Daily Southtown (Sunday)

CATCH A CLASSIC

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Warner Bros.

100th Anniversar­y: The Superhero Era Begins TCM, beginning at 7 p.m.

Marvel may rule the big-screen superhero game nowadays, but in the late 1970s and ’80s, when the modern form of the comic-book feature film was being introduced, it was DC Comics — which is under the Warner umbrella — that dominated the box office. That came largely through the two Warner Bros. blockbuste­rs, starring DC’s two most popular characters, that are airing tonight as part of Turner Classic Movies’ monthlong celebratio­n of the studio’s centennial. Up first, though, there is a cartoon:

director Chuck Jones’ classic 1953 Merrie Melodies animated short Duck Dodgers in the 24½th Century, starring Daffy Duck, Porky Pig and Marvin the Martian. Then, the evening’s comic-book-themed double feature takes off with Superman (1978), in which Christophe­r Reeve cemented himself as the quintessen­tial big-screen Man of Steel. Several elements of the film — Reeve’s interplay with Margot Kidder as Lois Lane, director Richard Donner’s deft ability to re-create the colorful feel of a comic book without descending into camp, visual effects that earned a Special Achievemen­t Oscar and followed through on the film’s tag line that “You’ll believe a man can fly,” and John Williams’ rousing, Oscar-nominated musical score — combine to give this production an enduring magic that subsequent Superman films have not been able to duplicate. Following that is Tim Burton’s 1989 blockbuste­r

Batman (pictured). Just as Superman has forever linked Reeve with his screen character in the minds of many, so, too, did this film make Michael Keaton the favorite bigscreen Batman/Bruce Wayne to a lot of people, as unlikely as that might have seemed before the film was released. Likewise, Jack Nicholson’s brilliantl­y crazed and iconic performanc­e as Jack Napier/Joker has cast a long shadow over other actors who have since portrayed that legendary supervilla­in.

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WARNER BROS.

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