I don't buy the claim that Williams's Superman theme is equivalent to Norman's Bond theme. Bond has only had one theme from the beginning. Williams's Superman theme was preceded by (and was a pastiche of) Sammy Timberg's theme to the '40s cartoons and Leon Klatzkin's theme to the '50s TV series, not to mention John Gart's themes to the '60s Superman and Superboy cartoons. And it's been followed by Ron Jones' theme to the 1988 animated series (which was combined with Williams's theme in the main titles), Kevin Kiner's Superboy theme from the same year, Shirley Walker's S:TAS theme, Robert J. Kral's theme to Superman/Doomsday, Louis Febre's heroic Clark Kent motif from Smallville, etc.
In my experience, the excessive copying of elements from the Donner Superman cheapened them for me. For years, I felt antipathy toward the Donner film because I was sick of the way everyone kept imitating its elements rather than using some imagination. Then, recently, I rewatched the films and discovered that those elements -- the theme, the design of Kryptonian tech and architecture, etc. -- work very well in their original context. But that's just it. You can't recapture the quality of the original by copying it. All you do is dilute and cheapen the elements you copy. If you want to imitate something from a good film, then imitate its willingness to be original! That's what made it a good film. Not the specific designs or melodies or characterizations that they used, but the fact that they were creative, that they put their best effort and imagination into it.
I don't want to see another hamfisted attempt to imitate what Richard Donner and Christopher Reeve and John Williams achieved. I want to see -- and hear -- an original take on Superman, because making it original is the best way to make it worthwhile.
In my experience, the excessive copying of elements from the Donner Superman cheapened them for me. For years, I felt antipathy toward the Donner film because I was sick of the way everyone kept imitating its elements rather than using some imagination. Then, recently, I rewatched the films and discovered that those elements -- the theme, the design of Kryptonian tech and architecture, etc. -- work very well in their original context. But that's just it. You can't recapture the quality of the original by copying it. All you do is dilute and cheapen the elements you copy. If you want to imitate something from a good film, then imitate its willingness to be original! That's what made it a good film. Not the specific designs or melodies or characterizations that they used, but the fact that they were creative, that they put their best effort and imagination into it.
I don't want to see another hamfisted attempt to imitate what Richard Donner and Christopher Reeve and John Williams achieved. I want to see -- and hear -- an original take on Superman, because making it original is the best way to make it worthwhile.