Of course, Superman won't die, and it's the villain who loses in the end. In the Superman series, the unchanging villain Lex Luthor made the classic Hollywood villain mistake this time: 1. He was too eager to express his own criminal plan, and even explained his own enemies without bothering, for fear that others would find him. It's like a flaw in his own plan. 2. Turning a blind eye to the obvious vacillation and mutinous tendencies of the people around him, it is his woman who makes him fall short in this film - there is also a question of how a guy with such imaginative and ambitious ambitions like Luther would be like that What about women who have no brains and only sympathy? 3. The killing of the protagonist was not complete. Seeing him fall into the bottom of the water, he thought everything was fine. He didn't understand the truth of "living to see people and dying to see corpses." It means that he will not come back to life or return to life from the dead.
In fact, the problem with this film is not only that the villain's performance is too Hollywood-style classic, but the whole film is equally unhappy and law-abiding. All the plots and all the bridges are familiar and will not exceed the audience's expectations. Even the brilliant plot of Superman's emotional setbacks and troubles has not been fully developed. Regarding emotional issues, Superman didn't get depressed even for a second, and there was still only determination, determination... and dullness on that handsome face. All that attracts audiences is the legacy of the Superman series, and this "Superman Returns" doesn't add anything new to the series -- other than giving Superman a son.
View more about Superman Returns reviews