Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel revealed

Discussion in 'Science Fiction & Fantasy' started by JacksonArcher, Dec 10, 2010.

  1. JacksonArcher

    JacksonArcher Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    I agree completely. However, he's going to make a considerably more mainstream film, with big, grandiose action sequences that will most likely visually excite regular audiences, so I see Snyder's film being embraced by erudite Superman and comic-book fans and regular audiences more openly.

    History is probably repeating itself, in a less obvious way, and in different circumstances. Ang Lee made the very cerebral and thoughtful Hulk, which was deemed too intelligent by either audiences or studio executives (or both), and what came after as a result was a dumbed down version that relied more on action sequences and a relentless pacing than focusing on an actual story (The Incredible Hulk). Now, I actually liked The Incredible Hulk, but I think I would have liked it a lot more had it retained the 30 minutes of deleted footage that judging by the script would have focused more on characterization.

    Going by Snyder's not-so-impressive litany of work, I see him going for something far more visual and stylistic than anything with a meaningful or insightful story. However, I would love to be proven wrong. Perhaps David Goyer's script and Christopher Nolan's input was substantial enough to affect the outcome of the story, but at this point I'm not convinced. Hopefully Snyder can make an entertaining film that balances story, character and action, but based on his previous works, I'm not exactly instilled with the utmost confidence.

    Audiences wanted more of Superman punching things, just like they wanted the Hulk to smash things more, and that's exactly what they are going to get. Let's hope story and character, like it was with the Hulk, is not sacrificed with Superman.
     
  2. Myasishchev

    Myasishchev Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    That tool Odysseus sure was awful emo about getting home, right?

    Anyway, Superman Returns is a flawed but pretty great movie. I mean, did you people see Spacey's Lex Luthor? Or does the rage about Superman daring to have premarital sex (and then daring to feel sad about how he's missed much of his kid's childhood) blind you to how awesome much of the film, especially Spacey, was?

    And I say this even though the Evil Real Estate Developer is my least favorite Lex incarnation of them all, and in full recognition that a Byrne's Man of Steel-esque Spacey-portrayed Luthor was a missed opportunity of cosmic proportions.

    Oh, and as for how "visually interesting" the Donner movies are, did Superman or Superman II have Clark getting shot in his invulnerable eye? No, they did not.

    Re: Snyder. Snyder is the best comic book adaptation director there ever was, and likely ever will be. He's actually rather spectacular. Yes, he's a little too much in love with manipulating the flow of time, but that's okay, so are comics. But, actually, you know, he'd be God's own choice for a Flash film.

    Have to say I agree here. It's almost the exact plot from Alex Ross' entertaining but empty waste of time, Justice. I mean, it even shares the same master villain.

    On the other hand, after Squadron Supreme, Infinite Crisis, and the five billion other stories that employ the trope, I'm tired of the superhero genre telling me that proactive superheroism is the most profound evil in the universe. Close the hibernacles? Man, fuck you, Nighthawk, what do you have against life extension?
     
    Last edited: Dec 12, 2010
  3. Anwar

    Anwar Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    Didn't Singer actually say "What's LexCorp?" once? He wasn't even remotely aware of Lex as anything other than the Donner buffoon.
     
  4. Myasishchev

    Myasishchev Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    I dunno. If so, I wish someone had told him.

    That's the best Lex. And, it seems, the Lex they've been trying to move away from over the past few years, between President Crazy, a return to grace based on a frankly unbelievable framing of his alternate universe son, the thirty or so weeks Lex subsequently managed to get through before doing something really stupid and Sivana-esque once again, and then a bizarre turn as an Orange Lantern.

    (However, I really, really need to get my hands on those Cornell-scribed Action Comics, and see what's going on.)
     
  5. Admiral_Young

    Admiral_Young Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    Cornell is a master at writing Lex...it really is a terrific character profile. I can't wait until Clark finds out about the robot ;)
     
  6. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    There are a lot of great versions of Lex Luthor to choose from:

    * The Lex from Elliott S! Maggin's novels Last Son of Krypton and Miracle Monday, a fascinatingly rich, almost heroic character, a supergenius who could've brought a technological utopia to humanity if his ego hadn't compelled him to devote himself to battling Superman. He saw Superman's power as a dangerous imbalance in human society and dedicated himself to being the restorer of balance.

    * The Lex from the DC Animated Universe, an amalgam of the post-Crisis business mogul and the pre-Crisis scientific genius, with the personality of a cultured thug and the intelligence to be a master chessplayer.

    * The Lex from Smallville, a fallen angel, a man of great potential for good but brought down by his fatal flaws. Like Maggin's, an enemy who could've been Superman's greatest friend.

    * The Lex from All-Star Superman, so arrogant and self-absorbed that he can look right at Clark Kent without glasses and not recognize him as Superman because his sense of superiority won't let him contemplate that a lowly reporter could be in any way significant in comparison to him.

    The movies to date have really dropped the ball when it comes to Lex Luthor.


    I've got nothing against seeing more action, but I'd prefer a naturalistic look to Snyder's hyperstylized approach. One thing I've always wanted to see was a Superman aerial action sequence executed by skydivers, with no visual effects beyond those necessary to erase their parachutes. With the right editing and camera angles, a skydiving sequence could convincingly look like a flying sequence. (There was an episode of The Greatest American Hero where they actually did this, and it was moderately convincing so long as you ignored the obvious ripcord and parachute-pack bulge on the "flying" hero.) Having the characters actually soaring through midair would give it a realism and excitement that you can't get from wire work in front of a greenscreen or CGI constructs. But Snyder's bound to take it in completely the opposite direction and make everything look totally fakey.

    (The thing that disappointed me the most about his approach to Watchmen was the stylization. That story called for more of a cinema verite approach, a gritty naturalism in keeping with the tone of the story.)


    Why in the world are you spelling "emo" in capital letters? It's not an acronym. It's short for "emotional."


    Yes, and I was unimpressed by him. I don't get why people make such a fuss over Spacey in general, and in particular I didn't find his Luthor all that interesting, in part because he was saddled with such an inadequate version of the character.


    What a bizarre question. Why would you think people would have a problem with premarital sex? This isn't the 1950s.

    And it's inappropriate to accuse people of being "blind" just because their tastes differ from yours. Different people with equal degrees of perception, taste, and judgment can arrive at mutually contradictory opinions about the same thing, because they're different people. There is no absolute right or wrong in matters of taste.


    You found that interesting, I found that self-indulgent and derivative of The Matrix. That said, there are plenty of things about the movie I found visually interesting. In particular, Kate Bosworth was utterly captivating to look at. However, she was profoundly, insanely wrong for the part of Lois Lane. Looks aren't everything.


    I would say that's a good idea, except that he'd pretty much do the same kind of super-slo-mo representations of superspeed that Smallville has made its bread and butter since the beginning. And thanks to Smallville, I've kind of gotten tired of seeing superspeed represented that way.
     
  7. Myasishchev

    Myasishchev Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    Spacey in general? The guy's a national treasure. American Beauty, Usual Suspects, LA Confidential, and the delightfully charming K-Pax? All meaningless?

    I dunno about anybody else, but I liked his Luthor because of the mental instability and brutality he played him with, and the huge entertainment factor in every scene he was in.

    I do feel there's a certain moral conservatism that bothers people about Superman Returns. Especially in Superman's context, where they might not care if it were another character. Or, maybe, more charitably, it's that some people feel that the insoluble family situation left at the end of SR betrays their assumption that all Superman stories should be unremittingly idealistic. In any event, I feel it is appropriate to point this out (and as glibly as possible), because it's not a criticism of the work. It's like saying you don't like Starry Night because you don't like the color blue--that's your bag, not van Gogh's.
     
  8. wamdue

    wamdue Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    I make no claims to being a massive superman fan, but isnt Kryptonite at harmful at a certain distance to Superman? once Superman is a certain distance away from it, he is fine.

    Same goes for the Krypton island, so as long as the moon is far enough way Superman should be ok.
     
  9. Admiral_Young

    Admiral_Young Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    @Christopher...ask the poster who used it the first time, if you read my post (which you must have because you quoted it) I stated how much I hate that term being used instead of emotional turmoil. I know it stands for emotional...I capitalized it for the basis of emphasizing my point which I guess you failed to see. EMO is like using the word "gay" to describe something that is stupid or "lame" now to describe someone with emotional problems. For some reason you are fascinated instead of my capitalization of it.

    We also don't need a lesson on the variety of Lex's...I believe some of us have made quite clear the version that we would have liked to see. Kevin Smith used this version in his drafts of "Superman Lives" . For whatever reason Singer chose to use the real estate schemer version from the Donner films which is fine, but I don't think that is what fans were anticipating in "Superman Returns". The "Smallville" version you indicated happens to be based on the adult version of the corporate tycoon/super genius that is currently depicted in the comics.
     
  10. Agent Richard07

    Agent Richard07 Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    I'm glad that Singer (and someone else in the production) pointed out that it wasn't a hard sequel to Superman II. That sort of comment should make it easy to imagine it as it's own thing and not the redone third installment that so many imagine it to be. And personally, I don't like the idea that you can just ignore events in an ongoing saga anyway. In fact, I don't know why so many people would be okay with that approach. A story loses meaning and integrity when you just ignore whatever you didn't like. I'm happy to see Superman Returns as what they say it is... a remake inspired by the Christopher Reeve movies as opposed to a "proper sequel" that ignores III and IV.
     
  11. davejames

    davejames Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    Yeah, agreed. I mean, I'm not going to lie, I DO love that slow-motion/speed-em-up style of his, and think that visually he comes up with a lot of damn cool stuff.

    Unfortunately... that kind of style just does NOT belong in a Watchmen movie. And I really hope he dials it back for Superman too.
     
  12. Shazam!

    Shazam! Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    You can be 'visually interesting' without relying on what 14 year old kids think might be 'cool'.
    How do you figure that when both his attempts have missed the point of the source material by miles?
     
  13. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    I didn't say "meaningless," because I'm not so arrogant as to think my personal opinions are in any way representative of universal truth. If Spacey works for you as an actor, if his performances have meaning to you, I have no problem with that. But individuals have different tastes. I'm merely stating my own preferences as an individual. I'm not claiming they're better or more valid than anyone else's. And I'm certainly not going to call anyone else blind or deluded simply for having different tastes from my own.

    As for the films you listed, I've only seen The Usual Suspects and LA Confidential, and neither of them did much for me. I don't get why people extol the twist ending of Suspects; I saw it coming a mile away (and no, I wasn't spoiled in advance, beyond knowing in general terms that there was a twist coming). And Confidential was an unpleasantly violent and nihilistic film in which the cops were no better than another group of mobsters, and I hate stories about mobsters. Heck, I didn't even remember Spacey was in that one; he just doesn't leave a particularly strong impression on me. If you like his work, great, good for you, but different people have different tastes.


    Well, it's certainly not a factor in my dissatisfaction with the film, and I resent the assumption that everyone who dislikes a film must do so for only a single universal reason. I'm an individual, and I make my own choices for my own reasons. There are many different opinions of any given thing, and that means there are multiple reasons to like it and multiple reasons to dislike it. It's simpleminded and petty to try to lump everyone on the other side into a single, simplistic category. The mature thing to do is to ask people individually what their reasons were for not liking it, to let them speak for themselves rather than prejudging them as a group.




    Beside the point. However "hard" or "soft" a sequel he intended it to be, he still deliberately made his takes on the characters and their relationships similar to what Donner did, and I don't think those choices worked out well. I'm not making some anal-retentive fanboy quibble about continuity. I'm saying that I wonder if fresher ideas for the characters would've worked better than what we got. (By the same token, I would've liked to see a new, original take on Kryptonian architecture rather than a rehash of the crystal stuff, and I would've liked to hear John Ottman's new take on a Superman theme rather than a mere recycling of Williams. Not that those elements of the old movies weren't good, but doing something new is better than copying something good that's already been done. Because copies are never as good as the originals.)
     
  14. Agent Richard07

    Agent Richard07 Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    That's OK, I am. It's always been a pet peeve. :rommie:
     
  15. Myasishchev

    Myasishchev Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    You know, for what it's worth, I actually think you (personally) would really like K-Pax.

    I'd say that if you didn't it means you were born without a heart, but I strongly suspect you'd take that as a serious expression of my feelings. ;)

    I'm not making an assumption about every single person who disliked the film. Like I said, I was being glib, but in doing so attacking what I saw as the general attitude, rather than an individual's opinion.

    If one isn't permitted to make generalizations about people, one would be arguing till doomsday over a billion different interpretations of any given work.

    No, really?

    Maybe if I said "it displays in the most visceral manner possible Superman's invulnerability," it would sound smarter, right?
     
  16. Agent Richard07

    Agent Richard07 Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    Yeah, K-Pax is really good. It's one of my favorite movies.
     
  17. the G-man

    the G-man Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    My absolute favorite version of the character, bar none.
     
  18. Christopher

    Christopher Writer Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    No, one would be soliciting other people's opinions and listening to what they have to say. The best way to find out about people is to ask them. It's as simple as that.
     
  19. Trent Roman

    Trent Roman Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    Unfortunately, yes. A hackneyed performance and general waste of talent. Honestly, for all that Spacey's Luthor was an obvious atavism of Hackman's Luthor, the villains in Superman Returns reminded me more of the old Adam West Batman series. You have your overblown, drama-queen lead bad guy. You have a piece of arm candy who doesn't act remotely vicious enough to be with him, and falls for the hero within ten seconds of meeting him. Then you have a handful of random thugs so that the hero has somebody to ZAM! and KAPOW! Luthor and his hangers-on had no sense of menace about them; petty thugs on a black-green island. I've liked Singer's work elsewhere, but I still cannot fathom somebody who manages to get Kevin Spacey and Parker Posey to fill out his rogues' gallery, then tells Spacey to ham it up and Posey to keep it mellow.

    Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
     
  20. Saul

    Saul Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Re: Full story for Bryan Singer's planned SUPERMAN RETURNS sequel reve

    It worked for Begins because that was two different characters. But here it's just one character who turns out to be Brainiac. For people who don't know Brainiac such a reveal is meaningless.