We watched the first hour and loved the way it developed the characters and the relationships Superman has with his fathers and Lois Lane. One could draw parallels to the experience of children who suffer from sensory integration disorder.and yet ironically, this is NOT a film I would recommend for a child who has SID.
The director does a great job portraying the sensory overload Clark experienced. One merit of the film is that the underlying storyline of the struggles Clark had as a young boy adapting to Earth's atmosphere and to being different. The final fight scene went on for an eternity and seemed to serve no purpose other than to feed the director''s and/or audience's "need" for gratuitous violence. Superman is seemingly oblivious to this, except to save Lois Lane, of course.
While the film-viewer does not actually see any innocent bystanders get hurt, it only stands to reason that if an entire borough is decimated, people are killed. As I recall, in the older films and TV series, Superman did his best to avoid hurting innocent bystanders when fighting the "bad guy," but in this film he seemed often unconcerned that his actions to stop the villain often led to huge destruction, massive explosions of entire blocks of the city, etc. Without knowing the original story, it was hard for my 13 1/2 year old daughter to understand many of the classic Superman references in the film, and her take-away was just an impression of violence. While I could appreciate a different take on the Superman story, I was very disappointed in the level of violence which, especially towards the end, seemed to be the main point of the film. Which Side of History? How Technology Is Reshaping Democracy and Our Lives.Cómo saber si una aplicación o sitio web son realmente educativos.
#Man of steel streaming how to
Common Sense Selections for family entertainment.