Much as I like SR, it's clear that there isn't the public love for it so as to warrant a sequel; few people are saying 'I can't wait to see what happens between Superman, Lois, Jason and Clark.'
I would retain Routh there. I still maintain he was a perfect successor to the great Christopher Reeve. And in keeping him, I'd get in WB's good books by not spending a zillion dollars on the hunt for a new Supes! So ine would be about a 90% reboot.
I don't think audiences would be confused by him in a movie that wasn't a sequel to SR. General audiences think a lot less about this sort of thing than we geeks do. By the time this came out, SR would be way in the back of their minds, not least of all cos of the lukewarm response many had to it. Audiences deal with re-casting all the time, they could deal with reboots to Punisher and Hulk a mere few years after the previous entries, they could cope with Judi Dench staying on as M in a James Bond movie. It's not like Routh is a household name anyway - they'd just see Superman onscreen. I'm sure a lot of people didn't notice the difference between Eric Bana and Ed Norton or even between Timothy Dalton and Pierce Brosnan. So do you think they'll waste much time thinking about Routh and the continuity implications of him staying on? Doubt it.
I don't think I'd keep any of the rest of the cast though. Kate Bosworth had no pizzazz as Lois and lacked chemistry with Routh. Give me someone more feisty. Langella and Huntingdon were fine but replaceable.
I wouldn't do another origin story. To return to an analogy I used in another thread, I'd take the Goldeneye approach to relaunch rather than the Casino Royale one. Assume the audience knows who Superman is, just as Goldeneye did with James Bond, rather than showing how he came to be Superman, as CR did. We'd never seen Bond's origins onscreen before, so I understand why CR took that route, but we have seen Superman's, both in Superman The Movie and Smallville, so why do it again? A comic montage like they've done with the Spider-man movies would suffice, at most flashbacks like Burton's Batman.
Just as Goldeneye started off with the audience safe in the knowledge that James Bond was a legendary, slightly dinosaurish spy who loved woman and a drink, this movie would start off with the assumption that they know he's the Man of Steel, last son of Krypton, alter ego of Clark Kent etc. At most, a few lines of exposition could establish the relationship with Lois etc. I wouldn't shake up the formula with a son and return from space - just classic Superman ticking all the boxes you want - again, just like Goldeneye did.
No Lex as the villain in this movie - I'd even drop in a few lines about him being missing, presumed dead. We had a thoughtful, sensitive and romantic Superman in SR - time for an action packed movie. A TWOK rather than a TMP, an Incredible Hulk rather than Ang Lee's version. Give TMOS a villain as powerful as he is - Brainiac, Doomsday Bizarro or the like. Lots of action, fighting and money shots. And no need to compromise on character and drama as a result - Iron Man, Spider-man and LOTR showed that you can have loads of action and SFX without any need to compromise on character and emotion. Put Lois, Metropolis and all Superman loves in peril. Put TMOS through the wringer. And don't get Michael Bay to direct!
Finally, I'd take a leaf from Marvel's books. At the end of the credits, a shot of a dark room, a sinister sounding voice. And from his dialogue, we realise that he's been manipulating and guiding the 'big bad' all along, pulling the strings. We don't get to see him till the very end and even then it'd only be a fleeting glance - think Vader's head in ESB. This head wouldn't be scarred, but it would be bald. Yes, Lex is back.
Even then, I would use Lex only sparingly in a sequel and I wouldn't have him anything like the Hackman/ Spacey version. He'd be meaner, nastier, more sadistic, less funny and not interested in land. Merely power and destroying Superman (not necessarily in that order). Not sure who I'd cast but I'd want to go along the lines that Marvel have gone - Dafoe, McKellen, Rourke, Roth etc. Someone indie-ish and talented as hell. Someone like Ed Harris, John Malkovich or even Jon Voight, though not necessarily any of them - probably someone less famous.
I would retain Routh there. I still maintain he was a perfect successor to the great Christopher Reeve. And in keeping him, I'd get in WB's good books by not spending a zillion dollars on the hunt for a new Supes! So ine would be about a 90% reboot.
I don't think audiences would be confused by him in a movie that wasn't a sequel to SR. General audiences think a lot less about this sort of thing than we geeks do. By the time this came out, SR would be way in the back of their minds, not least of all cos of the lukewarm response many had to it. Audiences deal with re-casting all the time, they could deal with reboots to Punisher and Hulk a mere few years after the previous entries, they could cope with Judi Dench staying on as M in a James Bond movie. It's not like Routh is a household name anyway - they'd just see Superman onscreen. I'm sure a lot of people didn't notice the difference between Eric Bana and Ed Norton or even between Timothy Dalton and Pierce Brosnan. So do you think they'll waste much time thinking about Routh and the continuity implications of him staying on? Doubt it.
I don't think I'd keep any of the rest of the cast though. Kate Bosworth had no pizzazz as Lois and lacked chemistry with Routh. Give me someone more feisty. Langella and Huntingdon were fine but replaceable.
I wouldn't do another origin story. To return to an analogy I used in another thread, I'd take the Goldeneye approach to relaunch rather than the Casino Royale one. Assume the audience knows who Superman is, just as Goldeneye did with James Bond, rather than showing how he came to be Superman, as CR did. We'd never seen Bond's origins onscreen before, so I understand why CR took that route, but we have seen Superman's, both in Superman The Movie and Smallville, so why do it again? A comic montage like they've done with the Spider-man movies would suffice, at most flashbacks like Burton's Batman.
Just as Goldeneye started off with the audience safe in the knowledge that James Bond was a legendary, slightly dinosaurish spy who loved woman and a drink, this movie would start off with the assumption that they know he's the Man of Steel, last son of Krypton, alter ego of Clark Kent etc. At most, a few lines of exposition could establish the relationship with Lois etc. I wouldn't shake up the formula with a son and return from space - just classic Superman ticking all the boxes you want - again, just like Goldeneye did.
No Lex as the villain in this movie - I'd even drop in a few lines about him being missing, presumed dead. We had a thoughtful, sensitive and romantic Superman in SR - time for an action packed movie. A TWOK rather than a TMP, an Incredible Hulk rather than Ang Lee's version. Give TMOS a villain as powerful as he is - Brainiac, Doomsday Bizarro or the like. Lots of action, fighting and money shots. And no need to compromise on character and drama as a result - Iron Man, Spider-man and LOTR showed that you can have loads of action and SFX without any need to compromise on character and emotion. Put Lois, Metropolis and all Superman loves in peril. Put TMOS through the wringer. And don't get Michael Bay to direct!
Finally, I'd take a leaf from Marvel's books. At the end of the credits, a shot of a dark room, a sinister sounding voice. And from his dialogue, we realise that he's been manipulating and guiding the 'big bad' all along, pulling the strings. We don't get to see him till the very end and even then it'd only be a fleeting glance - think Vader's head in ESB. This head wouldn't be scarred, but it would be bald. Yes, Lex is back.
Even then, I would use Lex only sparingly in a sequel and I wouldn't have him anything like the Hackman/ Spacey version. He'd be meaner, nastier, more sadistic, less funny and not interested in land. Merely power and destroying Superman (not necessarily in that order). Not sure who I'd cast but I'd want to go along the lines that Marvel have gone - Dafoe, McKellen, Rourke, Roth etc. Someone indie-ish and talented as hell. Someone like Ed Harris, John Malkovich or even Jon Voight, though not necessarily any of them - probably someone less famous.