Monday, June 17, 2013

Man of Steel

LEAD CASTHenry Cavill, Amy Adams, Michael Shannon, Diane Lane, Kevin Costner, Russell Crowe, Ayelet Zurer, Laurence Fishbourne, Antie Traue  DIRECTOR:  Zack Snyder  SCREENWRITER:  David S. Goyer  PRODUCER:  Christopher Nolan, Charles Roven, Emma Thomas, Deborah Synder  EDITOR:  David Brenner MUSICAL DIRECTOR:  Hans Zimmer  GENRE:  Action/Adventure, Drama, Science Fiction/Fantasy  CINEMATOGRAPHER:  Amir Mokri  RUNNING TIME:  143 minutes  DISTRIBUTOR:  Warner Bros. Pictures  LOCATION:  US, Canada

Technical assessment:  3.5
Moral assessment:  3.5
MTRCB rating:  PG 13
CINEMA rating:  V 14

            Man of Steel opens with a childbirth.  The mother is Lara (Ayelet Zurer) and the father, assisting at birthing, is Jor-el (Russell Crowe); their newborn is Kal-el, to be known as “Superman” (Henry Cavill), the first child in many years that comes to Krypton by natural birth.  The destruction of Krypton, the home planet of Superman, is imminent.  Causing its disintegration is the scheme of artificial population control which breeds children en masse and nurtures them not in their mother’s womb but in an artificial environment which assures that these children will in time fulfill their respective predetermined roles in Krypton’s society.  This kind of genetic engineering is championed by General Zod (Michael Shannon), a megalomaniac who wants to build a new race of Kryptonites but fails to win the support of the scientist Jor-el who is totally opposed to Zod’s eugenics.  To escape the impending death of Krypton, Jor-el and Lara decide to send the infant Kal-el off to a benign planet, Earth.  The space capsule bearing Kal-el lands in a farm in the American heartland, Smallville, Kansas, owned by the Kents (Kevin Costner and Diane Lane), who raise him as their own, teach them their values, and keep his identity a secret.
            Less than a week after opening on June 12, Man of Steel has already hit major milestones in the global box office—it is promising in that in the face of stiff competition coming from CGI-heavy doomsday, apocalypse, and other superhero flicks, Superman seems able to hold its charm among the movie going public.  The introductory Krypton sequence is visually compelling, with a clearly spelled-out premise defining the origin and destiny of the newborn babe.    Keeping the audience engaged is the non-linear storytelling, studded with relevant and timely flashbacks mirroring Kal-el’s struggle from boyhood to manhood, burdened as he is with extraordinary powers he never asked for.   The sets and effects are great, the score envelops you in a world all its own.
            Man of Steel largely owes its power to the carefully chosen cast.  Crowe’s performance as Superman’s biological father is heartfelt and charismatic, matched only by the quiet intensity of Costner as the foster father.  Shannon exudes menace without having to utter a word, while Fishburne plays the editor’s role with finesse.  Lane is the ideal foster mother—devoted yet detached.  No one could have played journalist Lois Lane better than Amy Adams, with her perky personality and intelligent eyes; she might have come on stronger, though, with a no-nonsense hairdo instead of the girly-girly soft curls.
            Our mind wanders, though, as we get impatient for the explosions and repetitive combat scenes to end: why are the US armed forces in movies of this kind so stupid as to fight obviously superior alien powers with their puny little guns and tanks when even their toughest fighter planes are but paper planes to the invaders?  Such a waste of ammunition!  But thank God, this time, Superman doesn’t wear red briefs outside the skintight suit.
            Viewers of faith can glean the message of this film in spite of its protracted pyrotechnics, though.  Director Zack Snyder sprinkles his opus with elements that a church-going audience may pick up and interpret as parallels to the messianic story.  The cinematic savior of the world descends to live among Earthlings, and he has a mission, much like the Son of God who came down to Earth as an ordinary man.  We learn that the “S” on the strongman’s chest means “hope” in Krypton; on Earth the “S” stands for “Superman”, but it could also mean for all intents and purposes  “Savior”, since he is told that he is to save the world by bringing hope to Earth.  He is adopted by simple folk—farmer father, housewife mother—just like the carpenter-housewife couple from Nazareth.  Agonizing over whether to turn himself in as the rebel Zod demands, he seeks the counsel of a priest in a church—the shot shows Cavill close-up, framed against the stained glass background of Jesus praying in Gethsemane.  Some film critics have even averred that the battle between Kal-el and Zod is one between good and evil, with Kal-el as Jesus and Zod as the devil.  Hhmmm.  Be that as it may, the pro-life cause stands to benefit from the statement of Jor-el against “artificial population control”, a concept whose evil consequences the anti-RH advocates the world over have been trying to open the public’s eyes to.  It’s nice to know Superman is on our side.