"Man of Steel" critics' reviews: Film wallows in sorrow more than soars
Henry Cavill as Superman and Amy Adams as Lois Lane in "Man of Steel." / Warner Bros.
The reviews are in, and while most movie critics agree that the 
newest retelling of the classic Superman story is worth seeing, "Man of 
Steel" is weighed down by pathos and too much kryptonite. 
Featuring Henry Cavill in the red-and-blue tights, and Amy 
Adams as his love interest, this Zack Snyder-directed story by the "Dark
 Knight" trilogy's Christopher Nolan and David S. Goyer (with Goyer 
penning the screenplay), gets bogged down by its own gravity, and lacks 
the fun and light-heartedness of previous movie and TV versions, 
according to the critics. 
Check out what they had to say below.
Peter Travers, Rolling Stone:
 "Caught in the slipstream between action and angst, 'Man of Steel' is a
 bumpy ride for sure. But there's no way to stay blind to its wonders."
Richard Roeper, Chicago Sun-Times:
 "There's very little humor or joy in this Superman story, and not 
enough character development for us really to care once the big-budget 
pyrotechnics are under way."
Ann Hornaday, Washington Post:
 "For now, audiences can only speculate as to the hidden depths of 
Cavill, who in Zack Snyder's busy, bombastic creation myth is reduced to
 little more than a joyless cipher or dazzling physical specimen."
Lisa Kennedy, Denver Post:
 "The chief problem here is one of rhythm and balance in the 
storytelling and directing. The movie swings between destructive 
overstatement and flat-footed homilies."
David Edelstein, New York magazine:
 ["Man of Steel" offers] "lots of noise and clutter -- but never the 
simple charm of the original comic by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster or 
the faintly self-abashed handsomeness of Christopher Reeve. The movie 
isn't dead on arrival, like Snyder's over-reverent 'Watchmen.' But it's 
pleasure-free."
Dana Stevens, Slate: "Snyder provides an elegantly illuminated retelling of the origin story of that most saintly of superheroes, Superman."
Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian: 
 "This is a great, big, meaty, chewy superhero adventure, which broadly 
does what it sets out to do, though at excessive length. What I missed 
were the gentle, innocent pleasures of Superman's day-to-day 
crimefighting existence.... Due to the cataclysmic battle in this film, 
much of the Man of Steel's mystery and novelty have been used up. 
Subsequent adventures may lose altitude."
Justin Craig, FoxNews.com:
 "Zack Snyder, Christopher Nolan and David S. Goyer have managed to 
become Superman's very own Kryptonite, stripping the iconic character of
 his greatest assets: wit, charm, and most importantly, hope; rendering 
"Man of Steel" this blockbuster season's biggest disappointment."
Chris Nashawaty, Entertainment Weekly:
 "'Dark Knight'-style makeover never quite comes together. Sure, 
Superman is still faster than a speeding bullet and more powerful than a
 locomotive. ... But he's been transformed into the latest in a long 
line of soul-searching super-brooders, trapped between his devastated 
birth planet of Krypton and his adopted new home on Earth. He's just 
another haunted outsider grappling with issues."
Ty Burr: The Boston Globe:
 "Snyder knows how to put on a show, and 'Man of Steel' has a massive 
scope that's hard to resist. ... But what's missing from this Superman 
saga is a sense of lightness, of pop joy."
Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times: "Given
 the 'Dark Knight' trilogy's Nolan and Goyer's involvement, it's no 
surprise that 'Man of Steel' is conceptualized in the Batman mold, a 
dark end of the street extravaganza where, theoretically at least, epic 
vision would be joined with dramatic heft. It hasn't worked out quite 
that way.
Stephanie Zacharek, the Village Voice:
 "'Man of Steel' is a movie event with an actual movie inside, crying to
 get out. Despite its preposterous self-seriousness, its overblown, 
CGI'ed-to-death climax, and its desperate efforts to depict the 
destruction of, well, everything on Earth, there's greatness in this 
retelling of the origin of Superman, moments of intimate grandeur, some 
marvelous, subtle acting, and a superhero costume that's a feat of mad 
mod genius."
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Via:CBSnews

