CAT, I do respect your opinion. Would you care to elaborate?
Nearly all movies today have a propaganda elements to them. Heavily tilted to the neo-liberal Globalist narrative.
CIA and Hollywood
One of the politically potent moments in the movie was when Luther was hosting his cocktail party and stated america's consciousness died with Kennedy and Lennon (there was a third name, but it came so fast I missed it).
It was refreshing to see a major motion picture evoke the passe notion that there is a higher power that supersedes our existential bodies.
Lex Luthor: We know better now, don't we? Devils don't come from hell beneath us. No, they come from the sky.
Lex Luthor: If man won't kill God, the Devil will do it!
. . .
Lex Luthor: See, what we call God depends upon our tribe, Clark Joe, 'cause God is tribal; God takes sides! No man in the sky intervened when I was a boy to deliver me from daddy's fist and abominations. I figured out way back if God is all-powerful, He cannot be all good. And if He is all good, then He cannot be all-powerful. And neither can you be.
Luthor has mistakenly interpreted Psalm 136 -- Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good.
His love endures forever.
This philosophical argument is far to simplistic for the likes of Luthor (if he was sane). An all-powerful God is so because He stands outside time. Beyond the duality of good vs. evil. Hence, He can not be 'all good' nor can He be 'all bad'. Psalm 136 rightly interpreted means God's Love for His Family is beneficial.
. . .
I presumed it was targeted to the Dark Knight, Frank Miller, Batman fans. Of which I am not a member. The altruistic Superman motif which by itself is dull. When the two are weaved together, the sum is greater than its parts.
The movie is not a Marvel wantabee. Nor should DC ever try to be!
Could you please expand on that thought?