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NEWSWEEK and VARIETY love Superman

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ManaByte

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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13389957/site/newsweek

Movies: The Big Guy's Back. We Missed Him.


June 26, 2006 issue - There was headscratching and second-guessing when director Bryan Singer announced he was abandoning his wildly popular "X-Men" franchise to make "Superman Returns." Would the Man of Steel fly for a new generation of moviegoers? Could Singer resurrect the series Richard Donner and Christopher Reeve revitalized in 1978, which sputtered out in 1987, three sequels later?

Singer did the right thing. From the start of this gorgeously crafted epic, you can feel that Singer has real love and respect for the most foursquare comics superhero of them all, as well as a reverence for the Donner version, which serves as his visual and emotional template. In "Superman Returns" (written by Michael Dougherty and Dan Harris from a story they cooked up with Singer), the caped crusader for truth, justice, etc. (Brandon Routh) returns to crime-ridden Earth after a five-year detour amid the remains of his home planet. Back in Metropolis—where, as Clark Kent, he gets his old Daily Planet job back—he learns that Lois Lane (Kate Bosworth) has a nice, good-looking live-in boyfriend (James Marsden) and a son, and, to add insult to heartbreak, has won a Pulitzer Prize for her article "Why the World Doesn't Need Superman." Also back from a stint behind bars is master criminal Lex Luthor (Kevin Spacey) with heinous plans to create a new continent (don't ask) at the expense of several million lives.

Singer aroused a feeling that I, as a victim of Chronic Summer Superhero Fatigue Syndrome, wasn't expecting: I felt happy to have Superman back, as if I'd actually missed the guy. You know that you are in the presence of kitsch of a very high order when a comic-book romance can actually produce a lump in your throat. Newcomer Routh may or may not be a real actor, but he effortlessly lays claim to the iconic role, just as Reeve did. Indeed, he virtually duplicates Reeve in the way he plays Kent as a diffident, awkward Midwestern colt. Singer cleverly doles out his hero in small portions, so that we're left, like all those awestruck admirers in Metropolis, wanting more glimpses of him than we get.

The movie follows form by making Lex Luthor a comic menace. Spacey, who can do ironic megalomania in his sleep, has a decidedly lighter touch than Gene Hackman. Both he, and Parker Posey as his moll, are great fun to watch. But Luthor's evil schemes are the most nonsensical and forgettable aspects of the movie. Singer's real forte is lyricism. This "Superman," which infuses its action with poetry, soars as a love story filled with epic yearnings, thwarted desires and breathtaking imagery: Lois, spied on with her lover's X-ray vision, ascending in a skyscraper's elevator; Superman, zapped with kryptonite, descending silently and helplessly through space. (If Jean Cocteau had directed $200 million action movies, they might have looked a little like this.) Next to Singer's champagne, most recent superhero adventure movies are barely sparkling cider.

—David Ansen

http://www.variety.com/VE1117930841.html

"Why the World Doesn't Need Superman" reads the title of a piece that wins Lois Lane the Pulitzer Prize in "Superman Returns," the latest bigscreen revival of comicdom's strongest and fastest hero. Not only is she wrong in the context of the story (not to mention real life), but she'll be wrong in the court of public opinion once the world gets a look at this most grandly conceived and sensitively drawn Superman saga. Sure to rate with aficionados alongside "Spider-Man 2" and, for many, "Batman Begins" on the short list of best superhero spectaculars, pic more than justifies director Bryan Singer's decision to jump ship from the "X-Men" franchise, and will pull down stratospheric B.O. around the globe.

What is it about the current climate that has produced three major releases within a month's time that hinge on the hitherto unsuspected offspring of legendarily childless figures -- Jesus in "The Da Vinci Code," Satan in "The Omen" and the title character here? It's an odd development, although it does provide a promising springboard for future series entries, something not enjoyed by the three increasingly dispiriting sequels to Richard Donner's entertaining Christopher Reeve starrer.

New version tips its hat to the 1978 picture in numerous ways; it's dedicated to Reeve and wife Dana; it recycles John Williams' main musical theme; Marlon Brando once again appears, albeit mostly vocally, as Superman's father; and newcomer Brandon Routh bears a conspicuous resemblance to Reeve.

Nonetheless, Singer imprints his handiwork with its own personality. Despite its acute awareness of what's come before, "Superman Returns" is never self-consciously hip, ironic, post-modern or camp. To the contrary, it's quite sincere, with an artistic elegance and a genuine emotional investment in the material that creates renewed engagement in these long-familiar characters and a well-earned payoff after 2½ hours spent with them.

After an opening credits sequence devoted to an explosive illustration of the tremendous energy forces in deepest outer space, screenplay by Michael Dougherty and Dan Harris ("X2: X-Men United""X2: X-Men United") returns Superman, briefly, to the farm where he was raised (memory flashbacks neatly recall his learning to fly) after a five-year absence. Soon turning up in Clark Kent guise at the Daily Planet to reclaim his old job, he's nonplussed when he learns his beloved Lois Lane (Kate Bosworth) has a son, Jason (Tristan Lake Leabu) and a good-looking significant other, Richard White (James Marsden), the editor's nephew, and has made her name as banner-carrier for the anti-Superman lobby.

But the Man of Steel nonetheless proves he's worth having around. Old nemesis Lex Luthor (a shaven-headed Kevin Spacey) is up to no good again, harnessing power from a perfect crystal and announcing his return by causing power outages and creating mayhem on an intended airborne space shuttle launch (yes, that's Richard Branson on the shuttle crew) that sends the plane carrying the shuttle and reporters, including Lois, out of control. Arriving a half-hour in, sequence is a doozy, as the burning jet eventually plummets straight for the ground (unavoidable shades of "United 93") until being gently stopped at the last second by the Caped One.

As far as the public is concerned, Superman has made a triumphant return. But Lois remains unimpressed, to the point that a rebuffed Superman takes a lonely flight to Lois' waterfront home (with its gorgeous view of Metropolis) in order to use his X-ray abilities to eavesdrop on her seemingly enviable family life.

Sequence, and all that comes after, renders rubbish all the uninformed pre-release media stories about a gay Superman, as what Singer and his writers are offering here is an elaboration on the theme of Superman (or most any superhero) as an outsider. Brando's Jor-El is heard to tell his son (in dialogue from the Donner version) that he'll always be "different," an "outcast" who can pass as a human being but will never truly be one.

For quite some time, Lois maintains her resistance to Superman, while he can't help but do what he does best -- save the day for those in dire jeopardy (in a truly internationalist, although markedly nonpolitical, spirit, as TV news reports testify). Pushed by editor Perry White (Frank Langella) to get an interview with her old flame, Lois finally meets him on the roof of the Daily Planet's splendidly retroretro office building, whereupon Superman takes her on a nocturnal flight that beats Howard Hughes' airborne date with Katharine Hepburn in "The Aviator" any day.

By this point, it is clear Singer's take on the impossible love between the two has nothing to do with the old joke that Lois doesn't see the resemblance between Superman and Clark Kent (something picked up on quickly by her son) or the problems of finding a place to change into tights and cape, but perhaps quite a bit to do with themes of loss and the tragedy of fate as classically expressed in opera or ballet. There are dramatic passages where, in another context, one could easily imagine any of the three leading characters breaking out into arias of regret, confession, desire or intent, just as Superman's incredibly graceful and often slow vertical ascents and landings, as well as his moments of reflective isolation, create the frissons of expressive dance movements.

Topping off these aspects is the evocative, darkly lyrical score by John Ottman, continuing in his unique dual role for Singer as composer and editor (with Elliot Graham). The sometimes ethereal qualities of Ottman's work, amplified by significant choral strains, provide an emotional dimension -- and show up Williams' "Star Wars" thematic variation for the bombast it is.

Luthor's dastardly plans involve kidnapping Lois and her son aboard his sleek boat, giving Spacey a big scene in which he can really rock and roll with some very choice line readings. The villain really does seem to have Superman on the ropes at one point, but after a somewhat distended final stretch, the real climax comes in a touching scene between Superman and little Jason, who may or may not be super himself.

Regular Singer cinematographer Newton Thomas Sigel has contributed significantly to giving the film a fantastically clear, clean and stable look; "Superman Returns" is an unalloyed pleasure simply to behold. Production designer Guy Hendrix Dyas and costume designer Louise Mingenbach have anchored their work in the '50s -- an old-fashioned newsroom with modern accoutrements, coats and ties for the men, sharp professional wear for Lois and other women -- but without any cloying self-consciousness. Visual effects are super throughout.

One can praise newcomer Routh very highly indeed simply by saying that he carries this giant film with apparent effortlessness. Thesp possesses a winning, appealing personality that nicely complements his rangy, black-haired, blue-eyed good looks. Parker Posey has a bit of a field day playing Lex Luthor's sassy floozy.

The only semi-disappointment in the cast is Bosworth. First off, she seems too young to have been working for the newspaper for more than five years and to plausibly have had her kid for the same length of time. More significantly, she comes off as flinty and cold for too long, denying Lois a beating heart beneath the brusquely professional m.o. You never get a strong sense of the woman inside the newshound with an unrivaled inside connection to the most famous man in the world.
 
In before inane piano comments.

Seriously, there are few bad impressions. This one is looking like it may hit it out of the park.

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Kabuki Waq said:
just so everyone knows these two place gave Starwars ep 3 a 90 and 80 respectively :lol

Ansen On Ep. 2: "David Ansen in Newsweek begins his reviewing recognizing that it will be greeted with scorn by the Star Wars faithful. "Let the hate mail commence," he remarks in his open paragraph, then dismisses the movie in just four more paragraphs. "The enterprise is showing its age," he writes. "The movie feels long, and ... the storytelling feels stiff in the joints."

Ansen On Ep. 3: "Before the movie gets good—and it does, in the final 45 minutes, achieve a genuine dark power—we also have to put up with the usual Lucas liabilities: graceless dialogue, wooden acting, overcluttered compositions and undercooked characters, and an utter inability to stage a convincing love scene."

What was that again, Kabuki? It's the reviewer not the magazine/website.

Look at the overwhelmingly positive early word.
 

Matrix

LeBron loves his girlfriend. There is no other woman in the world he’d rather have. The problem is, Dwyane’s not a woman.
DEAN CAIN SAYS " F*ck you Routh for being in a great movie and being a great Superman!"

LONG LIVE CAIN!
 

DMczaf

Member
Matrix said:
DEAN CAIN SAYS " F*ck you Routh for being in a great movie and being a great Superman!"

LONG LIVE CAIN!

Damn straight

I found the first photo of Superman Returns sequel!

45.jpg


ITS THE WHOLE FAMILY!
 
krypt0nian said:
Ansen On Ep. 2: "David Ansen in Newsweek begins his reviewing recognizing that it will be greeted with scorn by the Star Wars faithful. "Let the hate mail commence," he remarks in his open paragraph, then dismisses the movie in just four more paragraphs. "The enterprise is showing its age," he writes. "The movie feels long, and ... the storytelling feels stiff in the joints."

Ansen On Ep. 3: "Before the movie gets good—and it does, in the final 45 minutes, achieve a genuine dark power—we also have to put up with the usual Lucas liabilities: graceless dialogue, wooden acting, overcluttered compositions and undercooked characters, and an utter inability to stage a convincing love scene."

What was that again, Kabuki? It's the reviewer not the magazine/website.

Look at the overwhelmingly positive early word.



Newsweek gave ep3 80/100 according to meta critic so i suggest you post the whole review.

Variety gave ep2 and ep 3 both 90/100 THERE IS NO DEFENDING THIS. Same reviewer too.
 

White Man

Member
I'm still not setting expectations until I hear some feedback from real people. Bryan Singer's output has been consistently good, but not great, and with all the backstory, drama, starts and restarts associated with the history of this movie, I think it would be hard for anyone, let alone Singer, to hit a dinger with this movie.

Then again, it is Superman, and word has been really good so far.
 
Truly the movie will be just as great as the Starwars Prequels it even has the same ppl like manabyte Hyping it :p


DejaVu all over again.
 

Matrix

LeBron loves his girlfriend. There is no other woman in the world he’d rather have. The problem is, Dwyane’s not a woman.
DMczaf said:
Damn straight

I found the first photo of Superman Returns sequel!

45.jpg


ITS THE WHOLE FAMILY!

Look at that complete package,I worship this man of steel.
 

DMczaf

Member
Kabuki Waq said:
Truly the movie will be just as great as the Starwars Prequels it even has the same ppl like manabyte Hyping it :p


DejaVu all over again.

Manabyte is not on the official Superman GAF Hype Team! He is promoting Pirates 2!
 

Matrix

LeBron loves his girlfriend. There is no other woman in the world he’d rather have. The problem is, Dwyane’s not a woman.
Kabuki Waq said:
Truly the movie will be just as great as the Starwars Prequels it even has the same ppl like manabyte Hyping it :p


DejaVu all over again.


Lucas didnt flim Superman Returns.....

Superman wins even with Mana on its side.
 
Matrix said:
Lucas didnt flim Superman Returns.....

Superman wins even with Mana on its side.


Just like you pointed out how the reviewer who said SUperman was crap actually liked MAtrix Reloaded (which is a valid hit to the reviewer's credibility i agree)


These reviewers actually enjoyed Ep 2 and ep3 with totally obliterates their Credibility.


also You have mana on your side :(
 

Raiden

Banned
DMczaf said:
Damn straight

I found the first photo of Superman Returns sequel!

45.jpg


ITS THE WHOLE FAMILY!

I liked him alot..Dean Cain...right?

Anyway, id have him in Superman Returns over Routh.
 

Matrix

LeBron loves his girlfriend. There is no other woman in the world he’d rather have. The problem is, Dwyane’s not a woman.
Kabuki Waq said:
Just like you pointed out how the reviewer who said SUperman was crap actually liked MAtrix Reloaded (which is a valid hit to the reviewer's credibility i agree)


These reviewers actually enjoyed Ep 2 and ep3 with totally obliterates their Credibility.


also You have mana on your side :(


These reviewers were clearly on drugs while reviewing the prequels,they got that shit out of their systems just in time for Superman :p
 

Matt_C

Member
This Singer movie might be cool but what are the chances if the Smallville team breaks out and does a feature film instead?

Welling wearing the tights versus Rosenbaum FTW

Seriously, I do not get on why the Smallville cast still wants to do TV instead of breakng out into a movie series. Do they think the show would last longer than 7 seasons or something?

I still want to see Returns since I like Singer's film style and starting to like Superman again since the whole Infinate Crisis/52/One Year Later bit.
 

DarienA

The black man everyone at Activision can agree on
I'm still mad at Singer for abandoning Xmen III... that damn stinker....
 

Matrix

LeBron loves his girlfriend. There is no other woman in the world he’d rather have. The problem is, Dwyane’s not a woman.
I dont feel any deja vu reading these reviews,id rather them be positive than negative.I only brought up the matrix reloaded review because the guy said go see little man over Superman,something aint right there :|

The thing I was always worried about was Routh,sadly he aint no Cain,but itseems he nailed it and like I said if he didnt,this movie wouldnt get one positive review.

Its called Superman for a reason,you have a shit Supes,you have a shit movie.
 
Matrix said:
I dont feel any deja vu reading these reviews,id rather them be positive than negative.I only brought up the matrix reloaded review because the guy said go see little man over Superman,something aint right there :|

The thing I was always worried about was Routh,sadly he aint no Cain,but itseems he nailed it and like I said if he didnt,this movie wouldnt get one positive review.

Its called Superman for a reason,you have a shit Supes,you have a shit movie.


I hope the movie is good too. I use to rewatch the old movies when i was young. But this movie is givin me that "shit its prolly gonna suck" feeling.


Also you should never take the Manabyte Curse Lightly. Its pretty amazing tho that everyone who liked the starwars prequels seems to love this movie.
 

Matrix

LeBron loves his girlfriend. There is no other woman in the world he’d rather have. The problem is, Dwyane’s not a woman.
sj.jpg


"Dont worry my son,just cause they loved the Star Wars prequels doesnt mean your movie is shit"
 

ManaByte

Member
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr/reviews/review_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002689933

The Superman who returns in "Superman Returns" is a different Man of Steel than we are used to seeing. In "Superman: The Movie," the film by director Richard Donner in 1978, the late Christopher Reeve rescued the iconic superhero from high camp with the sincerity and warmth of his acting. His Superman was a romantic charmer. Director Bryan Singer positions this new film as a sequel to Donner's film, and his Superman -- played with winning fortitude by newcomer Brandon Routh -- is less a Man of Steel than a Man of Heart.

While Routh is the same age as Reeve when he played the role, Routh's Superman is older in spirit. His Superman has known heartbreak and loss. He thinks about his late father and must consider the possibility that he might have a son. He even faces his own mortality. In other words, Singer wants to put human emotions into his alien superhero, and for the most part, he succeeds.

Not that the other kind of Superman movie turns up missing. The hero's rescues are spectacular thanks to the marvels of digital effects. And its villain, Lex Luthor, and Luthor's female companion, Kitty Kowalski -- deliciously played by Kevin Spacey and Parker Posey -- spice the film with extravagant comedy. So old fans can rejoice even as this "Superman" wins new fans from among those who normally don't care about superheroes.

Singer and writers Michael Dougherty and Dan Harris imagine that the superhero has vanished for five years. During that time, he has searched the far reaches of space for his home planet of Krypton and has determined that, yes, it is a destroyed planet. Now, returning to Earth, he discovers that absence has not made the heart grow fonder.

His mom (Eva Marie Saint) is overjoyed to see him, of course. But Lois Lane (Kate Bosworth) has won a Pulitzer by penning a story, "Why the World Doesn't Need Superman," and the world has more or less forgotten its savior.

Superman in his Clark Kent guise gets his old job back at the Daily Planet from editor Perry White (Frank Langella). Day 1 on the job, Lois is in deadly peril when a space shuttle launched from the back of a jet fails to disengage and rockets into space with the jet still attached and Lois onboard. Fighting through fire and molten debris, Superman brings the disintegrating plane in for a soft landing in a crowded baseball stadium before he and Lois can lock eyes for the first time in five years. Well, he certainly knows how to get the girl's attention.

But Superman can't overcome the obstacles he faces in the new realities in Lois' life: Not only is she still angry at him for disappearing without a word, but she has a son, Jason (Tristan Leabu), and a fiance, Richard White (James Marsden), the editor's nephew.

Meanwhile, Lex, newly sprung from prison, plots to use Superman's own "crystal technology," married to Superman's Achilles' heel, kryptonite, in an ingenious scheme to ignite a new land mass in the Atlantic that will swamp North America while creating a gigantic real estate venture for him. These evil machinations barely leave Superman and Lois much time to reflect on their relationship. But clearly, Superman must wonder who Jason's father is even as he adjusts to a role reversal that sees Lois and her fiance coming to his rescue! Times have indeed changed.

To underscore the link to Donner's film, designer Guy Hendrix Dyas borrows here and there from John Barry's original design elements, composer John Williams' "Superman" theme is woven through the film, and Singer incorporates footage of Marlon Brando as Jor-El, Superman's long-dead father, into the early segments. However, this Superman does represent a new generation of flying. Superman doesn't so much fly as float. He can levitate a few feet or thousands of feet in the air. He's a Michael Jordan who never comes down. His nighttime excursion with Lois in the skies above Metropolis is reminiscent of the romantic moonlit ride Reeve gave Margot Kidder, his Lois, a ride that thrilled female viewers a generation ago.

This high-wire act would have gone for naught if Routh had not so capably filled the Man of Steel's costume. Like Reeve, he is just right physically, looking at times like the old comic book drawings of Superman. There is honesty in his acting where the emotions that play across Superman/Clark Kent's face and body come from deep within. Bosworth's Lois is a torn woman, highly ambivalent over the return of a man she has tried to hard to forget. And young Leabu does a nice job in conveying the innocence and curiosity of a boy with a new hero/authority figure in his life.


The oh-wow technical wizardry behind "Superman Returns" accomplishes two things: It makes you appreciate the huge advances in visual effects since 1978 but also appreciate the considerable accomplishments of Donner's team back in the day.
 
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