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PG Superman: The Movie (1978)
Reviewed by Danny Graydon
reviewer's rating
Five Stars
User Rating 5 out of 5



Director

Richard Donner
Writers

Mario Puzo
David Newman
Leslie Newman
Stars

Christopher Reeve
Marlon Brando
Gene Hackman
Ned Beatty
Jackie Cooper
Glenn Ford
Margot Kidder
Trevor Howard
Jack O'Halloran
Length

146 minutes
Distributor

Warner Bros
Cinema

1978
Released

24th September 2001
DVD

24th September 2001
Find out if you can buy "Superman: The Movie"



Forty years after his 1938 comic book debut cinema finally provided a forum equal to Superman's epic pop-culture stature. Making good of the boastful tag line "You'll believe a Man can fly", "Superman The Movie" remains a defining high point of Hollywood's tumultuous relationship with superheroes.

Affectionately directed with an unerring sense of verisimilitude by Richard Donner, with a witty script by Tom Mankiewicz which balances naiveté and knowingness, and a superb John Williams score, the film handles the source material's ludicrous conceits with dazzling straight-faced aplomb.

Today, it would seem commercial suicide to have the lead character debut an hour in, but Superman's origin story, moving from the doomed, crystalline planet Krypton (replete with multimillion-dollar Brando cameo) to Clark Kent's youth in Norman Rockwell-esque Kansas establishes a suitably grand tone to the Metropolis bound action. The movie sees Superman squaring off against Lex Luthor (a campy Hackman), whose [admittedly thin] plot of destroying California to facilitate land-fraud leads to all manner of super-heroics.

Reeve proved a casting dream, delivering a measured, mannered portrayal that, as Superman, never once succumbs to the all-too-easy campy histrionics, while proving an adept light-comedian as the klutzy Clark Kent. As Lois Lane, Margot Kidder showcases an appealing mixture of feistiness and doe-eyed romance, resulting in memorable chemistry in the spectacular helicopter rescue and, especially, their cloud-bound first-date.

Yet, above all, the film's revolutionary flying effects of perspective-based back screens and wire work proved an unqualified success aided by Reeve's believable performance and, while obviously dated now, still makes for stirring, exciting fare as Superman chases a ballistic missile.

Compared to the despicable mess that was "Batman and Robin", this remains a perfectly captured fantasy spectacle, back in the days when the creative process wasn't muddied by the fickle demands of toy companies.

Read reviews of "Superman II", "Superman III", and "Superman IV: The Quest for Peace".



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