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The film revolves around Clark Kent, a guy from Krypton, is sent to Earth due to his planet was attacked and destroyed. From Clark Kent was a kid until as an adult, he was adopted by a kind couple and the more Clark grows up, the more he awares the power which is available in his body. Until one day, the old enemy who destroyed his planet comes to destroy the Earth, he has to rise to defend the earth where he grew up.
What's missing in Snyder's Superman is a dash of the hokey goodness that Christopher Reeve contributed to the role and the comic cold cheesiness that Gene Hackman and Terrence Stamp brought as Luthor and Zod.
I'm excited to see where Man of Steel goes, now that it's accomplished its own bit of world building. There's every reason to expect the inevitable sequels will be better.
There's plenty to like in Snyder's hectic, rowdy film. But by the time we reach the bludgeoning excesses of the last half-hour it's hard to shake the sense that this was an opportunity at least partially missed.
Christliness has always been an element of the Superman myth. But this film's near literal insistence upon it becomes absurd since director Zack Snyder and screenwriter David S. Goyer don't dramatize the analogy, they presume it.