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Poll Superman 2006-2018

Which Superman live-action film released between 2006 & 2018 is the best?


  • Total voters
    55
I voted Batman v. Superman. BVS has it's problems, but it still gave me a live-action "Death of Superman" story as well as the Trinity. I would rank "Justice League" second, "Man of Steel" third, "The Donner Cut" fourth (though I think the Donner Cut is overrated and I wish that WB would release both the Lester and Donner cuts of the film these days, and "Superman Returns" last. I didn't feel "Returns" was super enough, even though the ingredients were there.
 
^ Superman Returns exists in the same universe as the Reeve films.
True. Superman The Movie(1978)[Reeve], Superman II(1980)[Reeve] and Superman Returns(2006)[Routh] are considered a trilogy ignoring the events of Reeve's Superman III and Superman IV:Quest For Peace.
 
I voted for Donner Cut simply by de facto association.

None of them are terrible - or at least not as terrible as the interwebz leads on - but none are exactly good either.
 
Superman Returns is underrated and unfairly maligned (particularly the nonsensical "deadbeat dad" criticism -- he didn't know Lois was pregnant when he left, people).

He shouldn't have abruptly left on a long voyage at all and he really shouldn't have if he was so close/involved with her.
 
He shouldn't have abruptly left on a long voyage at all and he really shouldn't have if he was so close/involved with her.

That's not always how adult relationships work. Especially if you are trying to figure out who you are, what you are, and the mystery of your past. He felt he needed to, makes sense to me. I think the movie could've handled it better, but, Superman leaving to find out about his homeworld, that makes a lot of sense. He's a man of two worlds.

He "shouldn't have left" is only one side of the story. It makes for interesting conflict, if you ask me.
 
He shouldn't have abruptly left on a long voyage at all and he really shouldn't have if he was so close/involved with her.

If we go strictly by what happened in S2, then he erased her memory of the whole thing, so they didn't have anything special going on at all anymore.

Either that, or he reversed time and the relationship never even happened in the first place, a la the rough/conjectural Donner Cut. But in the latter case, there's no way Lois could have been pregnant, so SR is nonsensical as an in-continuity sequel to the Donner Cut, despite Warner basically pushing the Donner Cut as the new "official" version of the movie by making the Lester cut unavailable as a standalone blu-ray in the North American market, and including the Donner Cut in a "Triple Feature" blu-ray set along with Superman: The Movie and Superman Returns, implying that the three movies are supposed to form a cohesive trilogy. And you also end up with Superman zooming around the Earth to reverse time two movies in a row, as this was originally intended to happen only in the second movie and not the first one.

To me, none of the Superman movies have been quite right, but Richard Donner's work comes closest.

Besides being rather underwhelming, Superman Returns tried to heavily rely on nostalgia, while at the same time only fitting the actual narrative continuity of S1 and S2 in the vaguest and foggiest of disjointed broad strokes.

The DCEU (or whatever they're calling it these days) movies so far featuring Superman are ponderous, dour and joyless; a real chore to sit through. These movies' tone takes on a self-important air of trying to say something big and meaningful, but they really don't. :rolleyes:

Kor
 
The DCEU (or whatever they're calling it these days) movies so far featuring Superman are ponderous, dour and joyless; a real chore to sit through. These movies' tone takes on a self-important air of trying to say something big and meaningful, but they really don't. :rolleyes:
It's the province of adolescence (and the adolescent-minded) to believe that only darkness and misery can be truthful or meaningful. A properly optimistic and inspiring Superman speaks to the spirit in a way all the "realism" in the world could never match.
 
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I never really liiked "Superman Returns" because I felt like (because in sections it WAS); I was watching a shot for shot remake of "Superman" (1978) - and where the plot diverged, "Superman Returns" was just sub par (especially the ending).

If I want to see "Superman" (1978) I'll just watch that (and be more entertained).

My choice (of the options on this poll) was "Man of Steel" (2013). It has its flaws, but in general I liked the overall casting, and the performances said cast turned in for the film.
 
(MARTHA!)
WHY DID YOU SAY THAT NAME?!!
It captured the right magic of Superman at times. Routh was the best cast Superman of this era, and nailed the Clark/Reporter Clark/Superman identity right.
Yeah, they wasted him. Brandon Routh is doing a good job as Ray Palmer. He's a natural actor to play a superhero.
Really, they should've made [Batman V. Superman] about a 20 minute movie.
People have already cut Star Trek: The Motion Picture down to a few minutes, so it's only a matter of time.
 
I had problems with Superman Returns, but overall the movie DID get Superman. The plot may have been bad, but the writing for the character was spot on.

Man of Steel may have had great special effects and a fine actor as Superman, but it just wasn't Superman.
 
I would have voted for "Man of Steel". But I love "Batman v. Superman" so much and how Superman's personal arc had such a big impact in it, I voted for the 2016 movie.
 
Here's the penultimate "original cut" of ST:TMP:
[Video of "The Changeling"]
;)
Darn it, I made this joke in another thread a several months back. You're using my own jokes against me! ;)

By the way, did anyone notice that Man of Steel TOTALLY ripped off BOTH scenes of Krypton's destruction from the DC Animated Universe? It's like Snyder just said to the visual effects guys "Make it look like the cartoon."
 
A properly optimistic and inspiring Superman speaks to the spirit in a way all the "realism" in the world could never match.

I will never understand this obsession with this desire for Superman to be portrayed as some 24/7 "optimistic and inspiring" hero. Talk about boring. For me, this turns Clark Kent aka Superman into a one-dimensional character with no development. Why are people so afraid of Superman having many facets to his personality?


By the way, did anyone notice that Man of Steel TOTALLY ripped off BOTH scenes of Krypton's destruction from the DC Animated Universe? It's like Snyder just said to the visual effects guys "Make it look like the cartoon."

Yeah, and it looked great to me.
 
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