are scientists, not mystics. Krypton isn’t just a backdrop – it’s a civilization in decline. General Zod isn’t evil in the traditional sense – he’s terrifying because he believes he’s right.

And that matters. Because Clark has to confront what he might have become.

When Zod hijacks Earth’s televisual broadcast to speak to the world – it’s chilling. His flickering, staticky broadcast feels like an intrusion. Like a terrorist signal cutting through national borders. There’s something unsettling about how plausible it is. That moment, more than anything, shows what the film gets right: it understands fear. It understands awe.


The Snyder Vision

Zack Snyder is often misunderstood. People call his work “style over substance,” but that’s lazy criticism.
In Man of Steel, the style is substance.

The camerawork is intimate and deliberate. The flashback structure fragments the origin story in a way that mirrors Clark’s inner dislocation – one moment he’s a child, the next he’s lost in the world, then suddenly he’s something more.

Kevin Costner is magnetic as Jonathan Kent – quiet, conflicted, principled. Diane Lane brings warmth and steadiness as Martha. Michael Shannon’s Zod commands the screen with tragic conviction. Amy Adams gives us a Lois Lane who’s smart, grounded and emotionally tuned. And Henry Cavill – measured, noble, physically exacting – is the most believable Superman in decades.

The CGI is precise and atmospheric. Krypton feels fully realized, not sketched. The fights are fast, disorienting, but never meaningless. Every punch has gravity. Every blast of force changes the geography.

Snyder directs the action with real weight – not just visual heft, but moral weight. This isn’t spectacle for its own sake. It’s action that reflects power, and the consequences of power.


A Better Tomorrow

This is the Superman who hides in shadows. The one who’s feared before he’s embraced. A man unsure of what he’s meant to be until the moment requires him to be it.

The myth is here – but it’s repurposed for a modern framework.
Hans Zimmer’s score – soulful, slowly building, pulsing with restraint. It suits this Superman: less boy scout, more bruised idealist. A man who wants to do good – but isn’t yet sure how.

That moral confusion isn’t a weakness of the film – it’s the focus.


Truth, Justice & The American Way

The only other screen adaptation that captures Superman this fully – without requiring a dive into comics – is Superman: The Animated Series. That show, like this film, took Krypton seriously. It built a society with consequences. A people worth mourning. A world that matters.

Man of Steel belongs in that tier.

It’s a balanced, measured reintroduction. A myth rebuilt from the ground up – richer, graver and more honest than most audiences expected.

Man of Steel‘s not a film about superpowers.
It’s about restraint, pressure, loss and the cost of virtue.
It’s about learning how to rise.

This isn’t the Superman who smiles for the camera.
This is the Superman who brawls, who chooses, who endures.

Man of Steel is a serious film about a serious man.
Worthy of our collective esteem.

★★★★★ ★★★★★

For briefer thoughts: IMDb & Letterboxd. Or read The Batman, BvS or Superman for more DC.


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