Defy me to find a person who is more excited about the
upcoming Man of Steel movie in June.
However, as a youth minister I am finding it difficult to rally my
pupils around the release of this movie.
In contrast, last summer I spent a week with my teens making a Batman movie in honor of the release of the Dark Knight Rises and it was the most popular idea I have ever had.
I have seen it in the media, I’ve argued with my friends,
and I’ve heard it in the groaning of students when I told them we’re going to
make a Superman movie this summer.
America loves Batman and Superman is too ‘June Cleaver’
Let me tell you why you loved Batman:
Christopher Nolan’s Batman is a masterpiece of connecting
mythology with culture. When the
franchise began in 2004 we were living in a post 9-11 world. We didn’t trust anybody. Not Muslims, not the Bush Administrations,
not even our own opinions and perspectives.
Post modernity was on everyone’s lips.
We began unpacking the metanarratives; that is the story behind the
story. Everything was up for speculation
and evil was everywhere, even within my own soul.
Enter Nolan’s Dark Knight; a story that ultimately discusses
that eliminating the evil in this world must begin within. Bruce Wayne conquers his fears and doubts by
embracing them. And the ends justify the
any means necessary if your heart desires justice and there’s a lunatic
threatening to kill everyone (remember that Sonar machine Wayne had built using
everyone’s cell phone). In a post 9-11
world we needed a hero to teach us how to deal with all the uncontrollable
evils in this world: By being on the side of justice at all costs both in our
actions and in our character.
And then last summer someone killed a bunch of people in a
theatre in Colorado, coincidentally during the release of Nolan’s final chapter
to his Dark Knight trilogy. And I
believe we’ve never been the same since.
It seems in the last year public mass killings is all the news reports
on, just when it gets quiet someone sets off a bomb during the Boston Marathon
or shoots some kids in Connecticut. Our
conversation has dramatically shifted from terrorists in the Middle East to
terrorists next door, and now we find ourselves in what I am calling the
post-post-9-11 era. We’ve shifted from
airport security to gun control, racial profiling to background checks.
It’s not so much about what to do about evil in this world,
it’s about asking an even bigger question: Is humanity doomed? Are we as a society deteriorating? Do I need to carry weapons on my belt to
protect my family and me? Can I trust
anybody? Are people good?
To quote Fred Rogers: ‘Whenever I saw something scary on the
news, my mother would remind to look for the people who are helping. There are always people helping.”
Whether it is underpaid and overly criticized teachers
taking bullets for their pupils or people running into the blast site to help,
we as the human race have beaten the terrorists simply by way of virtue.
And this is the overarching story I believe Zach Snyder will
tell us in his Superman epic. You see,
Superman is a demi-God, his battle isn’t with bullets or being
overpowered. Superman’s battle is with
humanity as a whole. Are we the kind of
people worth saving? Why does Superman
with all of his power choose to serve us rather than rule over us? Why in light of all the evil things we do,
does Superman race into burning buildings, stop rock slides, and save Lois Lane
from a helicopter accident? Because we
as human beings are worth saving! (For more on this click: here)
Superman exists to demonstrate to us the good in humanity, something we all need to be reminded of as our 24-hour news cycles perpetuate a lost and broken narrative about all of us.
Superman exists to demonstrate to us the good in humanity, something we all need to be reminded of as our 24-hour news cycles perpetuate a lost and broken narrative about all of us.
Superman is the hero of post-post 9-11 America.
Shalom.