Hindustan Times (Patna) - Hindustan Times (Patna) - Live

NEED SAVING? WAIT A MIN... FOR SUPERMAN

No one in the known universe is like Clark Kent’s alter ego. We Earthlings are so lucky that Krypton blew up and we got him 80 years ago

- Sanchita Guha sanchita.guha@htlive.com

Do you… eat?” asked Lois Lane to Superman when he lightly dropped on her terrace for their sort-of-date in the first big-ticket movie, released in 1978. That question may have already been answered for comic book buffs, because Superman was introduced to the world some four decades earlier, on April 18, 1938. The alien from the destroyed planet Krypton, created by schoolmate­s and nerds Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, was a runaway success from the first issue. Yet, it’s Hollywood that has made Superman the truly universal hero he is today.

He has been played on the big screen in any significan­t way by only three actors so far — Christophe­r Reeve, Brandon Routh, Henry Cavill — proving how difficult it is to find the right man of steel among a bunch of mere mortals.

Director Richard Donner’s Superman, starring Reeve, was the second-biggest blockbuste­r of that year, earning nearly six times its budget of $55 million, the most expensive film until then. (It was beaten to the top spot only by another classic: the musical Grease, starring John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John.) Reeve fronted four Superman movies, born to own the role with his chiselled face, incredible blue eyes, and a physique that didn’t need any help from the costume.

His 1995 riding accident and paralysis took the steam out of the franchise. There were Superman comics, TV shows, and ideas for smaller films. But fans had to wait until 2006 for a proper reboot, starring Routh in Superman Returns, directed by Bryan Singer of X-Men fame. In 2013, the franchise went back to the origin story with Man of Steel, and Cavill has since then worn the red cape in several films.

Superman’s destiny is to save humans; and he does so spectacula­rly. The first comic book cover had him holding a car above his head, and a puny human cowering on the ground. That stance has been repeated a countless number of times in the films. The motif remains: there’s a weight that no one else can lift, and the world needs Superman. And to think that Jerry and Joe had initially imagined him as a supervilla­in! Where would Earthlings be without Superman?

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India