The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Other incarnations of the character as portrayed on the big screen and the small screen.

Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby apologistpuncher » March 7th, 2010, 5:48 am

Whogaman wrote:I am not sure that the public rejected SR or was it Routh. Routh was not Chris no matter how hard he tried.


Since there will be NO sequel to Singerman, and BJ Routh has headlined ZERO hit movies in over 5 YEARS, I'd say they rejected BOTH.

The guy has no "presence" or "acting ability", no matter what some people WANT to believe.....
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Mitch » March 10th, 2010, 3:42 pm

FROM THE L.A. TIMES Big News

link

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/herocomplex/2010/03/christopher-nolan-takes-flight-with-superman-we-have-a-fantastic-story-1.html

Christopher Nolan takes flight with Superman: 'We have a fantastic story'


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This is a longer version of my story that will run today on the cover of the Los Angeles Times Calendar section...


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The topic at the Batcave on Monday night was the future of that other superhero — you, know, the one from Metropolis. “It’s very exciting, we have a fantastic story,” Christopher Nolan said while sipping tea in the sleek editing suite that fills the converted garage adjacent to his Hollywood home. “And we feel we can do it right. We know the milieu, if you will, we know the genre and how to get it done right.”

Nolan was standing next to his wife, producer Emma Thomas, his partner in all of his films — including “Batman Begins” and “The Dark Knight,” the grim franchise that pulled in more than $1.3 billion at theaters worldwide — and he was explaining their plan to take on a challenge that has frustrated Hollywood for two decades: Getting another Superman film franchise off the ground.

Nolan, speaking about the Superman project for the first time, is pleased with the excitement stirred but, like the magicians in his 2006 film “The Prestige,” sees no value in revealing all of his tricks before the curtain goes up. Still, he wanted to answer some of the early questions about his plans for Superman — as well as his third visit to Gotham City.

There was a spasm of fan excitement when word leaked last month that Nolan, who is now viewed as the Hitchcock of superhero cinema after his two Batman films, would be the “godfather” for a reboot of the Man of Steel, acting as producer and mentor to an as-yet-unnamed-director who will be making a movie based on a story by Nolan and frequent collaborator David S. Goyer.

The Internet flurry that included reports that, according to Thomas, might be better described as fan fiction. The dispatches revealing that the film will be called “Man of Steel” ? and feature Lex Luthor and Brainiac? Or the one about it being a period piece with something like a low-fi version of the hero?

“I don’t know where this stuff comes from,” Thomas said with a chuckle, although, as with any good poker player, it’s hard to say where the bluff starts and ends.

This much is certain: The couple are completely focused on the movie-of-the-moment, which is “Inception,” which opens July 19 and stars Leonardo DiCaprio as a dream thief of sorts in what may be Hollywood’s first metaphysical heist film. The movie is the most complicated undertaking of Nolan’s career — it was shot in six countries and tells a tale that flips between reality and three levels of dream-time — and, well, all things considered, he’d rather Superman stay in his Fortress of Solitude and off the front page for a while longer since that project is a matter for 2012 or 2013 at best.

But, of course, Superman, first superhero of them all, is an American pop culture icon on par with Mickey Mouse and Elvis. But after the close of the Christopher Reeve era with “Superman IV: The Quest for Peace” in 1987, the property became one of the most frustrating in Hollywood. A dozen different reboots were started through the years with names attached such as Nicolas Cage, Kevin Smith, J.J. Abrams, McG and Brett Ratner and plans were trotted out to kill Superman, strip him of his powers or pit him in battle against Batman.

Finally, director Bryan Singer, who had earned credibility with comic book fans with his two “X-Men” films for Fox, delivered with “Superman Returns” in 2006 starring Brandon Routh. But the finished product was viewed as oddly lifeless by many critics. The $200-million film finished its theatrical run with a respectable $391 million worldwide but it wasn’t heroic enough to earn a sequel.

Nolan said that he admired Singer’s film, especially the way it connected in to director Richard Donner’s version of Superman and the first two movies starring Reeve. Nolan added, though, that this new movie will stand on its own.

“A lot of people have approached Superman in a lot of different ways. I only know the way that has worked for us that’s what I know how to do,” Nolan said, emphasizing the idea that Batman exists in a world where he is the only superhero and a similar approach to the Man of Steel would assure the integrity needed for the film. “Each serves to the internal logic of the story. They have nothing to do with each other.”

Still, it was a frustrating moment in the Batman franchise that led to this new Superman revival. Nolan and Goyer, a key collaborator on both Batman films, were at a story impasse on the third Batman film (which is now picking up steam as well) when, as a distraction, Goyer gave the filmmaker a daydream version of how he would tackle a story about the last son of Krypton.

“He basically told me, ‘I have this thought about how you would approach Superman,’” Nolan recalled. “I immediately got it, loved it and thought: That is a way of approaching the story I’ve never seen before that makes it incredibly exciting. I wanted to get Emma and I involved in shepherding the project right away and getting it to the studio and getting it going in an exciting way.”

Goyer is now writing the screenplay and Nolan is keeping it close to the vest.

It’s interesting where inspirations originate. Nolan put together an especially deep cast for his Batman films — the first one, for instance, featured Morgan Freeman, Liam Neeson, Gary Oldman and Tom Wilkinson in supporting roles. That, he said, was an idea imported from Metropolis.

“I went to the studio with the analogy of ‘I want to cast the way they did in 1978 with “Superman,”’ where they had Brando and Glenn Ford and Ned Beatty and all these fantastic actors in even small parts, which was an exotic idea for a superhero movie at the time. It really paid off, too., As a kid watching ‘Superman’ it seemed enormous and I realized later by looking at it that a lot of that was actually the casting, just having these incredibly talented people and these characterizations. And Marlon Brando is the first guy up playing Superman’s dad. It’s incredible.”



Superman, created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, was an instant success when he arrived on the publishing scene in June 1938 and he more or less created the American comic book and its signature concept, the superhero. Superman made the leap to radio in 1940 and then to the silver screen in 1948 when Kirk Alyn became the first of many actors to wear the cape. George Reeve was the face of Superman on television for 104 episodes in the 1950s Reeve may be the definitive version of the hero for most people today, but young fans have a view of the hero shaped more by the award-winning animated series in recent years and “Smalllvile,” the CW series that just got re-upped for a tenth season, making star Tom Welling the Clark Kent with the longest tenure.

Nolan, for the record, also won’t confirm that he is actually directing the third Batman film but, well, or course he is, but “Inception” isn’t in the can yet and it’s against his code. He can’t be easily tricked, either. Asked if Superman as a franchise has to overcome a deficiency of truly great villains, unlike, say, Spider-Man and Batman, he won’t bite. “That’s a very sly way of asking a question I’m not going to answer.”

Nolan says he has no idea who will direct the Superman film (there has been conjecture that it may be his brother and frequent collaborator, Jonathan Nolan) but his role appears to be comparable Peter Jackson with “District 9,” which was directed by newcomer Neill Blomkamp but benefited greatly from imprimatur of the “The Lord of the Rings” auteur. Jackson is also stepping into a similar role in Middle-earth as Guillermo del Toro takes over as director for “The Hobbit” films.

Nolan established himself as a bold and cerebral filmmaker in 2000 with “Memento,” has made a specialty of rooting stories of the fantastic in a gritty reality with psychological undertones and emphasis on using practical effects and stunt work as opposed to the magical painting brushes of CG era. All of that made him an ideal filmmaker for fight-time in the brutal gutters of Gotham but it doesn’t make the filmmaker the first obvious choice for flight-time amid the gleaming citadels of Metropolis. Warner Bros executives seem confident that he is -- and they need him to be the right man with the "Harry Potter" franchise -- and perhaps Batman -- nearing an expiration date.

Sitting in his edit bay, which is decorated with posters of Ledger as the Joker and has a skylight that rolls shut with mechanical screeching that adds to the Batcave ambiance, Nolan said he knows about storytelling and it’s difficult to dissect his work beyond that.

“We’re approaching it in a not dissimilar way in terms of trying to find an incredible story in a way that audiences can engage with it the way they engage with contemporary action films,” Nolan continued. “I think David’s approach is a very good way of doing just that.”

And that third Batman film? Jonathan Nolan is “now doing the hard work” of writing the script based on the story by his sibling Goyer. “My brother is writing a script for me and we’ll wait to see how it turns out...he’s struggling to put it together into the epic story that you want it to be.”

“Batman Begins” was the origin and back story of the hero, while “The Dark Knight” found the hero reeling as his Manichean, good vs. evil world view was upended by a new villain, the Joker, who was a wild-card agent of chaos going up against order, be it a police department or the mob. The second film ends, literally, with Batman on the run, a fugitive.

So what happens next?

“Without getting into specifics, the key thing that makes the third film an great possibility for us is that we want to finish our story,” he said. “And in viewing it as the finishing of a story rather than infinitely blowing up the balloon and expanding the story.”

Nolan said the key characters from the two first films and the actors who that play them will be back. “We have a great ensemble, that’s one of the attractions of doing another film, since we’ve been having a great time for years.”

Perhaps. But the great challenge is to find a villain (or villains) who that can not only match up with the Caped Crusader but also with Heath Ledger’s Academy Award-winning portrayal of the scabby, demented Joker. Fans have churned up the rumor mill for months now (Johnny Depp as the Riddler? Angelina Jolie as Catwoman? Philip Seymour Hoffman as the Penguin? Ben Kingsley as Hugo Strange?). But Nolan, no fan of letting cats out of the bag, declined to play along.

His villain choices to date have steered cleared of strongly supernatural or super-science characters (no Man-Bat, Mr. Freeze or Poison Ivy, for instance) but he shook his head when asked if that was trajectory he would continue. He did however concede one tidbit: “It won’t be," he said, "Mr. Freeze.”

Batman has been throwing punches in the pages of DC Comics since 1939 and as the decades passed, much of the core of the character stayed the same even as Bruce Wayne’s sideburns or the profile of the Batmobile changed. Not so with film.

“I’m very excited about the end of the film, the conclusion, and what we’ve done with the characters,” Nolan said.“My brother has come up with some pretty exciting stuff. Unlike the comics, these thing don’t go on forever in film and viewing it as a story with an end is useful. Viewing it as an ending, that sets you very much on the right track about the appropriate conclusion and the essence of what tale we’re telling. And it hearkens back to that priority of trying to find the reality in these fantastic stories. That’s what we do.”

-- Geoff Boucher
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby apologistpuncher » March 11th, 2010, 3:54 am

"Nolan added, though, that this new movie will stand on its own."

THIS pretty much confirms NO BJ Routh, doesn't it?

High five!!!
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Mitch » March 18th, 2010, 4:22 pm

What if?
This was Superman The Man of Steel?

Would people really want him as Supermanfor the reboot? TOM???????


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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Mitch » March 20th, 2010, 9:59 am

If you have been wondering where The Flash movie is or when will Warner Bros. make a Wonder Woman movie, Superman etc

I’ve got some awesome news to share.

For a little while I’d been hearing from a few sources that Warner Bros. had a plan for their DC comics library and we’d be hearing about it soon. After all, they own a tremendous amount of superheroes and they’re doing almost nothing with them. What I was told was after the Harry Potter franchise ended next year, they’d need a new franchise or franchises for their tent pole releases and the plan was to use their huge vault of DC superheroes as their replacements! More after the jump:


And at today’s Showest presentation, WB head honcho Alan Horn confirmed the news. I forget exactly what he said on stage, but it’s essentially what I heard: DC Superheroes are coming and they’d replace Harry Potter.

The thing you need to realize is under Alan Horn, Warner Bros. instituted a tent pole release strategy which calls for a few event films to be made every year. For the last decade, Harry Potter has been used to fill the release calendar and now that the franchise is ending after Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2, the studio needs need blood to take it’s place and a new way of earning the huge money that only tent pole releases can generate.

Enter DC Superheroes.


Horn says that with the "Harry Potter" franchise coming to an end, the plan is to move forward with their vault of DC Superheroes as a replacement - sounds like they're essentially following the Marvel plan of around two films per year. This would include "Green Lantern" currently in production for 2011, the third "Batman" for 2012, both "The Flash" and the rebooted "Superman" they have in development.

Finally Horn also confirmed that a fifth film in the "Final Destination" series is in the works.


source: Collider.com
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Mitch » March 23rd, 2010, 4:26 am

I wish movie production would begin this year, but 2011 seems to be the earliest. Lot's of waiting and speculating (yet again)
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Mitch » April 9th, 2010, 9:52 am

Update from moviehole.co.uk

Production for the rebooted Superman series begins on Dec 1st 2010.



This is good news! I am sure becquse of rights issues they have to begin in 2010.
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Whogaman » April 9th, 2010, 11:27 am

Mitch wrote:What if?
This was Superman The Man of Steel?

Would people really want him as Supermanfor the reboot? TOM???????





Interesting video, but Tom Welling would not be my choice to be the next movie Superman. He is another actor that seems too young to pull off the role. (Yeah I know Tom is in his 30's, and traditionally Superman is between 29 and 30 something in the comics.)

I guess we have a tentative start date for 'The Man of Steel' (?) and I'm sure that we will hear about which Hollywood hunk will be in the running for playing Superman. But I am not jumping up and down until a definite cast is in place. I guess I can say that fans have been burned in the past to drink the Kool Aid about who's actually doing the new film. I will wait til all the T's are dotted and the I's crossed to celebrate about this movie.

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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby David El » April 21st, 2010, 5:38 pm

Production to begin Dec 1st.
I guess they are going to busy at the North Pole in December! :D
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Mitch » May 24th, 2010, 9:54 am

Superman is casting right now.... It will not be an origin story, it will assume people already know the origin.
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Larkin » May 27th, 2010, 4:19 am

For once, I think Superman needs a new enemy. Lex has been in 4 movies now, time to change up.
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby David El » May 27th, 2010, 5:27 pm

Superman needs to be the Man Of Steel, or the Man of Tomorrow. Interestingly enough, they could use The John Byrne reboot as stated in terms of fun but they could actually end with "whatever happened to the man of tomorrow" after a few movies, giving the reboot before the original end of the original Superman. Don't worry my wordy paragraph does makes sense if you know the comics.
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Bill Williams » May 28th, 2010, 3:57 am

Who says that Superman has to be permanently 30 years old? Granted, that was Christopher Reeve's thoughts about the role in promoting "Superman IV", even though he was 34 when he made the film. And when you think about the comics over the last 18 years, Superman/Clark Kent is around 34 or 35 years old. And let's not forget that when Kirk Alyn shot the "Superman" serials in 1948 and 1950, he was already in his late 30's. And George Reeves was in his late 30's and through his 40's when he did AOS. So Tom Welling is in his mid-30's with "Smallville" heading into its final season. I say it's time he graduated to bringing Superman to the screen!
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby Mitch » May 31st, 2010, 3:05 am

"Holmes" Sequel, "Superman" Set Dates



Thursday May 27th 2010 03:34PM
Warner Bros. Pictures has scheduled "Sherlock Holmes 2" for a December 16th 2011 release date reports Heat Vision.

Filming is expected to kick off in Europe this Fall on the blockbuster follow-up to last year's hit and despite earlier reports that she's out, The Playlist reports that Rachel McAdams will be returning as Irene Adler albeit in a smaller capacity this time out.

The key casting though, the role of Professor James Moriarty, has yet to be locked despite Brad Pitt's name still being touted as a candidate. The date puts the film head-to-head in a competitive release slot with "Mission: Impossible IV" opening the same week and Spielberg's "The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn" opening the following week.

Meanwhile Warners has also revealed they are "nearing a greenlight" for a film based on the superhero "The Flash", and are targeting a Holiday 2012 release for the "Superman" reboot Chris Nolan is producing.
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Re: The Official NEXT SUPERMAN Movie (2011) Discussion

Postby David El » July 21st, 2010, 12:26 pm

I just posted this over on trekmovie.com

They should get Owain Yeoman from The Mentalist he would be great as Superman, 6.4 and trained by the Royal Academy.

Take a look below

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1466859/

What do you think?
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