This sounds somewhat more fun than it actually is. The screenplay by Chris Terrio and David S. Goyer has almost no wit, just a heavy darkness that sucks the zing out of many of even the best scenes. Meanwhile, director Zack Snyder – who helmed "Man of Steel" and made it an oppressive bore – manages to do a much better job here, but still chooses such a nonstop sense of gloom and shadow, and makes the superhero showdowns so violent that parents should really think twice about letting their kids under 10 see this.
There is no foul language in the form F words, and just one S word in this movie, although there are about five blasphemous uses of Christ's and God's names. On the positive side, prayer is used by characters at several key moments, and one man kisses his Cross while praying for mercy on his soul as he's about to die in the Metropolis disaster.
But the violence is intense, though not bloody, and the final showdown with an incredible villain is certain to terrify young children.
It's also implied that Bruce Wayne wakes up with a one-night stand female companion sleeping in his bed, though no sex is shown. Clark Kent and Lois Lane are shown living together outside of marriage, and she's seen in a bathtub (no real nudity) both before and during a moment when a fully dressed Clark gets in, with the cut-away scene implying they are about to have offscreen sex in the tub.
One final thing to point out is that Snyder really uses our collective fears and anguish over 9/11 to draw emotion over the destruction of Metropolis in both "Man of Steel" and this film. In "Steel, " watching the city's towers fall and its citizens run from giant, fast-moving smoke clouds seemed distasteful and exploitative because the Superman-Zod showdown was ugly and overdone itself.
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Here, however, he and the writers have created such a broader universe for the story and raise impressively deep questions about the nature of good and evil, what makes a hero or a vigilante acceptable rather than simply dangerous, and the timeless quandary about the tension between God and man that the 9/11 subtext works. "Batman vs. Superman" may forget to have much fun, but it might actually make viewers think about some important issues.