
Superman
2025 · Directed by James Gunn
Woke Score
CriticCritic Score
Audience
Woke-Adjacent
Critics rated this 34 points above its woke score. Among Woke-Adjacent films, this critic score ranks #28 of 151.
Representation Casting
Score: 68/100
The cast features notable diversity including Edi Gathegi, Isabela Merced, María Gabriela de Faría, and Grace Chan in supporting roles. Rachel Brosnahan carries significant screen time as Lois Lane, a professional journalist character.
LGBTQ+ Themes
Score: 0/100
No evidence of explicit LGBTQ+ themes in the available plot description or cast information. The narrative focuses on Clark Kent's dual heritage rather than sexual identity.
Feminist Agenda
Score: 45/100
Rachel Brosnahan's presence as Lois Lane, a career-focused journalist, suggests some attention to female agency, though the degree to which the film actually centers her perspective remains unknown.
Racial Consciousness
Score: 50/100
The plot's emphasis on reconciling Kryptonian heritage with human upbringing touches on themes of cultural identity and belonging, though whether this is explored with explicit racial consciousness or remains metaphorical is unclear.
Climate Crusade
Score: 10/100
No indication of climate-focused themes in the plot description or genre classification. The film's focus on personal and heritage reconciliation does not suggest environmental messaging.
Eat the Rich
Score: 25/100
Clark Kent's employment as a journalist at a major metropolitan newspaper could provide opportunity for critique of power structures, though the traditional Superman narrative has never been fundamentally anti-capitalist.
Body Positivity
Score: 0/100
No evidence of body positivity themes in a superhero action film centered on an idealized physical specimen. The genre conventions work against this marker entirely.
Neurodivergence
Score: 0/100
No indication of neurodivergent representation or themes in the available information. The Superman narrative has not traditionally engaged with this material.
Revisionist History
Score: 30/100
The film's exploration of Superman's dual heritage and identity could potentially reframe the character's mythology, though whether this constitutes genuine revisionist history or standard character development remains to be seen.
Lecture Energy
Score: 40/100
James Gunn's previous work suggests a balance between entertainment and thematic resonance without heavy-handed exposition. The focus on internal reconciliation suggests character introspection rather than overt preachiness.
Synopsis
Superman, a journalist in Metropolis, embarks on a journey to reconcile his Kryptonian heritage with his human upbringing as Clark Kent.
Consciousness Assessment
James Gunn's Superman arrives as a film caught between the inherited gravitas of the source material and the contemporary impulse to interrogate that material's foundational assumptions. The casting reflects the modern sensibility that superhero ensembles should exhibit demographic variety, with Edi Gathegi, Isabela Merced, and others positioned throughout the supporting structure. Yet the film's central narrative, focused on Clark Kent's reconciliation of his dual heritage, tilts more toward a meditation on immigrant identity and belonging than toward explicit cultural polemic. This is Superman as internal conflict, not Superman as sermon.
Gunn's directorial fingerprints suggest a film more interested in character texture and ensemble dynamics than in weaponizing its narrative for ideological purposes. The presence of Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane signals a female character of professional consequence, though whether the film grants her genuine agency or settles for the decorative remains to be seen. The plot's emphasis on reconciling "Kryptonian heritage with human upbringing" gestures toward themes of assimilation and cultural negotiation, material that could be mined for progressive commentary or left as generic superhero angst depending on execution.
The film occupies a liminal space in contemporary blockbuster politics. It is diverse without being preachy, thematically interested in identity without necessarily being polemical about it, and directed by someone with a track record of incorporating social consciousness into ensemble narratives without sacrificing narrative momentum. Whether this constitutes genuine progressive sensibility or merely the surface aesthetics of it will depend entirely on what the film actually says when it finally arrives.
Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm
Critic Reviews
“Boasts a smart screenplay by Robert Benton and David and Leslie Newman, striking cinematography by Geoffrey Unsworth (especially in the Smallville sequence), bright comic turns by Margot Kidder and Gene Hackman, and of course, that winning performance by Christopher Reeve in the title role. Believe a man can fly? You bet!”
“Superman is a pure delight, a wondrous combination of all the old-fashioned things we never really get tired of: adventure and romance, heroes and villains, earthshaking special effects, and -- you know what else? Wit.”
“If not the best superhero movie ever, it's definitely in the top 3. Reeve will forever be Superman to most of us.”
“Superman doesn’t have enough conviction or courage to be solidly square and dumb; it keeps pushing smarmy big emotions at us—but half-heartedly. It has a sour, scared undertone. ”
Consciousness Markers
The cast features notable diversity including Edi Gathegi, Isabela Merced, María Gabriela de Faría, and Grace Chan in supporting roles. Rachel Brosnahan carries significant screen time as Lois Lane, a professional journalist character.
No evidence of explicit LGBTQ+ themes in the available plot description or cast information. The narrative focuses on Clark Kent's dual heritage rather than sexual identity.
Rachel Brosnahan's presence as Lois Lane, a career-focused journalist, suggests some attention to female agency, though the degree to which the film actually centers her perspective remains unknown.
The plot's emphasis on reconciling Kryptonian heritage with human upbringing touches on themes of cultural identity and belonging, though whether this is explored with explicit racial consciousness or remains metaphorical is unclear.
No indication of climate-focused themes in the plot description or genre classification. The film's focus on personal and heritage reconciliation does not suggest environmental messaging.
Clark Kent's employment as a journalist at a major metropolitan newspaper could provide opportunity for critique of power structures, though the traditional Superman narrative has never been fundamentally anti-capitalist.
No evidence of body positivity themes in a superhero action film centered on an idealized physical specimen. The genre conventions work against this marker entirely.
No indication of neurodivergent representation or themes in the available information. The Superman narrative has not traditionally engaged with this material.
The film's exploration of Superman's dual heritage and identity could potentially reframe the character's mythology, though whether this constitutes genuine revisionist history or standard character development remains to be seen.
James Gunn's previous work suggests a balance between entertainment and thematic resonance without heavy-handed exposition. The focus on internal reconciliation suggests character introspection rather than overt preachiness.