Man of Steel's Monday box office numbers are in and they
were 1.15 times that of Spider-Man's first Monday, a movie
that went on to gross $403M domestic. It raises the prospect
that Man of Steel could defy all expectations and become
the #1 movie of 2013. That tends to generate more buzz
and discussion everywhere, including the question in the
subject line. It's from an article in Variety and here's the
link:
http://variety.com/2013/film/news/does-man-of-steel-exploit-disasters-like-911-1200497860/
And here's an article and two source site links that estimated the
death and destruction in Metropolis:
http://www.buzzfeed.com/jordanzakarin/man-of-steel-destruction-death-analysis
http://satblog.methaz.org/?p=1404/
http://hurricane.methaz.org/tracking/mos_oped.pdf
The latter is presented as an "editorial" from Perry White. :-)
My answer to the question is a big "No," but in some ways
this kind of controversy and publicity may spur even more
people to go see the movie and decide for themselves.
Metropolis is a fictional city in a fictional world, known best
for its association with Superman, a fictional character in an
SF story. There are so many layers upon layers of Definitely
Not Exploiting 9/11 here that it ought to make the No answer
obvious IMO, with one caveat that I think is actually a plus.
It's that science fiction stories have a long tradition of trying
to be relevant by addressing current issues in our society.
Metaphors are routinely present, but often most subject to
individual interpretation. So sure, one can see similarities.
That's just as true for movies made years before 9/11, like
Independence Day. Clearly, ID couldn't have been exploiting
9/11 in 1996 because it hadn't happened yet. In fact, Man
of Steel is to a large extent based on the 1978 and 1980 movie
premise in which Christopher Reeve played Superman, Margot
Kidder played Lois Lane, and General Zod was the villain from
Krypton played by Terence Stamp. About 35 years later, we
now have a reimagining of sorts, condensing the two movies
into one with some very significant other improvements. It's
resulted in not just the best Superman movie ever in the
opinion of many core fans and moviegoers, but also the best
Superhero movie.
"No, that was Avengers," the Marvel fans might say, or "No,
that was The Dark Kight" the Batman fans might say. The
thing is, Superman preceded both Batman (by a few years)
and anything Marvel has by about 25 years. Superman 1978
was the first Superhero movie to get on the box office map
in any significant way, and it went way beyond that into the
Top 10 all-time and borderline Top 5 depending how one
counted it back in the day.
The alien context of Superman was there from the very first
page of the first comic in 1938. The story is unlike Batman,
Spider-Man and most other human or human-turned-mutant
heroes in that respect, and it was so more than 70 years
before 9/11.
Can Superman, the most iconic of heroes and of modern
American mythology, be fairly criticized for updating itself
decades later, or for doing so because johnny-come-lately
whippersnappers have tried to horn in on his impenetrably
iconic status in the interim? :-)
To each his/her own and if they want to do that so be it, but
I think the iconic status of Superman and the Superman story
make Man of Steel an even greater achievement. It received
an A CinemaScore (a survey of opening night moviegoers) in
both the under-18 and over-50 demo. The movie is working
very well for both the oldtime fans and the new ones.
It may be that the Man of Steel sequel, to be released as
soon as 18 months from now in December 2014, will focus
in part on the ramifications of the destruction, First Contact
with aliens and so on. Many expect it will. But in the Silver
Age when Superman's powers soared to virtual god-like levels,
he'd have had all of Metropolis rebuilt in less than a half an
hour. Or gone back in time to undo everything. :-) This 2013
version of the story has him powered-down from those levels,
but by the end of Man of Steel he's already a savior of Earth
and I'm expecting he'd do a lot to help after that.
So if Man of Steel 2 comes back with some "can't trust those
mutant heroes no matter who they are" storylines, where they
make Superman some pariah to all of Metropolis or Earth, I'm
complaining. :-) That'd be moronic based on what we saw. A
concern about what may be next, and Lex Luthor launching
into action to do what he thinks needs to be done, sure. That
could be the makings of an iconic struggle of sorts Part Deux. :-)