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Who looks the most like superman from the comics.

Who looks the most like superman from the comics.

  • George Reeves

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Christopher Reeve

    Votes: 15 48.4%
  • Tom welling

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Dean Cain

    Votes: 2 6.5%
  • Brandon Routh

    Votes: 2 6.5%
  • Henry cavill

    Votes: 10 32.3%
  • Tyler Hoechlin

    Votes: 2 6.5%

  • Total voters
    31
Christopher Reeve by far, he was close enough to the comics at the time and then played a big influence on future depictions.

Dean Cain looks a lot like the Clark Kent of the comics but not very close or IMO right as Superman.
 
Dean Cain was as close to perfection as Clark Kent as I've ever seen, he wasn't as convincing as Superman (Pilot aside).
Brandon Routh did a far better job than he is given credit for, I was also a big fan of Welling.
Cavill looks a lot like the New 52 Superman but he's a fair bit away from the classic look of the character,, for that there is only one winner. Christopher Reeve, I doubt anyone will ever come close to him. He was Superman.

I can't give serious consideration to Hoechlin, he's just a young skinny guy with black hair. He looks nothing like Superman or Clark Kent.
 
The poll is invalid because there's no Kirk Alyn, John Haymes Newton and Gerard Christopher option. And before someone says that John Newton and Gerard Christopher played Superboy and not Superman, (a) they were older than a lot of the actors who portrayed Superman and (b) so did Tom Welling and Welling never even once wore the costume!
I realize that John Haymes Newton played Superboy and not Superman. Nevertheless, he did look amazingly like the comic book Superman. I don't know how many people saw that Superboy series. I believe it only ran in syndication.
 
I realize that John Haymes Newton played Superboy and not Superman. Nevertheless, he did look amazingly like the comic book Superman.

That's kinda what I also said. So… you're agreeing with me.

I don't know how many people saw that Superboy series.

Enough apparently. It did run for four seasons after all.

I believe it only ran in syndication.

So did a small TV series called Star Trek: The Next Generation. ;)
 
Brandon Routh was too skinny and too milquetoast. Contacts didn't help.

He's probably one of the more built Superman actors we've had, second to Cavill, I imagine. Dean Cain and Tom Welling closeby, too. But he sure as hell wasn't skinny. He definitely had more mass than Reeve (though not without effort -- Reeve also trained his butt off, it's just that modern workout techniques and protein shakes go farther these days. If Reeve had access to that, he'd probably be closer to Routh in mass).

Seriously, just google Brandon Routh and Dean Cain shirtless pics, and they're very, very close together. And yes, it was a delight for me to look that up, but still. If Cain's not too skinny for the role, Routh definitely wasn't, either.

Superman in the comics has a Mr. Universe build. Super wide linebacker neck and huge chest. None of the live-action actors ever quite got there. They always went for a slimmer look. George Reeves is chunky but not ripped enough.

Well, really, he's only been Mr. Universe fairly lately, in Nu52 and under Ed McGuinness 10 years ago. From the 60s even to just before Flashpoint, he'd be ripped, sure, but he wouldn't be the physically-biggest hero around, and it made enemies like Mongul and Doomsday even more visually impressive. John Byrne, Dan Jurgens, George Perez, and Curt Swan would draw him as strong but lean, like a triathlete; by contrast, Alex Ross and Frank Quitely would draw him as physically large like an older linebacker, but not cut like a bodybuilder. Otherwise, he'd be drawn just as physically imposing as most superheroes, with a decent balance of mass and size rather than pure muscle bulk. He's usually closer to Matthew McConaughey than Arnold Schwarzenegger or The Rock, and not as lean as Brad Pitt (which is more for someone like Nightwing or the Flash).
 
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I feel like that's more of a reaction or anomaly than a consistency, though. Even a simple google search of "Alex Ross Superman" shows a multitude of work over the past twenty years where Supes is beefy nowhere near as defined as that. Usually (not in Man of Tomorrow, of course), if Ross has him that ripped, it's because he had painted over another artist's pencils, like Jim Lee.
 
I feel like that's more of a reaction or anomaly than a consistency, though. Even a simple google search of "Alex Ross Superman" shows a multitude of work over the past twenty years where Supes is beefy nowhere near as defined as that. Usually (not in Man of Tomorrow, of course), if Ross has him that ripped, it's because he had painted over another artist's pencils, like Jim Lee.

Superman: Son of Krypton by Alex Ross (2013)
 
If it's an Alex Ross Superman you're after, this one could be Patrick Warburton or even Dominic Purcell. :techman:

21o7o1v.jpg
 
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