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Well. There it is.
We finally get an idea of the plot in broad strokes. For comics-folk and Superman fans, we get the characters and literal from-the-comics stories getting referenced. I'm seeing Action Comics 900 and All-Star Superman #12. Maybe a dash of Dini and Ross's Peace on Earth (a great one-off if you can find it). The take on Lex feels like Waid and Yu's Birthright, or else I'm projecting.
But, and stick with me, this feels like the Superman I look for in the comics and the Superman I occasionally get in TV or film. It only happens when the creators don't get bogged down with being about their own internal mechanisms or veer off to just punch things (although I like that, too, from time to time).
This is a Superman who is out there doing his absolute best in a world that is so (unnecessarily) complicated, doing the right thing is frowned upon when you don't ask for permission to save lives.
Ya'll, from Action Comics #1, Superman was the fantasy of two guys who asked "what if you didn't have to ask to do the right thing? What if no one could stop you when you tried to help? What would that look like? How would we react?"
In his first appearances Superman is seen busting into the governor's mansion to insist on a stay of execution for an innocent man. An issue or three later, he's taking on weapons dealers trying to start wars, forcing them to the front lines - he is not asking anyone if it's okay. Superman was intended to be a bit rogue-ish and outside the law, because it's never been too hard to see we build systems that don't benefit the people who need them to function, and certainly that was the case in the mid-1930's.