It's fair to say that Superman Returns probably wasn't quite the blockbuster many were expecting. It concentrates its action on a handful of dazzling, audacious sequences, it spends time working with its characters, and it deliberately pays homage to the heritage of the source material. Knitted together by Bryan Singer, the man behind the camera for the first two X-Men features, it's some distance away from the last time the Man of Steel appeared on the big screen.
But that's very much a good thing. Whilst it doesn't quite, and nor did it need to, perform the major surgery that Batman Begins had to undertake on the Dark Knight's adventures, Singer nonetheless leaves distance between his film and some of its predecessors (although there are respectful tips of the hat to the first two films, not least the nostalgia-inducing credits sequence).
The plot finds Superman returning to Earth after several years away, to discover that the world has moved on in his absence. It's not as safe, Lex Luthor is out of prison, and Lois Lane now has a family. Which is the cue for a lot of soul searching, slower, tender moments and character development that divided some sections of the cinema audience.
Yet, thanks to a stirring cast, led by newcomer Brandon Routh, the end product gels extremely well. Routh's performance is a fitting tribute to the late Christopher Reeve, while Kevin Spacey chews up anything he's allowed to as key villain Lex Luthor. Further, credible, support comes in the form of Parker Posey, James Marsden and Kate Bosworth.
It'd be remiss to call Superman Returns a flawless film. After all, the running time could use fifteen minutes taking off, there's not enough Kevin Spacey and there are occasional moments when the pacing feels a little off. But it is a superb return to form for the classic superhero, with the modern day blockbuster ingredients of some meat to go with the action firmly in place. Further instalments, Mr Singer, will be more than welcome. --Simon Brew
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Marlon Brando | Jor-El |
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Gene Hackman | Lex Luthor |
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Christopher Reeve | Superman |
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Ned Beatty | Otis |
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Jackie Cooper | Perry White |
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Glenn Ford | Pa Kent |
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Trevor Howard | 1st Elder |
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Margot Kidder | Lois Lane |
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Jack O'Halloran | Non |
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Valerie Perrine | Eve Teschmacher |
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Maria Schell | Vond-Ah |
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Terence Stamp | General Zod |
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Phyllis Thaxter | Ma Kent |
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Susannah York | Lara |
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Jeff East | Young Clark Kent |
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Marc McClure | Jimmy Olsen |
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Sarah Douglas | Ursa |
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Harry Andrews | 2nd Elder |
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Vass Anderson | 3rd Elder |
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John Hollis | 4th Elder |
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James Garbutt | 5th Elder |
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Michael Gover | 6th Elder |
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David Neal | 7th Elder |
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William Russell | 8th Elder |
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Penelope Lee | 9th Elder |
| Director | Richard Donner |
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| Writer | Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster, Mario Puzo, David Newman, Leslie Newman, Robert Benton, Tom Mankiewicz | |
| Producer | Charles F. Greenlaw, Richard Lester, Alexander Salkind, Ilya Salkind, Pierre Spengler | |
| Musician | John Williams | |
| Photography | Geoffrey Unsworth | |
| Edition | Two Disc Set |
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| Packaging | Keep Case |
| Nr Discs | 2 |
| Screen Ratios | Theatrical Widescreen (2.35:1) |
| Audio Tracks | Dolby Digital 5.1 [English] Dolby Digital 5.1 [Spanish] |
| Subtitles | Arabic | Bulgarian | Dutch | English | English (Closed Captioned) | French | German | Italian | Romanian | Spanish |
| Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
| Edition Release Date | Dec 04, 2006 |
| Regions | Region 2 |