Man of Steel still proves Henry Cavill is the best Superman
The actor has officially hung up his cape, but his potential return was something to get excited about
I hated Man of Steel when it first came out, and I wasnât alone. The movieâs dark tone, combined with the extreme collateral damage in its explosive and CG-heavy action sequences, struck me as excessive and insensitive. All those falling towers represented people dying by the score, and I felt the movie (and its Superman) callously didnât recognize the carnage for what it was.
But in the years since, these decisions have been better contextualized by the full vision of Zack Snyderâs trilogy and other superhero cinema. Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice reframed the calamitous fight between Superman and Zod on the ground level. And since the destruction of Sokovia in Avengers: Age of Ultron, the Marvel Cinematic Universe has mostly dealt in a sanitized, bloodless version of mass violence.
With time and maturation on the movieâs part (and mine), Iâve done a complete 180 on Man of Steel, which now stands among my favorite superhero movies ever made. Snyderâs sweeping two-and-a-half-hour saga is a deeply personal movie about alienation and isolation, and about the failures of our parents even when they have the best of intentions. Itâs about a man trapped between two worlds and being pulled in two directions by the strongest possible forces: the people who love him.
The movies that have followed certainly played their part in Man of Steelâs continued legacy, but one thing has stayed true from the beginning: Henry Cavill was born to play Superman. He has the good looks and the natural charm â two must-haves others have also brought to the iconic character. But unlike Christopher Reeve, Brandon Routh, and many of the other fine actors who have played Superman over the characterâs 80-year history, Cavill plays Kal-El as fundamentally lonely.
The gloominess of Zack Snyderâs DC movies is often discussed, but Cavill excels as Superman because his version of the hero exists in relation to the world around him. In Man of Steel, Superman is a complete outsider, unable to fully connect or relate to people from either of the worlds he has inhabited. And thatâs all captured in every minute of Cavillâs performance.
The first time we see Cavillâs Clark Kent, heâs a rugged man with a full beard and mustache working on a boat. Heâs quiet and inexperienced, and immediately gets called a âdumbassâ by a colleague who thinks heâs saved Clark by pushing him out of the way of a falling hazard. When the boat is called to a distress call at a local oil rig, Clark barely wastes a second, ditching everything to save the rigâs crew. He doesnât say a word for the entire sequence, silently sacrificing the life he had built for himself in order to save a group of strangers. Itâs all instinct, and even if heâs silent, Cavill is able to communicate everything you need to know about what Clark is thinking â heâs almost amused when heâs âsaved,â barely stopping himself from rolling his eyes, and Clarkâs sheer determination when he decides to expose his powers and save the rig workers darts across Cavillâs face in an instant.
In these quiet early moments, Cavillâs Clark comes across as thoughtful and sensitive. He seems to constantly analyze and mull over every situation and interaction, considering how consequential his actions can be and how separated he feels from everyone else. Cavillâs big blue eyes, when not furrowed in confusion or curiosity at the people he shares this planet with, yearn for connection. He sees and hears too much for any one person to handle, and it takes a visible toll on Cavillâs expressions throughout the movie.
The Kryptonians Clark encounters are even more alien to him than the humans; Michael Shannonâs terrifying Zod lays into him for his estrangement from his heritage. And Kal-El isnât quite âhumanâ enough to fit perfectly into our world, either. Itâs an important character trait for someone who literally has a fortress of solitude, but one that often gets lost in favor of showing his easygoing charisma and âman of the peopleâ status. Henry Cavillâs Superman has no such buffer: His is a melancholy world, and itâs important for Man of Steel we see that, both through Cavillâs pensive expressions and Clarkâs relationship to loved ones and strangers alike.
This dichotomy is seen most strongly through his strained relationship with his dads. Man of Steel could also be described as âthere are two dads inside you,â and Cavillâs Clark is the poor superman who has to wrestle with both of them.
Most foundationally you have Jonathan Kent, lost in Man of Steelâs most famous (and criticized) scene. After a bitter argument between a young Clark and Jonathan â Clark said heâs not his real dad, you know the drill â they approach some traffic with a tornado looming in the distance. Clark wants to run in and help the people around them, but Jonathan stops him, urging him to protect his mother. Jonathan runs in himself, and in his final moments, holds up a hand and shakes his head, telling Clark not to save him.
Frustrations with Jonathan Kentâs preventable death by tornado are understandable, but they are missing the point. Man of Steel goes to great pains to show how far Jonathan is willing to go to protect his son, even chastising him for saving his fellow classmates from drowning when their school bus crashes into a river. Itâs entirely consistent for Jonathan to feel the same way about his own demise â he is deathly afraid Clark will become a target (or a religious icon, as the mother of the bully Clark saves calls it an âact of Godâ) if the truth about him is known, and would rather die than reveal that secret.
Itâs not that Jonathan is against doing the right thing â after all, he runs into the danger, shooing Clark away. But he holds a different standard for his son, like many parents do, and it costs him his life. The movie treats this as a truth in Clarkâs life; itâs worth noting that every other instance of Clark using his powers results in a rapid and extreme military response, much like Jonathan feared. But Cavillâs performance also carries the gravity of Jonathan Kentâs worldview. When Jonathan dies, Cavillâs face is a perfect concoction of pain and anger, tears welling up as he mutters inaudibly to himself, his furrowed brow settling into place as his dad disappears for good and he shouts into the void. Itâs a formative moment for the film and this Superman that echoes throughout the rest of the series, and it works because of Cavillâs affecting portrayal of how this shatters his life. In the moment it happens, heâs loud in his grief, but everything after is quietly colored by it, an ever-present drain on his features.
While Jonathanâs death shows the hardships of choosing humanity, Clarkâs relationship with his Kryptonian father, Jor-El (Russell Crowe), has all the weight of choosing your fate. Itâs a sentiment Jor-El mentions in the movieâs stellar sci-fi prologue on Krypton (hopefully a preview of whatâs to come in Snyderâs upcoming Netflix space opera Rebel Moon), telling Zod, âHe will be free. Free to forge his own destiny.â And yet such choices often leave Clark cold in Man of Steel. Learning more about his Kryptonian heritage only makes Clark feel more disconnected from the world around him. The digitized consciousness of Jor-El tells him he is âjust as much a child of Earth now as one of Kryptonâ â surely meant to be comforting, but Cavillâs face reflects that he feels like a child of neither. Jor-El tells him he must guide the people of Earth away from the mistakes Kryptonians made, and to test the limits of his powers to keep getting strong, in direct contradiction to the advice of his other father. Clark once again finds himself stuck in the middle.
Both of Clarkâs dads are stubborn and rigid in their view of who he can be, attempting to impress their own values upon him out of a loving sense of protection. But none of his parental figures could possibly understand what itâs like to be in his position, as a Kryptonian on Earth, a man who grew up a scared child in a Kansas classroom, unable to control his X-ray vision and terrified by an overwhelming sensory experience that separates him from everyone else. His mother is able to comfort him, but thatâs not the same. There is a limit to Clarkâs parentsâ understanding of his situation, even if there is no limit to their love for him.
That loneliness is ultimately what deepens his connection to Amy Adamsâ Lois Lane, the only person who knows him for who he is without the baggage of also being a parental figure. When Clark and Lois meet, they are both exploring the same mystery. His furrowed brow disappears as he explains to her that she has a serious wound he needs to cauterize, and even in a tense situation Cavillâs face is notably more relaxed and warm. You can sense thereâs something kindred about the two. She has the same instinct to go toward danger that Clark has, despite being constantly told by those around her that itâs not good for her.
Itâs with Lois that you can see Clark start to really figure out the man he wants to be, not the one his dads prescribed for him. When heâs around her, Clark is notably more relaxed, as Cavillâs eyes change from concern to convey his own eternal hope â his character may be a stand-in for humanityâs hope, but his own is entirely wrapped up in her. And their relationship culminates in one of the sexiest scenes in superhero cinema, when the two of them make love in a bathtub in a luxurious penthouse apartment in Batman v Superman. Too often, relationships in comic book movies feel loveless and sexless â rote repetitions that exist merely because they are must-haves from the source material. But Cavillâs Clark and Adamsâ Lois are different. They have a bond forged through common values, interests, and shared experiences, and this chemistry jumps off the screen. This Superman fucks.
Itâs important to note, of course, that Man of Steel lets Cavill show the more lighthearted side of Clark, too. The first time Cavill smiles in Man of Steel is during Clarkâs first flight, and itâs delightful to see him actually have some joy in his life. The second time is when he hugs his mother. Cavill relaxes, back at home, in a simpler world where his secret doesnât matter. And itâs a useful reminder: Off the screen, Cavillâs love for the character is well-documented (and adorable; his dog is named Kal, for crying out loud!). You can argue thatâs an extremely secondary consideration, but it only adds to my appreciation, both of his performance and Man of Steelâs balance for him. This tranquility is brief, but itâs important â and informs everything about that bombastic, destructive climax in Metropolis.
After General Zod shows up and interrupts Clarkâs trip to Kansas, the brief spell of calm that has washed over Cavillâs face breaks. He surrenders himself as a prisoner, and his time on the Kryptonian ship is a traumatic one. Clark is rejected as a Kryptonian not only by Zod and his crew, but by the shipâs Kryptonian atmosphere itself, which reduces Cavill to curling up like a confused child in pain. For the first time since he was in that Kansas classroom, his eyes show real fear.
That fear, confusion, and loneliness quickly turn to rage when Zod kidnaps his mother, giving us a side of Clark that we hadnât seen before. Cavill seethes, reveling in the chance to play out lost boyhood fantasies of beating up bullies. Soon after, Zodâs lieutenant chides him, saying, âYou are weak, son of El. Unsure of yourself.â She posits this will lead to his defeat, but it only makes him stronger. Despite the certainty of both of his dads, Cavillâs Clark Kent is bold enough to question things with the strength of his unique perspective, making his own decisions, for better and for worse.
When Clark defeats Zod, it is not a triumphant moment. Many have lost their lives, Kryptonian and human alike, and he only snaps Zodâs neck to save a group of civilians threatened by the generalâs heat vision. Cavill looks on the verge of tears as he makes the fateful decision, severing one of his final links to his home planet before collapsing onto the floor and crying out in pain.
Itâs this vulnerability that makes Cavillâs turn as the man of steel work so well, and itâs one of the many reasons Iâm absolutely thrilled heâs getting another go at it in more Superman movies. When Man of Steel first came out, that vulnerability completely missed me. I was too distracted by the wanton destruction (and, frankly, by the terrible news judgment of Laurence Fishburneâs Perry White) to give the movie, and Cavillâs performance, a fair shake. But with the benefit of hindsight and the evolution of superhero movies in a completely different direction, I am delighted to have a changed relationship to this movie. Against a landscape of quippy sitcom actors in capes, Cavillâs is a thoughtful take on Superman, one that combines a sense of pure alienation with a stubborn drive to hope against all odds. To do this, the movie expertly plays his good looks and movie star charms against his big, sad eyes and constantly furrowed brow, in a dynamic combination that takes this character to soaring new heights.
Weâve had many great versions of Superman over the years, and are due for many more, but Cavillâs tenure was cut off early. Thereâs more he can do, our could have, with this character. If somehow he ever gets another shot, heâll be ready for it. Iâll be ready for it, too.
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