• The VOIDRUNNER'S CODEX is coming! Explore new worlds, fight oppressive empires, fend off fearsome aliens, and wield deadly psionics with this comprehensive boxed set expansion for 5E and A5E!

New Superman Officially Named!

Wolv0rine

First Post
I don't believe no one's posted this already...

(From Entertainment News from E! Online)

Look, Up in the Sky: Brandon Routh!
Fri Oct 22, 6:30 PM ET
By Joal Ryan

Earth, your new Superman has landed.


Brandon Routh, a 25-year-old actor of minor note and credits, was officially named Friday as the big screen's next Man of Steel.
((Pic: http://us.news1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/eo/20041024/thumb.c4863d6076ba7cb518bb927793a8fa45))

The announcement by Warner Bros. was more formality than revelation. Routh's secret identity was blown days ago by the previously unheralded movie-scoop Website LatinoReview.com.


In a statement, director Bryan Singer said it was always his intention to cast an unknown in the iconic superhero role, last held by the late Christopher Reeve.


"Brandon is an extremely fine actor who possesses the physical qualifications of Clark Kent/Superman," Singer said of the 6-foot-2 Iowan. "But he also embodies the legacy and history of this character in a way that makes me certain he's the right choice."


Routh will go before the cameras early next year when production begins in Australia. Though billed across the Web as Superman Returns, Superman Reborn or Superman Lives, the movie remains untitled.


Superman (Whatever It's Called) is slated for a summer 2006 release.


The film will be only Routh's second. He recently completed a supporting role in the thriller Deadly. That movie, starring Laura Prepon, is to be released next year.


Prime-time viewers have seen Routh, if they paid attention, in episodes of Will & Grace, Gilmore Girls and Cold Case. Daytime soap fans have seen Routh, albeit briefly, on ABC's One Life to Live.


Routh is as obscure as Reeve was when the latter snagged the title role in 1978's Superman--The Movie. Like Routh, Reeve was young (24 at the time he was cast), a soap alum (Love of Life) and game for making his first impression on audiences in blue tights.


In an interview published in the Chicago Sun-Times this week, screenwriter Dan Harris, who wrote the new movie with Michael Dougherty, said the Superman screen tests made by more established actors never quite worked.


"The biggest problems is that the known actors bring the baggage of their own personas," Harris said.


Stars whose names were floated as possible Supermen in recent years included (in alphabetical order): Jason Behr (news), Hayden Christensen (news), Brendan Fraser (news), Jake Gyllenhaal (news), Josh Hartnett (news), Asthon Kutcher and Paul Walker.


Oscar winner Nicolas Cage (news) was the highest profile almost-Superman--just weeks away from suiting up in 1998 when Warners pulled the plug on the production then headed by Tim Burton.


Soap actor Matthew Bomer was the Brandon Routh of last year--perhaps just weeks away from suiting up when Warners reportedly nixed then director Brett Ratner's choice as too low profile.


The way Harris described his screenplay in the Sun-Times a new Superman, and the new movie to go with him, may have been worth the wait. (It's been 17 years since the Reeve era petered out; it's been nearly 10 years since Warners began its quest to revive the franchise.)


Harris said the new movie will not rehash the origin legend from the '78 Superman or the current WB series Smallville, instead taking its jumping-off point from 1980's Superman II (and ignoring the two lesser Reeve sequels, 1983's Superman III and 1987's Superman IV: The Quest for Peace).





"[Superman] will begin in his late 20s," Harris said in the Sun-Times. "He lost his powers in Superman II and now he has the powers back. But something has happened because he's been away for a long time."

Now that he's back, Routh becomes the fifth actor to inherit the cape and "S" emblem after Reeve, Kirk Alyn, who starred in the Superman movie serial of the 1940s, and George Reeves, another Iowan who patrolled Metropolis in the 1950s TV series, The Adventures of Superman, and Dean Cain (news) of ABC's 1993-97 series Lois & Clark. (Smallville's Tom Welling only plays a Superman-in-training.)

With Routh installed as Superman and, in turn, Clark Kent, speculation has turned to which actress will be entrusted with Lois Lane's Daily Planet notepad.

Cinescape.com said this week that six actresses, including The O.C.'s Mischa Barton (news), Star Wars' Natalie Portman and Felicity's Keri Russell, reportedly were on Singer's list.

A list that just got one name--and one key job--shorter.

*****

Not sure what I think of the choice, myself. Something doesn't look quite right, but it might just be the Publicity Pic they used.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Chun-tzu

First Post
Huh. My favorite comic and movie sites haven't even picked this up yet. Can't have been a very public press release. Although, it leaked a while ago, so maybe that's why they've been slow to pick up the confirmation.

I wonder how Mark Millar (comic book writer) is going to take it. He swore up and down his inside sources had confirmed Jim Caviezel (Passion of Christ) was the next Superman. He even bet Harry Knowles of Ain't It Cool News $1000 US (donated to charity) that Caviezel was the man. But I think Singer's got the right idea, going with someone low profile.
 

Truth Seeker

Adventurer
Actually, it was posted already, in the News Section, 10.18.04, but it was placed with another news event.

And then it reposted again(a stand alone) by Morrus, the day after.
 

Klaus

First Post
Maybe this picture is better:

brandon_routh2.jpg


Casting rumors hint at Kevin Spacey (who was directed by Bryan Singer in The Usual Suspects) landing the role of Lex Luthor.
 

John Crichton

First Post
Good casting choice so far, in my limited opinion.

If Spacey is cast as Luthor this could be one of the best movies of the year (2006) rather than just a really good superhero film. He can really steal a scene. And Lex needs to be larger than life, even moreso that Supes, IMO.
 

Wolv0rine

First Post
Truth Seeker said:
Actually, it was posted already, in the News Section, 10.18.04, but it was placed with another news event.

And then it reposted again(a stand alone) by Morrus, the day after.

Hmm, sorry for re-posting news then. I scanned this forum for a page or two and didn't see anything about it, so I figured maybe it hadn't been noticed yet.

That picture's a bit better, Klaus. I do hope the boy pumps it up a bit before donning the blue & reds, though. He's in good shape, but not yet in Superman shape.

Hmm, Spacey'd be a pretty cool Luthor.

The part I really like is they're going to pick up from Superman II, and not start it all over from scratch. That announcement, so close after Christopher Reeve's death, seems almost like a tribute.
 

Klaus

First Post
Bryan Singer has said that the costume will be "classic" but will take advantage of the advance in technology since the 70s. For one thing, the costume will be cleverly shaded to make the actor seem stronger than he really is (much like it was done with Spiderman).

And don't worry. Christopher Reeve wasn't exactly buff when he auditioned for the part of Supes. He had wide shoulders (from swimming), but had to pump serious iron to have muscles that would show up through spandex.

I am very pleased with Routh's casting, visually. He has the neck and shoulders to pull the part.
 

Wolv0rine

First Post
Too true. And even with all the pumping-up, Reeve still looked kind of puny in the spandex. It just smoothed out the muscle tone he built up (and tall men have a lot of trouble looking buff).

Routh does have the neck/shoulders, and his hair's even actually black. :p Although possibly one of the best qualities I can think of offhand is that he could conveivably pass for an older version of Tom Welling from Smallville (which is always nice, considering that Smallville is still running, and such synchronicity is always nice in my book).

I just hope that they don't give us Kevin Spacey playing Gene Hackman's Luthor. I hated Gene Hackman's Luthor. Not all his fault, he didn't write the part, or direct it. But it just semed to make a fool of one of the greatest comic villains.
 


Xath

Moder-gator
I think they have to pick an unknown for Superman. Every actor knows of the Superman curse; alot of bigwigs would probably pass up the part.
 

Remove ads

Top