Can't believe steffana was right, zzznyder's superman was definitely better than this.
After watching it I remembered something that really stunned me a few weeks back:
2:25 if the timestamped link isn't working.
Thins nibba is watching the movie several times, looking for anything that will help his poor retarded brain cope with the fact that it's just a very good movie.
Seriously pathetic
boundle (thoughts on cracking AITD) wrote:
i guess thouth if without a legit key the installation was rolling back we are all fucking then
Some nice points about Superman's pathetic and out of place touchy-feely speech toward Lex.
Edit:
The Message That Changed Everything
Quote:
Now, the digital release of Superman has created one of the strangest contradictions in recent superhero memory. A blink-and-you’ll-miss-it news ticker now suggests Lex Luthor faked the Kryptonian message at the center of the film’s drama. The problem? Gunn himself has repeatedly said the opposite — and he’s been emphatic about it.
A ticker at the bottom of the screen reads: “The Daily Planet shows Luthor was behind the false images of Superman’s parents’ message…”
That single phrase — “false images” — flips the scene on its head. Instead of a horrifying Kryptonian legacy, the message becomes a smear job orchestrated by Lex Luthor.
This line was not reported in the theatrical cut. It’s possible that because it’s such a small text scroll that no one noticed it on the big screen before they had the ability to rewind and pause. However, it also could have been added for the digital release — a quiet adjustment that directly contradicts the film’s original presentation in the wake of massive fan backlash.
This isn’t a minor continuity slip. The authenticity of Superman’s heritage is the core of Gunn’s reboot.
If the message is real, Superman’s story is about choosing compassion over tyranny.
If the message is fake, then the stakes are reduced to Lex Luthor running a disinformation campaign.
The bigger concern? If this was indeed added in for the digital release, studios are now altering films between theatrical and digital release without telling audiences. Superman may be the first high-profile case of a modern blockbuster contradicting itself across formats through this Jor-El message.
Conclusion
James Gunn told fans, critics, and interviewers that the Kryptonian Jor-El message in Superman was real. The film’s dialogue backs him up. But the digital version of Superman potentially inserted a line that says the opposite.
Is this a quiet retcon by Warner Bros.? A subtle Easter egg meant for sequels? Or just an editing mistake? Whatever the explanation, the result is the same: Superman now exists in two versions — one that follows Gunn’s vision, and one that undermines it.
And until Warner Bros. addresses it, the controversy isn’t going away.
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