Saw Superman Returns, and it wasn't my movie. I thought the action scenes rocked, as long as you did the requisite ignoration of structural integrity limitations (though I did wince whenever he lifted people, because that's GOTTA hurt--especially the lifting of the whole family by one arm). It's the acting scenes that I couldn't get into. I just think Routh looked either like a dork or truly disturbing. I've never bought anything James Marsden was trying to sell me. Bosworth came off the best, but it's not a big best. If the kid was trying to be Omen creepy, then he out-acted them all. I just wasn't sure that's where they were going. Although it would make him a chip off the old block--Supes was creepier than Batman there.
Spike ,'Get It Done'
Buffista Movies 5: Development Hell
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I agree that Routh was disturbing-looking, but it somehow worked for me. It played off the alien thing very well.
I wasn't thinking alien so much as WB.
Also--I was thinking about the dual persona thing as portrayed in this movie...you could come away with the impression that he's the suit, since putting on the glasses didn't seem to make it look like he was ACTING the dork. He just was.
I agree that Routh was disturbing-looking, but it somehow worked for me. It played off the alien thing very well.
This, for me. I really wasn't expecting to like him at all, but somehow his performance really worked for me. The scene in the Planet offices when his glasses fall off and he stares at Lois for a moment...wow. Total gut-punch moment there.
Quickly followed, of course, by a moment where I wondered where all of his suits came from, and if the janitor ever complained about constantly having to clean them off the bottom of the elevator shaft.
Ha! I had your second thought as well, Jess.
I saw where the emotional moments were, I just didn't feel most of them. I think Parker Posey's character got to me more than anyone else's.
When his glasses fell off, all I could think of was how lousy a disguise that was, if they came off that easily. As for suits, I wondered how the medics (who I supposed hooked up monitors to him for their own peace of mind, since he's a fricking alien, and who knows what healthy looks like? STAR labs, how we miss ye) got his suit off in a way that let him put it back on so tidily. Unless he was wearing a backup. I didn't check for the wound tear.
I was very much in the WHY are you taking him to a hospital? Ok, sure, no where else to go (although I'd go with a sunny field somewhere), but for the love of Krypton, what possible good are the doctors in the ER going to be able to do for him? camp. It confused me, so logic and the movie had already parted company before I got to that bit, ita.
Animated Dragonlance movies well - at least one - is coming.
I chalk up to the authorities don't know any better. I felt it was a sort of "We have no idea what to do, so we're just going to do the best we can" thing. The various superhero movies tend to ignore the rest of their respective comic universes. So no other heroes, no Star Labs etc.
Still, I was sitting there watching the movie going "Open the damn window and let some sunlight in."
Animated Dragonlance movies well - at least one - is coming.
This part of the article doesn't exactly overwhelm me with confidence:
Helmed by Meugniot (the animated X-Men TV series) and written by Strayton (Cleopatra 2525, Xena: Warrior Princess),