3. What Exactly Is Lois Lane Made Of?
We have already established that Zak Snyder and David S Goyer weren't all that bothered by the idea of logic or the fundamental principles of physics, even by their own definitions, since Superman was unfeasibly able to breathe in space, so it isn't all that surprising that they abandoned their convictions again late in the film to allow Lois Lane to again escape death. When Zod's ship is destroyed by Superman's infant escape craft, which causes a black hole and sucks the ship back to the Phantom Zone, everyone with even a rudimentary knowledge of black holes (and we all have these days, thanks to Professor Brian Cox) would have been resisting the urge to scream at the screen. That's not how black holes work, we'd say - if you created even a "small" one within Earth's atmosphere, we'd all be sucked inside out and join Zod's team of soldiers in the deep, cold recesses of space. Anyway, that's not the real issue here, because once more, Lois Lane manages to ignore the traditional laws of science by somehow becoming heavy enough to defy the impossibly strong pull of the black hole that opens just behind her, and fall to Earth instead of being sucked into it. Apparently, whatever material Lane is made of is subject more to the pull of gravity than it is to the pull of a black hole, like no other mass in the known scientific world. She should be relentlessly experimented on immediately in case the Large Hadron Collider goes the way we all secretly suspect it will...