Hadn't heard that, is cool. Bet he kept his Executive Producer paycheck though.Rosenbaum wouldn't do the last episode.
He demanded more money.
Welling gave up his pay check, to Michael for the final episode.

Hadn't heard that, is cool. Bet he kept his Executive Producer paycheck though.Rosenbaum wouldn't do the last episode.
He demanded more money.
Welling gave up his pay check, to Michael for the final episode.
The only Superman movie ending that will be canon after the Cyborg Apocalypse:
I love Superman directed by Richard Donner and I would like to add the Director's edition of Superman II; it's fun to see the scenes he shot and footage shot with Marlan Brando.Superman ‘78 is still my all time favourite comic book movie, with Man of Steel #2.
I see that the OP and the entire thread mostly ignored Dean Cain.
I’ve never been a huge fan of Superman just cause I like it better when heroes have more balanced abilities and have to use their brains more to win.
But I can see the point of view that Superman is meant as a character with certain unassailable virtues and diminishing them diminishes the character.
I also agree that newer superhero movies can be too hyperkinetic. I like the improved visual effects but when so much is going on on the screen moving so fast you can’t pick out individual maneuvers well it loses the quality that made 80s action so compelling.
I’ve never been a huge fan of Superman just cause I like it better when heroes have more balanced abilities and have to use their brains more to win.
But I can see the point of view that Superman is meant as a character with certain unassailable virtues and diminishing them diminishes the character.
I also agree that newer superhero movies can be too hyperkinetic. I like the improved visual effects but when so much is going on on the screen moving so fast you can’t pick out individual maneuvers well it loses the quality that made 80s action so compelling.
I don't actually think it's all that hard, as evidenced by the many, many comic book writers and film/TV scenarists who have given us wonderful portrayals of the character over the past eight decades.To me this is sort of the big issue with Superman. What makes the character work is hard to make work because the things that make him appealing are very different from almost any regular character. He can be very boring if written one way or he can loose the things that make him special if you go another way. Writing for him must be what it was like trying to write for TNG and having to follow the Roddenberry rules yet also still having to make it all work.
I don't actually think it's all that hard, as evidenced by the many, many comic book writers and film/TV scenarists who have given us wonderful portrayals of the character over the past eight decades.
Nobody can be good or selfless totally, hence the need for ideals to aspire to . . . dare I say . . . heroes
Correct. The function of a character like Superman is to elevate and inspire. And that's a worthy, even vital thing for art to do. It's a fallacy that meaning and relevance are only found in darkness and despair.Nobody can be good or selfless totally, hence the need for ideals to aspire to . . . dare I say . . . heroes
For me, it's less about Cain's portrayal of Superman as it is his look. You're probably right about his portrayal as Clark being better, but to me, his look as Superman is as close as any live-acton production has gotten to the way Joe Shuster drew him back in the day. Especially when he smiles. That does it for me every time.I like Dean Cain's portrayal, though I find that I enjoyed his Clark Kent more than his Superman. But his was the first post Crisis version of the character and what I liked was it was a perfect example of the human side of Clark. He wasn't a bumbling idiot, and while as Superman, he was still the hero, as Clark, he was able to portray his human side and his own issues.
It's true the movies have had their ups and downs. But they did give us Superman '78, arguably THE defining portrayal of the character across all media, and Exhibit A against any argument that Superman has to be "fixed" somehow in order to work on the big screen.The movies no so much
Even the less successful movies have elements to treasure, including Superman III (the junkyard battle, a wonderful metaphor for Clark's essential humanity asserting itself to save the day),
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