Hollywood liberals are at it again, pushing their political agenda into our entertainment. James Gunn’s new Superman movie has become a battleground for woke ideology. He called Superman an “immigrant” and preached about “basic human kindness” we’ve supposedly lost. This kind of political messaging doesn’t belong in our superhero films. Americans want escapism, not lectures.
Dean Cain, the real Superman from the 90s, slammed Gunn’s comments. He was excited about the movie until the director started spouting liberal talking points. Cain knows this political nonsense will hurt the film at the box office. True fans don’t want their heroes weaponized for progressive politics. It’s a betrayal of what Superman stands for.
Conservative voices like Kellyanne Conway and Jesse Watters are calling out this madness. Conway said we don’t go to movies to be preached at. Watters joked about MS-13 being written on Superman’s cape. They’re right – this immigrant narrative feels forced and divisive. Hollywood elites keep pushing their agenda down our throats while ignoring what audiences actually want.
The numbers don’t lie – this movie is heading for disaster. Early buzz suggests it will bomb harder than a Kryptonite meteor. When directors prioritize politics over storytelling, audiences stay home. Remember the Marvel flops? This Superman film is following the same woke playbook that turns off real Americans. Our entertainment is being hijacked by activist filmmakers.
Gunn didn’t need to make these comments. Everyone knows Superman’s an alien immigrant – that’s not the issue. The problem is using that fact to push open-border propaganda. They’re twisting a classic American icon to fit their radical immigration views. It’s disrespectful to the character’s legacy and the fans who love him.
Hollywood just doesn’t learn. People watch superhero movies for fun adventures, not political sermons. The country’s divided enough without activists turning blockbusters into propaganda tools. Superman should represent truth and justice, not become a pawn in the left’s culture wars. Keep the messaging out of our entertainment.
There’s still hope the movie might deliver solid action despite the politics. But the damage is done – many fans feel betrayed. When filmmakers value virtue signaling over storytelling, everyone loses. Maybe someday Hollywood will remember that movies should unite us, not divide us.
The lesson is clear: Americans reject woke politics in their entertainment. We’ll vote with our wallets and skip lectures disguised as superhero films. Keep Superman flying high, not preaching low.

