Information about Superman Ii

Superman II

Original movie poster
Directed byRichard Lester
Richard Donner
(uncredited)
Produced byIlya Salkind
Pierre Spengler
Written byComic Book:
Jerry Siegel
Joe Shuster
Story:
Mario Puzo
Screenplay:
Mario Puzo
David Newman
Leslie Newman
Creative Consultant:
Tom Mankiewicz
StarringGene Hackman
Christopher Reeve
Ned Beatty
Jackie Cooper
Margot Kidder
Sarah Douglas
Jack O'Halloran
E. G. Marshall
Terence Stamp
Music byKen Thorne
John Williams
(Themes)
CinematographyRobert Paynter
(Lester footage)
Geoffrey Unsworth
(Donner footage)
Editing byJohn Victor-Smith
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date(s) December 4, 1980
June 19, 1981
Running time127 min.
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget$54,000,000
Preceded bySuperman
Followed bySuperman III|
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile


Superman II is the 1980 sequel to the 1978 superhero film Superman. It was the only Superman film to be filmed by two directors. For this reason the film is surrounded with controversy since original director Richard Donner had completed, by his estimation, roughly 75% of the movie in 1977 before being taken off the project. Many of the scenes shot by second director Richard Lester (who had been an uncredited producer on the first film) in 1979 are refilmed Donner sequences. It was released in Europe and Australia in late 1980 but not in the United States until June 1981.

According to statements by Donner, roughly 25% of the theatrical cut of Superman II contains footage he shot, including all of Gene Hackman's scenes. In 1984, when Superman II premiered on television, 24 minutes were re-inserted into the film (17 mins in US ABC TV). Much of the extra footage was directed by Richard Donner. A brand new re-cut of the film, restoring as much of Donner's original conception as possible, titled , was released in November 2006.

Taglines:
  • The three outlaws from Krypton descend to Earth to confront the Man of Steel in a cosmic battle for world supremacy.
  • The adventure continues.
  • The Man of Steel meets his match!
  • The Man of Steel is back, and better than ever!

Plot

The film begins with a prologue in which General Zod and his co-conspirators, Ursa and Non, are banished to the Phantom Zone by the Kryptonian elders as punishment for attempting to establish a dictatorship to rule Krypton. The story then moves forward to the present. Clark Kent learns from Perry White that Lois is in France, where terrorists have seized the Eiffel Tower and threatened to level the city with a hydrogen bomb contained in an elevator. While in the course of rescuing Lois, the bomb is activated and Superman throws the elevator out of the atmosphere and into deep space, where it explodes. The shockwaves shatter the crystalline conduit into the Phantom Zone, now floating near Earth, and Zod, Non, and Ursa are released. Lex Luthor, meanwhile, has escaped prison with Miss Teschmacher's help, leaving a hapless Otis behind. Luthor locates Superman's Arctic Fortress of Solitude, where he learns from a hologram about the three Kryptonian villains. Putting the pieces of the puzzle together, he hurries south, convinced his device has detected the three criminals' alpha wave signatures.
Enlarge picture
Superman and Lois Lane at the Fortress of Solitude.
Clark and Lois are on assignment in Niagara Falls, Ontario, investigating what Perry calls a "honeymoon racket." Superman rescues a boy who falls over the railing, then flies behind a hot dog stand, emerging as Clark. Lois suddenly decides it is far too convenient that Clark disappears every time Superman makes an appearance, and that Superman just happened to be right on hand to save that little boy. She tries to prove it by jumping into the Niagara River, screaming for Superman to save her. Clark does not change his identity and remains his nerdy self, feigning panic. However, unbeknownst to Lois, he uses his heat vision to sever a tree branch for Lois to use to stay afloat. After Lois gets herself to shore, she scolds herself for putting herself in danger and actually believing Superman could be such a weakling like Clark. However, later in their hotel room, Clark's powers are revealed when he quickly retrieves his fallen glasses from the fireplace with his bare hands. Seeing that he is unscathed, Lois realizes the truth. After some hesitation, Clark admits his secret identity and takes Lois to the Fortress of Solitude, showing her the crystals which created it and control its operations; Lois leaves the primary green crystal under her purse, outside the control panel. After a conversation with the hologram of his mother Lara about the consequences of being in love with a "mortal" (as Kal-El's Kryptonian body structure would not be able to impregnate Earth women), Superman agrees to give up his powers to begin a relationship with Lois despite warnings that the process is irreversible. The two retire to his bedchamber.

Meanwhile, the three Kryptonian criminals have devastated a joint NASA-Soviet moon expedition, killing three astronauts. They fly to Earth, which they believe is called "Planet Houston" (having overheard radio transmissions with Mission Control in Houston, Texas). They wreak havoc on a small town (East Houston, Idaho), easily defeating the U.S. military. After defacing Mount Rushmore, the trio attacks the White House, where Zod forces the President of the United States to kneel before him.

Returning from the Fortress of Solitude, the now-depowered Clark is beaten up in a diner by a bullying truck driver. His despondent mood worsens when, in horror, he watches the President announcing his abdication and Zod's now-supreme authority. The President suddenly pleads for Superman's help and Zod issues a challenge to Superman to face him. Realizing the danger posed to the world and the terrible mistake he made, Clark returns to the Fortress in search of a way to restore his lost powers. Arriving in the dark sanctum, he falls into despair, shouting for his father. He sees the green crystal glowing where Lois accidentally left it.

Meanwhile, General Zod and his cronies have grown bored with ruling the Earth, longing for a challenge. Lex Luthor pays them a visit in the Oval Office and negotiates a means to lure Superman to the villains by holding Lois hostage. He also reveals that Superman is the son of Jor-El, their imprisoner. They arrive at the Daily Planet offices and seize Lois, only to be interrupted by the arrival of Superman, his powers fully restored. A destructive battle ensues among the four Kryptonians as Superman struggles with the new experience of battling multiple enemies of his power level. During the battle, Ursa and Zod discover Superman's weakness, his concern for human life, and use this against him. Finally, Superman flees, seemingly in defeat. Luthor convinces the villains that they must pursue Superman to his Fortress.

At the Fortress of Solitude, Superman attempts to distract the villains with a hologram that creates multiple images of himself. However, after grappling with Zod, Ursa and Non threaten to tear Lois limb from limb, and Superman agrees to release Zod and capitulate to them to spare her life. Superman manipulates Luthor into tricking the criminals, counting on Luthor to double-cross him. Superman is forced into the same depowering chamber he used before, and the red light that drains super-powers is actually set loose on the Fortress. The three supervillains are drained of their powers, Lois and Luthor are unaffected, while Superman is safe inside the chamber. Superman feigns weakness and then crushes Zod's hand after seemingly accepting it in submission. Lois easily dispatches the now-powerless Ursa, and Non leaps towards Superman, only to find he can no longer fly. All three villains fall into the depths of Superman's fortress, apparently to their dooms.

Back in Metropolis, Superman uses a form of telepathy (a kiss) to erase the knowledge of his dual identity from Lois, returning them to their usual status quo. Later, Clark takes revenge on the customer who bullied him at the diner, who breaks his hand after attempting to punch the Man of Steel. Clark then shyly claims he has been lifting weights and pays the truckstop owner for the damages. The film closes with Superman restoring the American flag atop the White House and assuring the President that he will never again abandon his duty as Superman.

The film ends by stating that the series will continue in Superman III.

Cast

Actor Role
Christopher ReeveClark Kent / Superman
Gene HackmanLex Luthor
Ned BeattyOtis
Jackie CooperPerry White
Margot KidderLois Lane
Valerie PerrineEve Teschmacher
Marc McClureJimmy Olsen
Terence StampGeneral Zod
Sarah DouglasUrsa
Jack O'HalloranNon
Susannah YorkLara
Clifton JamesSheriff
E. G. MarshallThe President

Controversy and cult status

The neutrality of this section is disputed.
Please see the discussion on the talk page.
Off-screen problems hampered production of this movie: like other Salkind productions such as The Three Musketeers (1973) and The Four Musketeers (1974), this was filmed at the same time as the first Superman movie to be a direct sequel. However, Marlon Brando filed suit over his percentage of the first film's profits, so as a response, the Salkinds excised his scenes from the second film. Director Richard Donner argued with the producers over their attempts to make the film "more campy," in his opinion, which led to his removal and replacement on the project by Richard Lester. Following that, Gene Hackman declined to return for any reshoots by Lester, which cut down the number of scenes in which he appears in the final cut (or with a few scenes where a body double was obviously being used).
Enlarge picture
2006 DVD re-release.


Another reason behind Richard Donner's removal may have been that the Salkinds were upset that Donner went over their originally planned budget for the movie. Warner Brothers ended up getting more and more involved in the race to complete the film, allowing the studio to receive more profits from the film's box office take than the Salkinds had originally agreed to. With their power slipping away, Donner was unfortunately made the scapegoat.

Despite all the difficulties, and with only a few noticeable shifts in tone between the two directors' scenes (Lester's scenes tend to be more campy and humorous), it was noted by critics to be a remarkable and coherent film, highlighted by the movie's battle sequence between Superman and the three Phantom Zone prisoners on the streets of Metropolis. Scenes filmed by Donner include all the Gene Hackman footage, the moon sequences, the White House shots, Clark and the bully, and a lot of the footage of Zod, Ursa and Non arriving at the Daily Planet. Since the Lester footage was shot almost two years later, both Margot Kidder and Christopher Reeve's appearances look different between the Lester and Donner footage. Reeve appears less bulked up in Donner's sequences (filmed in 1977), as he was still gaining muscle for the part. Kidder also has dramatic changes throughout; in the montage of Lester/Donner material, shot inside the Daily Planet and the Fortress of Solitude near the movie's conclusion, her hairstyle, hair color, and even make-up are all inconsistent. Indeed, Kidder's physical appearance in the Lester footage is noticeably different; during the scenes shot for Donner she appears slender, whereas in the Lester footage she looks frail and gaunt.

In the years since the film's release, the controversy continues to be fueled, while the film itself has achieved cult status. In 1983, Alexander Salkind's production company pieced together an "Expanded International Cut" of the film for television using approximately 24 minutes of footage not shown in the theatrical release, some of which was original Richard Donner footage shot before Richard Lester became director. The "new" footage expanded on the film's many subplots, including a further explanation of the villains' task on Earth, Superman and Lois' romance and an alternate ending involving Lex Luthor, the three Kryptonian villains, and the final fate of the Fortress of Solitude. This 146-minute expanded version was released throughout Europe and Australia in the 1980s (the initial expanded U.S. ABC and Canadian CBC telecasts, though edited differently, were derived from the European/Australian TV edit).

In 2005, several Superman movie fans attempted to bring the film closer to Donner's original vision by creating their own professionally-made video restoration of the "International Cut" and offered free DVDs of it on one of the many Superman fan sites, but their efforts were thwarted by Warner Bros., who reportedly threatened legal action.

All four Superman films received Special or Deluxe Edition releases in 2006 coinciding with the release of Superman Returns. It was confirmed that Ilya Salkind has released Donner's footage for a separate Superman II disc and that Donner was involved in the project. According to an interview conducted by website supermanhomepage.com, Ilya confirmed that Time Warner now owns all of the footage shot for 1978's Superman, 1980's Superman II, 1983's Superman III, 1984's Supergirl and 1987's Superman IV: The Quest for Peace including distribution rights. SE restorationist Michael Thau worked on the project alongside Richard Donner and Tom Mankiewicz, who supervised the Superman II reconstruction. Despite some initial confusion, Thau confirmed that all the footage shot by Donner in 1977 was recovered and transferred from England. The new edition was released on November 28, 2006 and called . The new cut also features less than 20% footage filmed by replacement director Richard Lester.

Score

Main article: Superman music


As John Williams chose not to return to score the film due to obligations to other producers, Ken Thorne was commissioned to write the music upon Williams' recommendation. However, the score contains frequent excerpts from Williams' previous score to the first film. Thorne wrote minimal original material and adapted source music (such as Average White Band's "Pick Up The Pieces", which appears both in the diner in Idaho as well as during Clark's second encounter with Rocky, the bullying truck driver).

Trivia

  • Superman II was released in Europe and Australia (4 December 1980) before being released in the United States (19 June 1981).
  • The original script had the nuclear missile from Superman: The Movie releasing Zod and companions from the Phantom Zone, instead of the Eiffel Tower bomb. In the , the nuclear missile scene has been restored, and all scenes involving the Eiffel Tower plot were removed.
  • In the version of the film planned by Richard Donner, Superman flies around the Leaning Tower of Pisa at incredible super-speed, accidentally causing it to stand up straight. This was dropped by Richard Lester, but re-used in Superman III, where Evil Superman straightens the Tower of Pisa on purpose.
  • Some scenes from the Metropolis battle may have been shot and then cut: the destruction of the Washington Monument, the Statue of Liberty's arm being destroyed, melting of the Eiffel Tower, the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and Ursa's reshaping the faces on Mount Rushmore.
  • In one TV version, a U.S. "polar patrol" is shown picking up the three Kryptonians and Lex Luthor at the end of the film. Without this ending, it appears that Superman has let the Kryptonians die, though Superman has a strict code against killing and their deaths aren't necessary once they are depowered. Without this ending, it is still believed that Superman returns Luthor to prison, as he breaks out once again in Superman IV.The ending of this version also has Superman, with Lois standing beside him, destroy the Fortress of Solitude. The latter part of the scene can also be found on Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut, while the part where the police arrive is a deleted scene.
  • Superman also uses the rare "super-kiss" to make Lois forget he is Clark. While this was a real power Superman had in the comics, it was rarely used, and eventually removed.
  • During the fight scene inside the Fortress of Solitude, Superman uses his "S" symbol to subdue Non from a flying attack, temporarily encasing him inside a plastic film like substance.
  • Rhea Perlman and John Ratzenberger both make cameo appearances in the film. They would later appear on the Long running sitcom Cheers from 1982-1993.
  • Richard Donner briefly appears in a "walking cameo" in the film. In the sequence where the de-powered Clark and Lois are seen approaching the truck-stop diner by car, Donner appears walking "camera left" past the driver's side. He is wearing a light tan jacket and appears to be smoking a pipe.
  • In the scene where the young boy falls over the rail at Niagara Falls, as Superman is rescuing him, a woman's voice can be heard saying in a stereotypical New York/Jewish accent, "Of course he's Jewish." The creators of Superman, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, were both Jewish; as was Batman creator Bob Kane.
  • Selected premiere engagements of Superman II were presented in Megasound, a high-impact surround sound system similar to Sensurround.
  • In an episode of Family Guy, Peter remembers a scene in which Superman throws the crest from his chest, where Superman and Non discuss how it was only a minor inconvenience.
  • The idea, not the entire story point, of Superman & Lois having sex is in the back-story to Superman Returns.
  • After attacking the White House, Lex Luthor enters the Oval Office to make a deal with the Kryptonians. By the end of the scene, he is sitting behind the President's desk. In the comics, Lex Luthor ran for President of the United States and won.
  • In the 2006 documentary You Will Believe: The Cinematic Saga of Superman (included in the DVD set The Ultimate Superman Collection), Sarah Douglas says she was the only cast member to do extensive around-the-world press tours in support of the movie, as she was one of the only actors who held a neutral point of view in the Donner/Lester controversy.
  • Gene Hackman, Ned Beatty and Marlon Brando are the only actors who didn't participate in the film's reshoots. Their scenes in Lester's version (with the exception of Brando) were portrayed with body doubles.

See also

External links

Richard Lester (born January 19, 1932) is a British-based film director famous for his work with The Beatles in the 1960s.

Biography

Lester was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania of Jewish heritage.
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Richard Donner (born Richard Donald Schwartzberg on April 24, 1930) is a Jewish-American film director, and also a film producer through the production company, The Donners' Company, which he and his wife, producer Lauren Shuler Donner, own.
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Ilya Salkind (born Ilya Juan Salkind Dominguez, July 27, 1947 in Mexico City) grew up in the world of motion pictures. At the age of one, Ilya was photographed sitting on the lap of Zsa Zsa Gabor.
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Pierre Spengler is a French film producer. Among many international hits, he is best known for initiating the first three Superman movies, and producing them with Ilya Salkind.

Overview

Pierre Spengler started in the movie industry in 1964.
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Jerry Siegel

Jerry Siegel in 1976.
Birth name Jerome Siegel
Born September 17 1914(1914--)

Died January 28 1996 (aged 83)
United States
Nationality American

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Joe Shuster

Birth name Joseph Shuster
Born 10 July 1914(1914--)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Died July 30 1992 (aged 78)

Nationality Naturalized American
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Mario Gianluigi Puzo

Mario Puzo
Born: September 15 1920(1920--)
Manhattan, New York, USA
Died: July 2 1999 (aged 80)
Bay Shore, New York, USA
Occupation: Novelist
Nationality: American
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Mario Gianluigi Puzo

Mario Puzo
Born: September 15 1920(1920--)
Manhattan, New York, USA
Died: July 2 1999 (aged 80)
Bay Shore, New York, USA
Occupation: Novelist
Nationality: American
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David Newman may refer to:
  • David Newman (jazz musician), American jazz saxophonist
  • David Newman (composer), American composer
  • David Newman (politician), Canadian politician
  • David Newman (filmmaker), an American filmmaker

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Leslie Newman is a screenwriter who co-wrote the first three Superman films with husband David Newman, who died in 2003. They had two children together. She has written cook books and in 1974 published a novel entitled ''Gathering Force.
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Tom Mankiewicz (born June 1, 1942) is an American screenwriter and director. A graduate of Yale University, he is the son of Joseph L. Mankiewicz and the nephew of Herman J. Mankiewicz.
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Gene Hackman

Birth name Eugene Allen Hackman
Born January 30 1930 (1930--) (age 77)
San Bernardino, California, U.S.
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Christopher Reeve

Christopher Reeve discussing stem cell research at a conference at MIT, March 2, 2003

Born September 25 1952(1952--)
New York, New York, U.S.A.
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Ned Beatty

Ned Beatty at the 1990 Annual Emmy Awards
Birth name Ned Thomas Beatty
Born July 6 1937 (1937--) (age 70)
Louisville, Kentucky, U.S.
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Jackie Cooper

Jackie Cooper in 1989.
Birth name John Cooper, Jr.
Born September 15 1922 (1922--) (age 85)
Los Angeles, California, US


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Margot Kidder

At the 2005 Canadian National Expo. Photo by Jeremy Allin.

Born September 17 1948 (1948--) (age 59)
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Sarah Douglas

At the 2006 Dallas Comic Con. Photo by Corey Bond.

Born November 12 1952 (1952--) (age 56)
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Jack O'Halloran

Born March 8 1943 (1943--) (age 64)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Jack O'Halloran (born April 8, 1943) is an American ex-boxer and actor.
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E. G. Marshall

Marshall as the President of the United States in Superman II, 1981
Birth name Everett Eugene Grunz
Born June 18 1914
Owatonna, Minnesota, USA
Died July 24 1998 (aged 84) (lung cancer)
Bedford, New York
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Terence Stamp

Born July 22 1938 (1938--) (age 69)
Stepney, London, England

Terence Henry Stamp (born July 22, 1938[1]) is an English actor.
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Kenneth Thorne (born January 26, 1924) is an Academy Award-winning British-American television and film score composer.

Early life

Thorne was born in East Dereham, a town in the English County of Norfolk.
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Sir Geoffrey Unsworth OBE (1914-1978) was a British cinematographer who enjoyed a long and varied career in the British film industry, working on nearly 90 feature films spanning more than 40 years.
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Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc., or Warner Bros. (pronounced Warner Brothers), is one of the world's largest producers of film and television entertainment.

It is currently a subsidiary of the Time Warner conglomerate, with its headquarters in Burbank, California.
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"December 4th" redirects here. For the song by Jay-Z, see December 4th (song).
December 4 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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-1980- 1981 1982 1983  1984 .  1985 .  1986 .  1987  . 1988  . 1989  . 1990 
In home video: 1977 1978 1979 -1980- 1981 1982 1983     
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June 19 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.

Events

  • 1179 - The Norwegian Battle of Kalvskinnet outside Nidaros.

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-1981- 1982 1983 1984  1985 .  1986 .  1987 .  1988  . 1989  . 1990  . 1991 
In home video: 1978 1979 1980 -1981- 1982 1983 1984     
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Motto
"Dieu et mon droit" [2]   (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
"God Save the Queen" [3]
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English}}} 
Writing system: Latin (English variant) 
Official status
Official language of: 53 countries
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: en
ISO 639-2: eng
ISO 639-3: eng  
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