It's interesting that he had the name "Jor-El" right on the tip of his tongue. We nerds may think everybody knows this stuff, but I feel like if you stopped 100 random people on the street, you'd be lucky to find one who knew that name, or could pull it out of their head on demand.Yeah, that kind of sounded like a confirmation without a confirmation to me.
It's interesting that he had the name "Jor-El" right on the tip of his tongue. We nerds may think everybody knows this stuff, but I feel like if you stopped 100 random people on the street, you'd be lucky to find one who knew that name, or could pull it out of their head on demand.
The problem is that Zaslav is probably actually trying to destroy Warner Bros. He's not interested in the creative value of what it produces; he's just a vulture capitalist who bought a company so he could tear it down and make a quick profit selling off its parts.
I don't believe that. From everything I've head about the man I think he wants to be an old-fashioned studio mogul but his current responsibilities due to the debt make that impossible, so he has to be the bad guy. Of course, I don't know how much influence he has on the various profiles written about him...
My only familiarity with the character is WW84, but I liked Gunn a lot as Kraglin in the GotG movies.Sean Gunn as Maxwell Lord? https://deadline.com/2023/12/sean-gunn-dc-universe-maxwell-lord-james-gunn-1235659262/
My only familiarity with the character is WW84, but I liked Gunn a lot as Kraglin in the GotG movies.
Deadline's report suggests the character may not appear in Superman: Legacy. Good news if that's the case, IMO, since that film is threatening to become overstuffed with characters.Oh OK, I forgot about the Supergirl and Smallville versions. I'm definitely curious to see what Gunn's version will be like.
Today, probably. In the '40s and '50s, Superman was a nationwide sensation, so you'd probably find more than a few people who knew who Jor-El was (or Jor-L, as he was originally). Particularly in the '40s, when Superman appeared in comic books, newspaper comic strips, a hit radio series, a prose novel (by the head writer of the radio series), a theatrical cartoon short series, and eventually live-action serials. He was probably as big then as the MCU is now. If not bigger, because the media landscape wasn't as fragmented as it is today and there wasn't as much competition for the audience's attention.
Maxwell Lord was a regular in season 1 of Supergirl, played by Peter Facinelli. He was sort of the Lex Luthor surrogate, though he redeemed himself at the end of the season, then disappeared without explanation when the show moved production to Vancouver in season 2. Other versions appeared in the Justice League Unlimited episode "Ultimatum" (voiced by Tim Matheson) and in two season 9 episodes of Smallville (played by Gil Bellows).
Deadline's report suggests the character may not appear in Superman: Legacy. Good news if that's the case, IMO, since that film is threatening to become overstuffed with characters.
(Though what I should really say is "overstuffed with characters I don't care about," since there are rumors they're casting Supergirl for the film, and I'm all for that.)
But, he wasn't a "bad guy" until the much maligned Idenity Crisis in the mid-oughts. I didn't read a lot of the nineties comics, but my understanding is that prior to Identity Crisis he was the benefactor of the Justice League.
Believe me, I'm trying to be optimistic as well. I personally don't see the "possibility" in turning a Superman movie into a screen version of DC's Who's Who, but I've been wrong about artists' creative choices many times before, and always happily so. I'm delighted to eat my words when something I was skeptical about turns out great, and I'll be tying on a bib in anticipation come July 2025.What Gunn has said is that from the start, he is going to show that their is a cohesive world in which supers exist. WB wants a franchise, and Gunn's responsibilty is to create that world, so it doesn't mean that other heroes are going to take over the story, just that they will be appearing. Personally, I think that his approach has a lot of possibility and I'm being optimistic about it.
Believe me, I'm trying to be optimistic as well. I personally don't see the "possibility" in turning a Superman movie into a screen version of DC's Who's Who, but I've been wrong about artists' creative choices many times before, and always happily so. I'm delighted to eat my words when something I was skeptical about turns out great, and I'll be tying on a bib in anticipation come July 2025.
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