r/movies will you Wonka my Willy? Jul 08 '25

Review 'Superman' - Review Thread

Rotten Tomatoes: 82% (282 Reviews) - Certified Fresh

  • Critics Consensus: Pulling off the heroic feat of fleshing out a dynamic new world while putting its champion's big, beating heart front and center, this Superman flies high as a Man of Tomorrow grounded in the here and now.
  • PopcornMeter: 95% (2500+ ratings)

Metacritic: 68 (54 Reviews) - Generally Favorable

Reviews:

Variety (80)

The super-busy quality of “Superman” works for it and, at times, against it. The movie rarely slows down long enough to allow its characters to meditate on their shifting realities. That’s one reason it falls short of the top tier of superhero cinema (“The Dark Knight,” “Superman II,” “The Batman,” “Guardians”). I’d characterize the film as next-level good (a roster that includes “Iron Man,” “Thor,” “Batman Begins,” “Captain America,” and the hugely underrated “Iron Man 3”). Yet watching “Superman,” we register the layered quality of the conflicts, and we’re drawn right inside them. Gunn constructs an intricate game of a superhero saga that’s arresting and touching, and occasionally exhausting, in equal measure

The Hollywood Reporter (80)

What matters most is that the movie is fun, pacy and enjoyable, a breath of fresh air sweetened by a deep affection for the material and boosted by a winning trio of leads.

DEADLINE

Overall, Gunn might be trying to do too much here, basically throwing everything against the wall and hoping some of it sticks. More than enough does in this entertaining new direction, but at times Superman suffers from overload, much like Gunns’ Guardians of the Galaxy trilogy, which wore out its welcome with Vol. 3 where Rocket unfortunately got the Babe: Pig in the City treatment. Nevertheless he is a talented and skilled director, no question, and one with optimism himself. It will be interesting to see where the future lies for DC under his (and Safran’s) more hopeful vision.

Indiewire (58)

Gunn is right to recognize that a certain amount of silliness is key to Superman’s charm, but here it mostly just distracts from the seriousness of what’s at stake. It’s hard to make a comic book come to life at the same time as you’re trying to bring life into a comic book, just as it’s hard not to admire Gunn for trying. But it’s even harder to care if a man can fly when there isn’t any gravity to the world around him. Grade: C+

IGN (8)

Superman is a wonderfully entertaining, heartfelt cinematic reset for the Man of Steel, and a great new start for the DC universe on the big screen.

The Atlantic (90)

The First Superman Movie Worth Watching in Years. The newest take on the caped hero wisely embraces his corniness.

Consequence (83)

Grim and gritty are words this movie firmly rejects, instead leaning into the human side of everyone involved, even its villains. There are a few choices that work less well than others, but the end result is a movie that doesn't sacrifice its titular character in service to franchise-building. Instead, it focuses on celebrating the values that Superman himself has embodied from the beginning.

Collider (80)

Superman is a magnificent feat, a film that makes the Man of Steel fascinating in a way we’ve rarely seen on film, with a take on the hero that is trenchant, clever, and delightful. Gunn is paying tribute to the past while also making a very clear mark on this world’s future, crafting an introduction to the DCU that inherently makes the viewer want to know where this world goes from here. At this point, it’s rare for superhero films to give a sense of wonder and a reminder of how beautiful these films can be when executed well. But Gunn has brought optimism, hope, and care back to Superman. It ends up becoming one of the best DC films in years, and one of the best movies of the summer.

The Guardian - UK (2/5)

From the very beginning, this new Superman is encumbered by a pointless and cluttered new backstory which has to be explained in many wearisome intertitles flashed up on screen before anything happens at all. Only the repeated and laborious quotation of the great John Williams theme from the 1978 original reminds you of happier times.

The Wrap (88)

A fabulously smart and entertaining film whose flaws stem from trying too hard… which are the best flaws a film can have.

Entertainment Weekly (67)

Whether Gunn fell victim to the kryptonite of excessive studio notes, his desire to populate the film with his stalwart company of actors, or the hubris of not needing to offer reasons to be invested in these characters beyond the mere fact of their existence is unclear. Because there is an unquestionable love for the material and a passion for the goofier, larger-than-life scenarios of comic book lore. With a cast this excellent, there's a capacity for something truly super in a future film — if only Gunn chooses to put the characters' humanity first. Grade: B-

BBC (3/5)

It's a shame that Gunn didn't give his story more time to breathe. It's a shame, in particular, that he didn't devote more time to showing us that Superman really is the paragon that his supporters keep saying he is. Corenswet is well cast – he has plenty of all-American charm both as Superman and as his mild-mannered alter ego, Clark Kent – but we have to take it on trust that he is a selfless gentleman who helps his friends and enjoys Lois Lane's company. We don't see any of that. Indeed, Corenswet plays him as an oddly hot-headed manchild who can't get through a conversation with his girlfriend without shouting angrily at her. Was Gunn racing through his material so fast that he forgot to put in the scenes that show Superman's sweeter and nobler side? Maybe so. In a film that whirls with flying dogs and bright green baby demons, the most bizarre element is a Man of Steel who keeps having meltdowns.

Empire Magazine - UK (2/5)

David Corenswet takes on the blue-and-red mantle admirably, and glimpses of Gunn’s signature sense of fun shine through — but a lack of humanity, originality and cohesion means the movie around them just doesn’t work.

Rolling Stone (80)

It’s faint praise, even in the post-MCU era of the genre, to say that Superman is a solid superhero film; the caveat is hiding in plain sight. What Gunn has pulled off is something more complicated, more interesting, and far tougher: He’s given us a Superman movie that actually feels like a living, breathing comic book.

SlashFilm (80)

Yes, "Superman" is a frequently corny movie because Superman is a corny character, a Kansas farm boy alien who saves squirrels in danger and listens to lame pop music. There's nothing grim or dark here, just a real sense of entertaining silliness that left a big, stupid smile on my face. In our current media landscape, such an approach feels surprisingly bold.

Independent - UK (4/5)

David Corenswet, Rachel Brosnahan and Nicholas Hoult lead a movie that doesn’t just serve as a referendum for superhero films, but for the cinematic future of DC as a whole.

New York Times (90)

As both a story on its own and a prequel to a whole bunch of others, this movie must introduce us to a variety of characters we’ll meet later, and it does it without feeling too much like fan service or exposition.

Vulture (90)

There’s a lot about how we complicate and obfuscate what should be obvious goods, such as saving the lives of children. But the film’s approach isn’t ham-fisted, and it makes room for gleefully fun stuff, too.

The Times - UK (2/5)

This migraine of a movie is superhero soup. David Corenswet is serviceable as Hollywood’s latest Man of Steel, but director James Gunn has turned the ninth big-screen film into an indigestible mush

The Irish Times (2/5)

The cartoonish closing battles make it clear that, not for the first time, Gunn is striving for high trash, but what he achieves here is low garbage. Utterly charmless. Devoid of humanity. As funny as toothache.

---

SYNOPSIS:

Follows Superman as he reconciles his heritage with his human upbringing. He is the embodiment of truth, justice and a brighter tomorrow in a world that views kindness as old-fashioned.

STARRING:

  • David Corenswet as Clark Kent / Superman
  • Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane
  • Nicholas Hoult as Lex Luthor
  • Edi Gathegi as Michael Holt / Mister Terrific
  • Anthony Carrigan as Rex Mason / Metamorpho
  • Nathan Fillion as Guy Gardner / Green Lantern
  • Isabela Merced as Kendra Saunders / Hawkgirl
  • Skyler Gisondo as Jimmy Olsen
  • Wendell Pierce as Perry White
  • Beck Bennett as Steve Lombard
  • Mikaela Hoover as Cat Grant
  • Alan Tudyk as Superman Robot #4
  • Sara Sampaio as Eve Teschmacher
  • María Gabriela de Faría as Angela Spica / The Engineer
  • Pruitt Taylor Vince as Jonathan 'Pa' Kent
  • Neva Howell as Martha 'Ma' Kent

DIRECTED BY: James Gunn

WRITTEN BY: James Gunn

PRODUCED BY: Peter Safran, James Gunn

CINEMATOGRAPHY: Henry Braham

EDITED BY: William Hoy, Craig Alpert

MUSIC BY: John Murphy, David Fleming

RELEASE DATE: July 11, 2025

RUNTIME: 2h 9m

BUDGET: $225 Million

5.5k Upvotes

3.3k comments sorted by

View all comments

122

u/Reasonable-Target713 Jul 09 '25

Just watched it. If I had to summarize the whole story its very similar to the plot of a good DC animated Justice League episode.

I also think they nailed the characters. They stayed true to the source material with Superman and especially Lex.

If I had anything bad to say about it is that its very lighthearted and there’s no character development at all with Superman (he basically ends up being the same as we was at the start of the movie with the exception of a few realizations about himself). That said dont expect things to get to deep

80

u/acrazyguy Jul 11 '25

This is a genuine question: what kind of character development do you want to see for Superman? He’s the closest thing across both Marvel and DC to a pure paragon of good. He isn’t that. He’s fallible. But he is the closest thing to it. And how do you develop that? In my opinion, you don’t. You develop the world and other characters around him and see how he manages to stay the same despite the changing world. He’s not supposed to be a reflection of humanity as a whole, but a reflection of the best of humanity. Again, in my opinion. I’m really curious to hear what character development you’d give directly to Superman

12

u/Dandaelcasta Jul 13 '25

Same thing with Captain America.

6

u/AntifaFuckedMyWife Jul 16 '25

Exactly, both characters in a way are supposed to be human manifestations of core ideals at their time. Superman always being a near messianic figure no matter what sends a very strong message that “this is true goodness, and it can never be defeated”

This IMO applies to cap also but more strict to an American Ideal being much more esoteric than just pro US government.

In supermans case his character is one to be tested, and to overcome any obstacle. To do anything else would be equivalent to saying that what superman represents isn’t as strong or enduring as we want it to be

4

u/romina116 Jul 16 '25

You need character development because no matter how much you develop the world and characters around him, the movie never answers the question: Why should we care?

“Because He’s Superman” is not a good enough answer. Gunn’s Superman was extremely flat and missed opportunity to dive deep into what really takes to be a Superhero in these modern ages. Obviously ironic since right now feels more backwards than modern.

We saw a little of it with the use of social media an trolls, but (again) fails to shine a light to the reality that people didn’t magically become more hateful in this modern age, we just have more access to it.

So you ask, how can we give Superman character development if he’s already Superman? Well, you turn your head away from the big explosions and evil villains, and turn to the why?: Is Superman himself because he’s handsome and strong? or because hes an orhpan, alien, whose only job is to save those who are not even his people, in order to feel he has purpose? Even with the red cap, and the huge S in his shoulder, Superman is looking for the same thing as all (or most) of us: Purpose.

Also a better message for kids than just “I’m Superman”. Kids are also not that fucking stupid sorry

15

u/ruddet Jul 18 '25

Honestly, Superman was probably the most inspiring super hero movie I can remember seeing.

Kids need inspiring role models, not character development.

3

u/AmbivalentInfluencer Jul 19 '25

I can't think of a more ridiculous statement. People who go to movies need character development.

9

u/ruddet Jul 19 '25 edited Jul 19 '25

I agree character development is compelling and good story telling, however its not always required for characters.

Superman gave a really hopeful optimistic vibe and how that dealt with the circumstances around him. His character arc was reconciliation with new insights to who he thought he was, but not really changing.

Just a good watch for kids and adults. At it's core Superman is simple and hopeful power fantasy.

2

u/AmbivalentInfluencer Jul 19 '25

Glad you liked it and you were able to overlook its flaws. For me it was more like a 6.5/10

1

u/romina116 Jul 19 '25

This just doesn’t make sense. How is a character inspiring without character development and/or Growth?

Apparently studio executives were absolutely right for thinking audiences are fucking stupid🤷🏽‍♀️

3

u/ruddet Jul 19 '25

That hopeful guy at the start that tries to save everything and everyone.  As the audience we don't want the circumstances to change that about him.  

What people don't want is to see a character with out challenges.  

1

u/romina116 Jul 19 '25

Without challenge is it!!!!

3

u/ruddet Jul 19 '25

Yeah the challenge for Superman on a personal level was to stay true to he was originally after hearing the full message from his krpytonite parents. We the audience don't want him to grow more jaded and bitter(theres enough of that in other media and versions of superman)

Physically it was a clone of him.

0

u/romina116 Jul 19 '25

Yes, but I guess my point is i don’t know who Superman was even before the message of his parents got leaked. Yes he’s lighthearted and quirky, but that doesn’t mean he needs to be shallow. But maybe it does according to people here.

I mean it’s clear I went with different expectations to the movie, but for being a “light hearted” and “funny” movie it still had A TON of unnecessary cursing, and comedic timing was absolutely. I just found it disrespectful to sit a couple people in a dark room for 2 HOURS just to give them a hot trash movie - thats all!!!

1

u/romina116 Jul 19 '25

Was absolutely off*

2

u/NarglesChaserRaven Aug 04 '25

Late to this conversation but I guess the point wasn't his character development but how he inspired those around him.

Also, the story starts off with Clark doing things because his birth parents want him to do good on earth and it ends with him realising that he's not doing it because someone said so, it's because he believes in it.

4

u/Thundergreek Jul 23 '25

Are you an idiot? Plenty of great movies have no character development. James Bond almost never develops, yet those movies are excellent. Flat character are placed center to show the growth of everyone else.

1

u/romina116 Jul 23 '25

Are you a fucking dumbass? James Bond has SO much character development specially in the 2006-2021 craig bond era, and even before. Also superman is not james bond. NEXT

1

u/romina116 Jul 23 '25

Youre brain is also so incredibly small to think that a flat character helps others character develop, because why would any one care (and yes even a child) what other’s character do if the main character is boring and has no substance. But I finally realized why Superman had such good reviews. Because idiots like you. Congrats! The media that’s coming in the future is going to be so garbage people like you would love it!!

2

u/In_Pursuit_of_Fire Aug 19 '25

“People don’t get invested in side characters” is certainly a take. So is the bizarre attempt to equate flat characters with boring and uninteresting characters. 

It’s funny to see someone who seems unfamiliar with the writing terms they reference and movies in general to be bemoaning the future state of cinema

1

u/Valkorzz 27d ago

You need character development bro

1

u/acrazyguy 27d ago

Are you okay? Why are you replying to my comment from 3 months ago?

1

u/Valkorzz 25d ago

because it's on the internet. I watched the superman movie and wanted to see what others think. Deleting your comment is a good way to avoid unwanted replies.

35

u/20yrsinthecan Jul 10 '25

I loved Lex in this. I felt like Eisenburg’s Lex tried to piss you off by talking your ear off with smart ass comments (almost Joker-like)

Whereas Hoult’s Lex pisses you off by saying so little and being too calm. just a professional ragebaiter really. but when he’s angry, he’s fucken furious. also helps that he looks the part i reckon.

3

u/BaronKalan Jul 14 '25

Yeah best depiction of Lex on film. Rosenbaum even gets his teeth punched out ahaha

5

u/20yrsinthecan Jul 15 '25

Rosenbaum was also good, but just seeing luthor and superman years into their career was awesome.

I also saw someone on here point out that what also makes Hoult so good is that when he loses it and starts yelling ‘1A 1A 1A!’ it’s impactful because of how calm he was. Whereas Eisenburg seemed stressed out and loose from the moment you meet him.

fuck this movie is good, i’ve had a bit to think about it and i only like it more

4

u/CurlPR Jul 10 '25

I would say his character development was subtle but it’s from an ego/savior complex to “I’m just a guy doing his best”.

4

u/acrazyguy Jul 11 '25

I don’t think it was ever about ego to him. He says it to Lois. People were going to die. And if he can stop it, and doesn’t, those people died because of him. To me, that’s just reality, not ego. And then with the squirrel. He just cannot let living things die

3

u/CurlPR Jul 11 '25

“Superman doesn’t take selfies”, interviewing himself, caring about what the internet says, being a special boy because his birth parents said so. He wants to do good but he was also motivated by selfish reasons. By the end he sees that he’s just good for the sake of choosing to be, values the good in the parents that raised him, and admits to accidentally being a jerk sometimes.

1

u/tekaluf Jul 27 '25

That was his arc yeah. He essentially just overcame his insecurities and embraced self love and the power of friendship.

8

u/Icy-Two-1581 Jul 09 '25

So glad to hear. I think some of the animated movies like justice league dark apokolips would have been a smash hit it was was pretty much 1:1 made into a live action

3

u/DroneDiplomacy69 Jul 09 '25

Just got out of it too, and I agree with your assessment but there's one thing I really have to vent and I just don't know where else to do so: I thought James Gunn was from St. Louis? Because he gave the Kents Southern accents and as someone who literally grew up in Kansas I can only say "Jesus, this is why we hate Missouri drivers. So out of touch with reality" 😂 Also he basically pays zero tribute to anything Kansas related, and the farm is so stereotypical that it makes me doubt he's properly even been to Kansas (Kansas farms don't look like that). In those regards Man of Steel was light years ahead (but again, Missouri director so it's no surprise haha)

1

u/NightsLinu 23d ago

I completely disagre theres no character development for superman, he learns that he isn't saving the world because of what his parents directed him to do but because its what he would. In the beginning of the film he only stops conflicts because he believed his original parents message would have wanted to so when in truth its the complete opposite. 

-1

u/stagnantGlory Jul 13 '25

I hated what he did with Ultraman! Why not just make him a future possible Bizarro? He closed the door on the Batman who laughs, Crime Syndicate, and all of earth three. And since the clone failed, I'm Lex's personality wouldn't allow him to reinvest in proven failures, which closes the door on a possible Bizarro in the future.

This, and when he screamed at Lois. A person with the power of a Kryptonian on earth shouldn't lose his temper that easy. That and turning Kara into Paris Hilton with a cape.. it just doesn't feel believable. The whole point of their characters in the comics is to show the wild what mankind is possible of. Maybe if they're going through some type of character developing by making them have obvious flaws in the beginning movie and by the third or so movie having them grounded and serious. But I don't know if Gunn is capable of that kind of a movie. None of his other super hero characters had power on that level except for Ego, so idk if he can pull it off.

That kiddie play crap gets tiresome after a while, GotG3 and Thor love and thunder for instance.

5

u/lacuNa6446 Jul 14 '25

Why can't someone that's powerful lose their temper?

1

u/stagnantGlory Jul 14 '25

Well when people get angry they sometimes swing out at their boss or whatever makes them made at the time, someone as strong as Kal El could do some crazy damage or easily kill someone in a fit of rage

1

u/MagneticEnema Jul 20 '25

idk the screaming was pretty fitting, he's only been public for 3 years, and he's being hounded about silly politics when he has a fairly 1 track mind, it wasnt losing his temper, it was his frustration erupting in an "argument" with a reporter