SUPERMAN (PG)
D: Richard Donner
Warner/Salkind (Pierre Spengler)
US/UK 1978
142 mins
Science Fiction/Adventure
W: Mario Puzo, David Newman, Robert Benton & Leslie
Newman [based on the comic book created by Jerry Siegel & Joe Shuster]
DP: Geoffrey Unsworth
Ed: Stuart Baird
Mus: John Williams
PD: John Barry
Cos: Yvonne Blake
Christopher Reeve (Clark Kent / Superman),
Marlon Brando (Jor-El), Margot Kidder (Lois Lane), Gene Hackman (Lex Luthor), Ned Beatty (Otis), Jackie Cooper (Perry White), Valerie Perrine (Eve
Teschmacher), Jeff East (Young Clark Kent), Glenn Ford (Pa Kent)
You will believe a man can fly in this adaptation of the
long-running comic book adventures, filmed on a vast, epic scale by director Richard Donner.
Beginning with the destruction of his home planet of
Krypton, an alien child is placed in a portal which hurtles him towards Earth. The child is taken in by an old couple who live on a small Kansas farm and raise him as their own. As an older
teenager, he discovers the truth about his origins and becomes Superman, a seemingly indestructible superhuman who fights crime and cleans up Metropolis (presented here as NYC) while his
alter-ego, Clark Kent, works as a journalist for the Daily Planet and vies for the attentions of his love interest, Lois Lane.
The film also sees the introduction of Superman's most
popular villain, Lex Luthor, an unscrupulous real estate magnate who plans to destroy California so his land in the Mojave desert becomes a priceless commodity.
At 142 minutes, the length pushes at the boundaries and
some of the visual effects appear a little dated by modern standards, Superman became a milestone of cinematic achievement, not only in the field of optical effects, but also paving the way
for a subgenre which hadn't been taken in any seriousness in comic book film adaptations in years prior. Before this film set down the marker, superhero and comic book vehicles were done on
the cheap, usually rather campy and tacky in the vein of the 1960's Batman television series.
The casting choices are perfect, especially Christopher
Reeve, who unfortunately couldn't again escape from the typecast, despite being a fine actor in his own right. Margot Kidder is also excellent as the spunky love interest, Lois Lane, giving
the character more than just one dimension of a regular damsel in distress.
Much was scrutinised in the casting choice of Marlon
Brando, who received a massive $3m payout and top billing for a mere ten minute performance. He doesn't really do anything any other actor could do, but with his name atop the credits,
it was a statement that this was a film to be taken seriously.
For me, this is the father of all superhero
movies. The credit sequence alone is the stuff of legend, bursting to life with John Williams energetic, iconic score.
8/10