SUPERMAN (1978) | FIRST TIME WATCHING | MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 19 май 2024
  • Enjoy my reaction as I watch Superman (1978) for the first time!
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    0:00 - Intro
    1:47 - Reaction
    31:51 - Review
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Комментарии • 4,5 тыс.

  • @BradAaronTaylor
    @BradAaronTaylor Год назад +656

    _"You'll believe a man can fly."_
    And we did.
    Christopher Reeve IS Superman.

    • @TheFioda
      @TheFioda Год назад +20

      Till the end and beyond

    • @ajclements4627
      @ajclements4627 Год назад +8

      OP speaking facts.

    • @shawnlopez2317
      @shawnlopez2317 Год назад +24

      Maybe one day they'll make a movie about Christopher Reeve, but only person you could hire to play him is Superman.

    • @ronaldjeffrey8712
      @ronaldjeffrey8712 Год назад +25

      When I first saw Superman, I thought Christopher Reeve was Superman, when I saw Superman Returns, I thought Brandon Routh was an actor playing Christopher Reeve playing Superman.

    • @knoahbody69
      @knoahbody69 Год назад +19

      @@shawnlopez2317 He was a Super Guy, took his life in stride. Even acted on Smallville in his wheelchair.

  • @Malryth
    @Malryth Год назад +1319

    In my opinion Christopher Reeve IS the BEST Superman hands down. He captures the boy scout Superman from the comic books.

    • @ajclements4627
      @ajclements4627 Год назад +62

      The man embodied Kal-El more than anyone has currently in my opinion.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад +1

      Superman could also be a stone-cold douche in the earlier comics.

    • @Cbriggs502
      @Cbriggs502 Год назад +23

      You most be and older dude because henry cavill is the best superman hands down of this generation no disrespect to reeves he was good for his time

    • @samuraiwarriorsunite
      @samuraiwarriorsunite Год назад +39

      He can also look completely different without glasses and a different hairstyle. His flying style has been copied by every Superman since, but for me, he'll always be the best.

    • @gotz1516
      @gotz1516 Год назад +56

      @@Cbriggs502 I didn't know you did stand up comedy

  • @Devypocalypse
    @Devypocalypse Год назад +311

    Don't care how much CGI has hit, what can be done nowadays etc etc, that final shot of Reeve as Supes in space breaking the fourth wall and smiling at the viewing audience is the greatest comic book film shot ever. He was, is, and always will be the greatest. What a Hero.

    • @chadberserk1050
      @chadberserk1050 Год назад +9

      Amen to that. For me, that should be the end of every Superman film. Like how the gun barrel opener is for every James Bond.

    • @michaelberry1382
      @michaelberry1382 Год назад +1

      Didn’t Henry do it as well as an homage?

    • @Fleshox19-uz3qt
      @Fleshox19-uz3qt Год назад +5

      That's the Superman scene. Rising from the earth and that EPIC one arm bank towards us, the audience and then that smile. They did a similar scene in Superman Returns which was absolutely brilliant.
      I saw this movie as a boy, and his face will always be the Superman I think of. Other actors have played him on big and small screen. Once, Nicolas Cage was supposed to play him so I read somewhere. But I think that every man who plays the character will always be compared to Reeve.
      Right man, right part, right movie. Throw in a blinding score of epic proportion and you have a hit movie that will stand the test of time.

    • @kellymulderino7156
      @kellymulderino7156 10 месяцев назад +5

      True dat - i actually think the effects in 1978 supe were pretty damn good. in some ways i like it better than all the CGI crap

    • @Fleshox19-uz3qt
      @Fleshox19-uz3qt 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@kellymulderino7156 I feel the same way. Reeve made the flying theatrical.
      Now, it's just a blur. Reeve was, IS Superman.

  • @Ben-bs4od
    @Ben-bs4od 10 месяцев назад +39

    Reeve should have one an Oscar for this role. Because playing a straight Superman who is cheerful, positive, and charming, and then playing Kent as a Cary Grant like transformation will be hard to replicate. The other actors don't have his charm, his smile. Very underrated performance. I like it much more now than as a kid. It's such a lost feeling this movie evokes of an innocence of that era.

  • @LiveFromThePorcelainPalace
    @LiveFromThePorcelainPalace Год назад +700

    FUN FACT: The scene where Clark is running past the train. The little girl who sees him is Lois Lane. Her mother is played by Noel Neill, who played Lois in the 1950's TV show (and before that in the 1940's serials) and her father was played by Kirk Alyn, the original live action Superman from the 1940's serials!

    • @PlumbPitiful
      @PlumbPitiful Год назад +62

      Noel Neill was also in 2006's Superman Returns. She was the old lady on her deathbed in the beginning who was inexplicably married to Lex Luthor (Kevin Spacey) who got her to sign over all her worldly possessions to him right before she died

    • @nathancruz9172
      @nathancruz9172 Год назад +16

      That’s awesome 👏🏻

    • @ChrisReise
      @ChrisReise Год назад +15

      Was JUST going to comment this same thing.

    • @Val1Zod
      @Val1Zod Год назад +24

      Also the girl that plays Lana also plays as Martha Kent Clark’s mom in Smallville the tv show.

    • @TheIllustriouBlueJay
      @TheIllustriouBlueJay Год назад +13

      @@Val1Zod that's Superman 3.

  • @txheadshots
    @txheadshots Год назад +224

    For a quick masterclass in acting... watch the scene in Lois' apartment when Clark wants to tell Lois who he is... His entire demeanor and posture changes - he stands up straight, he lifts his head, and grows himself 3 inches taller just with those changes... he exudes confidence. Even in the suit and tie, he's suddenly Superman. Then he slouches and starts stammering again... and he's Clark. It's brilliantly acted.

    • @Marveryn
      @Marveryn Год назад +21

      Yes, this is what Christopher Reeve such a great actor the little detail. they did the same thing in the cartoon version back in the day. In that case it was the voice. when he was clark he spoke in a soft gentle voice but when he became superman he went to a much deeper manly voice. Its the little things that make the character

    • @RossM3838
      @RossM3838 Год назад +13

      All done in one take with no change in costume or lighting

    • @abeartheycallFozzy
      @abeartheycallFozzy Год назад +18

      One of my favourite behind the scenes anecdotes of film is the studio wanted to go to a gym and find a muscle guy to play Superman. The director and producer said.... Nope! Lets hire an actor and send him to the gym for a bit.

    • @TheScottThomas
      @TheScottThomas Год назад +2

      100%

    • @damc8415
      @damc8415 Год назад +20

      Christopher Reeve is the only actor to flawlessly play BOTH Superman and Clark Kent, and to keep them fully believable as separate yet interwoven characters. Christopher Reeve's 1950s predecessor, George Reeves, was a great Superman, but not even a little "mild-mannered" as Clark. The dude from the 1990's "Lois & Clark" was the coolest Clark Kent, but came across wooden as Superman. Other actors since have had strengths and weaknesses in the two roles.
      .
      But Christopher Reeve played Clark and Superman as two very different, but connected characters. Reeve's Clark is a humble, folksy, "aw-shucks" nerd, while Superman is a tough, determined, plain-spoken hero, yet Superman's tenderness saving a girl's cat from a tree, Superman's awful pun "bad vibrations" when a villain hits Superman with a tire iron, and Superman's carefully tactful "excuse me" to bystanders before flying to save Lois from the helicopter crash are all signs that Superman still has some folksy, nerdy and mild-mannered Clark at heart that no amount of superpowers will completely erase.

  • @kellyokinneally3955
    @kellyokinneally3955 Год назад +56

    I was six years old when my whole family went to see this when it first came out. I was still trying to catch my breath from seeing Luke, Han, Darth, and Chewbacca for the first time....and now THIS MOVIE! What a magical time the late 70's were for us Gen X'ers!!!!

    • @brandonwalsh4497
      @brandonwalsh4497 3 месяца назад +2

      Wow I was 6 in '78 too..
      Wow a more civilized time ❤

  • @steveturner3999
    @steveturner3999 Год назад +37

    This is the 3rd movie my wife and I saw when we were dating in 1978. The next day at work a friend asked me “Well, do you believe a man can fly?” I said “after watching this movie, uh yeah!”. They made it look so real.

  • @jackspry9736
    @jackspry9736 Год назад +118

    RIP Jackie Cooper (September 15, 1922 - May 3, 2011), aged 88
    RIP Marlon Brando (April 3, 1924 - July 1, 2004), aged 80
    RIP Richard Donner (April 24, 1930 - July 5, 2021), aged 91
    RIP Ned Beatty (July 6, 1937 - June 13, 2021), aged 83
    RIP Margot Kidder (October 17, 1948 - May 13, 2018), aged 69
    RIP Christopher Reeve (September 25, 1952 - October 10, 2004), aged 52
    You will be remembered as legends.
    And yes Gene Hackman is still alive, he turned 94 in January this year.

    • @breeknow
      @breeknow Год назад +3

      I see you're quite skilled in google sir.
      A gentleman and a scholar.

    • @jackspry9736
      @jackspry9736 Год назад +2

      @Breeknow indeed.

    • @paulpolpiboon9535
      @paulpolpiboon9535 Год назад +2

      Rest in peace RICHARD DONNER as well. He passed away last year or so.
      He is the kind man and the visionary behind the two Superman Movies.

    • @SJHFoto
      @SJHFoto Год назад +4

      And someone else you might now is Jackie Cooper. He was Perry White, and he was one of the Little Rascals from back in the 30s

    • @JohnSmith-qn3ob
      @JohnSmith-qn3ob Год назад +2

      Don't forget Ned Beatty

  • @andrewgordon5016
    @andrewgordon5016 Год назад +181

    With all the dozens of superhero movies there are today, it’s important to remember that this was THE superhero movie. The one in which both the director and the star honoured the source material and treated it with the proper respect. The one that proved that it was possible to create a great film out of a comic book character.

    • @mayorjimmy
      @mayorjimmy Год назад +3

      while i agree they honored the source material, it's fair to say they played pretty fast and loose with his powers. The time rewind thing at first but it got way more out of control as the Reeves Superman movies went on. I won't name anything for spoiler reasons, but anyone who's seen them knows.

    • @Priceluked
      @Priceluked Год назад +5

      @@mayorjimmy I mean it was 100% accurate with that period's Superman.

    • @logandarklighter
      @logandarklighter Год назад +5

      @Raylan Givens Arguably the Silver Age was still going at the time. At least at DC comics. Marvel was well beyond Silver Age and into "Bronze" age by 1978 or so. DC Comics first major "Universe Reboot" didn't come until 1986 in the form of "Crisis on Infinite Earths". That's when they toned down on Superman's vast array of powers. While keeping the core elements intact.
      Most people consider the 1990s through 2000s the "Iron Age". And 2010 until the current "Woke" collapse of comics is the "Rust" Age.

    • @mayorjimmy
      @mayorjimmy Год назад +1

      @Raylan Givens True. Sometimes I forget just how long ago this movie came out.

    • @sup9542
      @sup9542 Год назад +4

      Just caught a bit of No Way Home on TV today...I think the Marvel movies are going to age very poorly. Superman came out in 1978 and we're still enjoying it. I think Marvel movies are going to be seen as extremely cheesy. They don't take anything seriously and every line is a joke.

  • @LeeKeels
    @LeeKeels Год назад +72

    The single greatest movie theme music ever composed, and the only actor who has EVER truly embodied Superman, and probably ever will.
    The "S" is not for Superman, it's the crest of the House of El, his family crest.
    Fun fact: The "slogan" for this movie was "You'll believe a man can fly"...a reference to the cutting edge (for the time) special effects, and for the absolute perfection Reeve brings to the role.

    • @johnpaullogan1365
      @johnpaullogan1365 Год назад +2

      it is also a symbol in the kryptonian language that stands for hope

    • @burntvirtue
      @burntvirtue Год назад +4

      @@johnpaullogan1365 No. That was invented decades later, and then used most famously for the Man Of Steel movie. It did not mean hope at the time of this film (1978) nor for the rest of the 20th century.

    • @josephcasanova1975
      @josephcasanova1975 Год назад

      ​@@burntvirtue You may be right about that, but who's to say in the comics that it always wasn't the symbol for hope? I can tell you one things. It's not an S. I doubt Krypton had the same alphabet as Earth.

    • @Ladco77
      @Ladco77 2 месяца назад

      Whatever the symbol means, the main thing is it isn't an "S." At the beginning of the film you can see all the Kryptonians have various symbols on their cloths, including the Jor-El who has the same symbol on his as Superman's outfit.

    • @smdias65
      @smdias65 2 месяца назад

      If I'm not mistaken, this movie introduced the idea that the "S" was a family crest (I suspect the creative consultant, Tom Mankiewicz, came up with the idea). Supposedly, comic writer Mark Waid came up with the idea that it means "hope" in the 2000's.

  • @3Rayfire
    @3Rayfire Год назад +103

    The cheesiness in this movie is wonderful because it's *so* intensely sincere. That makes it believable. "Sends a check to his sweet gray hair old mother" "Actually she's silver haired". As natural as can be, no subterfuge, not meant to be mocking, just honest. There was love and care and respect in the characters. And Superman is as he's supposed to be. He's light, breezy even. Even when he's brooding or sad, you know there's a fundamentally good guy there who you care about. And he cares about you. *That* is Superman.

    • @Sentry751
      @Sentry751 Год назад +7

      That is the best way I have ever seen this described. You are spot on. The sincerity and earnestness that Christopher Reeve displayed here was so amazing; it makes you believe.

    • @Treffaut
      @Treffaut 9 месяцев назад +7

      The older I get, the more people I meet who are exactly as kind, thoughtful, and honest as Clark. Being a cynic doesn't make you wise, it just blinds you to people who are truly that good.

    • @MrDestroyerofdarknes
      @MrDestroyerofdarknes 7 месяцев назад

      “Golden hair”

    • @kathleenhensley5951
      @kathleenhensley5951 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@Treffaut Same here. Cynicism has become a modern disease, and in the young, a tragedy. It seems to me that whole generations never really have a youth, mind you, an innocent and happy youth.

    • @PeterParker-ff7ub
      @PeterParker-ff7ub 3 месяца назад +1

      This doesn;t have cheesiness, it has sincerity.

  • @dvdgway
    @dvdgway Год назад +165

    When I was a small kid and my father left us, I stumbled upon this movie probably 1979 or 1980. Even at that young age I said to myself Superman would never hurt his kids, he would never lie and he would always do the right thing. I started to look up to Supes as a role model. Then eventually I found out me and Christopher Reeve shared the same birthday and that completed my bond with the man of steel. I bawled like a baby when Chris Reeve died.
    RIP to the real Man of Steel

    • @nathancruz9172
      @nathancruz9172 Год назад +4

      I’m sorry to hear that.

    • @jasoncaldwell5627
      @jasoncaldwell5627 Год назад +1

      Marvel comics- particularly Spider-Man in the 80's became my moral role models- but Superman was movie idol?

    • @SyMchale
      @SyMchale Год назад +1

      Same mate, well, apart from the birthday 😂 I couldn't sleep as a kid unless I had my superman bed covers 😂🤦

    • @travmac52
      @travmac52 Год назад +2

      Thank you for sharing this.

  • @TheFioda
    @TheFioda Год назад +151

    "why can´t she see that he´s Clark?" Because that is proof of the amazing role play that Reeve did. It never was just the glasses. It´s the posture, the behavior, the voice, all...and Reeve did it in a way, that no one got close. He always will be...THE Superman

    • @retropyro
      @retropyro Год назад +15

      During shooting of the movie, Christopher Reeve would walk into craft service in full Superman costume and all the crew and other support staff would fawn over him. The women were basically drooling over him.
      Other days he would walk in with his full Clark Kent costume and no one would even look at him.

    • @sup9542
      @sup9542 Год назад +16

      The best example is when he takes off his glasses and stands 3 inches taller and completely changes. But it's also that no one would expect Superman to have a secret identity and pretend to be a normal human. And also that she probably doesn't even see Superman clearly, she's practically fainting when she's looking at him, stars in her eyes, and Clark is just Clark.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад +4

      He's got glasses...and a ponytail...and paint-covered overalls. He could NEVER be prom king.

    • @hellowhat890
      @hellowhat890 Год назад +5

      Because it's not just the fact that he puts on glasses and the movie has the audience focusing on him all the time.
      It's the mannerisms and the alter ego personality that Clark puts on when he's not Superman.
      As the superhero, he stands tall, confident, and very inspirational. And as Clark, he shrinks down, acts the opposite, and blends in with the crowd rather than stand out as an inspirational individual. Not only is that great acting by Reeve, but it highlights how much we sometimes can overlook that celebrities and our favorite heroes can be normal too and we often miss them or overlook.
      Thinking of another example from Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Everyone missed Steve at the Smithsonian visiting his own exhibit with a baseball cap. The only one who technically recognized him was a kid who looked carefully and closely enough to spot his hero. Maybe it was just how it was filmed due to the camera shots, scene, and the angles. But the one part I remember is that despite being depicted as a super tall man, Steve kept his head down with the baseball cap on and that didn't draw too much attention from the general public.

    • @captmurdock
      @captmurdock Год назад +8

      It's most apparent in the scene in her apartment, dressed as Clark, he's about to tell Lois his secret but chickens out at the last moment. Reeves goes from Clark to Superman back to Clark seamlessly. He did this role the best.

  • @daveolson6001
    @daveolson6001 Год назад +14

    15:41 "Why can't she see that he's Clark?" In his autobiography, Roger Moore (who was making a James Bond movie in the same studios where they made "Superman") told of a time when he saw Christopher Reeve in line at the cafeteria for lunch. He was in full Superman costume with the cape and tights and the curly-q hair. The women around him were swooning and panting and you could almost hear their undergarments evaporating. The next day Reeve was in the same line at the same time but he was dressed as Clark Kent, with the full 3-piece suit and glasses, and NO ONE looked at him twice.

    • @doogboh
      @doogboh 2 месяца назад +1

      Quite telling

  • @SNAPS3D
    @SNAPS3D 8 месяцев назад +7

    Trivia: The mom in that scene on the train with the little girl (little Lois Lane in the extended version) is Lois Lane from "The Adventures of Superman" TV show from the 50's. I would love to see your (and Carly's) reaction to "Superman 2, 3, and 4". Awesome reaction! So glad you enjoyed this. I saw it in the movies as a kid and yes it was an awesome experience! Christopher Reeve IS Superman!

  • @corvus1970
    @corvus1970 Год назад +65

    Did people watch this in 1978 and say "This is amazing?" The answer is Yes. Yes we did. The tagline for this film was "You will believe a man can fly", and they delivered.

    • @thewab1974
      @thewab1974 Год назад +4

      I was only four when this came out in the theater so my dad didn't take me to see it, but he made up for it by taking me to see Superman II.... twice.... in the theater. lol

    • @knoahbody69
      @knoahbody69 Год назад +3

      People born after 1989 don't understand how hard it was to make special effects. Now people notice "bad cgi". Now everything is rushed through to produce content.

    • @3DJapan
      @3DJapan Год назад

      I was 2 when this came out but I loved it and it's sequels when I was a few years older.

    • @alleygh0st
      @alleygh0st Год назад

      it wasn't just any man, though...

    • @knoahbody69
      @knoahbody69 Год назад

      @@alleygh0st That doesn't make any sense at all.

  • @Findo_Gask
    @Findo_Gask Год назад +149

    I'll never forget the moment when Superman caught the helicopter. Every kid in the cinema cheered! At the time it seemed magical.

    • @greenacres9287
      @greenacres9287 Год назад +1

      100% I grabbed the back of the seat in front of me and realized after he caught it that I was standing up cheering!

    • @chriswayne7628
      @chriswayne7628 Год назад +5

      It is magical.

    • @DannyLou03
      @DannyLou03 Год назад +8

      And the phone booth reference is lost today, but I remember thinking, "oh yeah, modern technology..."

    • @manasteal7441
      @manasteal7441 Год назад +3

      I became a Superman fan in that moment, I was 4 years old, 47 now still hits the same!

    • @Jimbo700
      @Jimbo700 Год назад

      Bob Brodie-> I was 27 when this movie came out Christmastime 1978 and it wasn't just the kids the kids who were out of their seats in the cinema... So were 27 year olds!

  • @davidjoe3368
    @davidjoe3368 Год назад +28

    This Movie is a Masterpiece! The skill and artistry required to make this Movie at that time was staggering, and there will only ever be one actor to play Superman, Christopher Reeve! R.I.P. Chris and Margot.

    • @novelty8theory494
      @novelty8theory494 Год назад +2

      The thing with these old movies also is they had a soul....that's why they stand the test of time. The new cgi filled Hollywood films are empty trash.

  • @davidq.5488
    @davidq.5488 Год назад +5

    In the theater, I was only 5. And everyone thought running next to the train looked so stupid.
    But when Lois is in trouble! and he comes out of the revolving door in full costume with the triumphant music, all in unison a full-packed theater stood up applauding and cheering. That alone was magical.

  • @mydolsmusic
    @mydolsmusic Год назад +151

    When superman screams 'no!" And flies off to turn back time I get chills and tear up every time after so many years and so many watch through's. He will always be the best superman, period.

    • @TheUberlisa
      @TheUberlisa Год назад +8

      Just before that, that little sob as lays Lois's head on the ground. Little kid me was a wreck.

    • @Nopcode42
      @Nopcode42 Год назад +2

      Same

    • @rvnlvr0599
      @rvnlvr0599 Год назад +3

      I’m the same way man. Love it! These were my favorite movies growing up. When I was 4 I jumped off my dads 1948 Ford thinking I was Superman and skinned my face bad, but I have no regrets. For a split second I was flying

    • @Mortismors
      @Mortismors Год назад +5

      He's also the last Superman with truly super powers. I would believe Christopher Reeves crushing a blackhole into nonexistence with his hands.

    • @moo3992
      @moo3992 Год назад +2

      So does everyone.
      That is why they did it ffs.

  • @ashsmith3695
    @ashsmith3695 Год назад +205

    The part when he was too late to save Lois and he had the flashback to when his father died. That was brutal. When he screams and takes off to reverse time in our theatre his scream echoed right through the auditorium. That scream still gives me chills to this day.

    • @jaysonraphaelmurdock8812
      @jaysonraphaelmurdock8812 Год назад +14

      "The scream" is iconic. Plus it sounds otherworldly

    • @logandarklighter
      @logandarklighter Год назад +19

      @@jaysonraphaelmurdock8812 Because - just for once - and just for a moment - he's not holding back. If he exerted his voice correctly, he could break windows for miles and burst human eardrums easily. But there IS no one else around for miles and miles luckily enough.
      After watching the movie enough times, I have my own interpretation of why his scream reverbs in that otherworldly way.
      You're hearing it from him - and from all the surfaces of the canyon around him reflecting it back an instant later. Reverb and reflection of sound.
      Or - I could just be overthinking this and nerding out. 😅

    • @MrDeathpilot
      @MrDeathpilot Год назад +24

      Fun Fact: Superman didn't reverse time... Only HE went back in time.
      The Earth didn't actually reverse it's spin. What we're seeing is time being reversed from his perspective.
      Since time slows as you approach the speed of light, going back in time would be theoretically valid if you actually could exceed the speed of light.
      This is what he's doing by circling the planet at high speed.
      For a long time this was a major plot hole for me... How could he make the Earth spin backwards and reverse time by just flying around it? That's not how it works, and its scientifically absurd...
      ...and if he chose to save Lois the second time, did all those other people die?
      Once I realized that ONLY Superman went back in time, it becomes possible for him to be in two places at once.
      It might have been less confusing if they had Superman slingshot around the sun instead, like they did in Star Trek IV.

    • @jrasicmark1
      @jrasicmark1 Год назад +11

      Now that I've lost both my parents, those death scenes hit me so much harder now.

    • @mmattson8947
      @mmattson8947 Год назад +11

      For me, it is the lead up to the scream.
      Several seconds of denial on his face, then that sob of anguish.

  • @steve4167
    @steve4167 Год назад +5

    First real superhero movie. She is rhyming while flying because a song version was made. And never used. So good to see someone watching this for the first time!

  • @suzannejane1035
    @suzannejane1035 Год назад +23

    I saw this as a kid when it came out in Glasgow, Scotland, and it still mesmerised me. RIP both Margot Kidder and Christopher Reeve; they were the best Lois and Clark xx

  • @janee2813
    @janee2813 Год назад +147

    I grew up in the 80s and Christopher reeve will always be superman to me. superman I & II are my favorite.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад +1

      Have a second favorite?

    • @michaelgoodyear9369
      @michaelgoodyear9369 Год назад +1

      Superman 2 is really good

    • @ugaladh
      @ugaladh Год назад +2

      I grew up in the '60s, and Glenn Ford was one of my favorite actors, when he had that heart attack in the movie, it hurt.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад

      @@ugaladh Sorry which one is Glenn Ford? He was in this Superman?

    • @RetroClassic66
      @RetroClassic66 Год назад +2

      Glenn Ford played Jonathan Kent, Kal-El’s adoptive Earth father.

  • @dereklopez9060
    @dereklopez9060 Год назад +59

    Christopher Reeve will always be Superman.
    May he rest in peace.

    • @officialmonarchmusic
      @officialmonarchmusic Год назад +2

      This is not a joke, but one of my teachers is related to him. I can’t remember exactly how, but it was something like 1st cousin once removed or something

    • @davidcosta2244
      @davidcosta2244 Год назад +1

      Well, Christopher Reeves and George Reeves, who did the original 1950’s TV series. They’re not related.

    • @bigpace
      @bigpace Год назад +4

      @@davidcosta2244 George Reeves and Christopher Reeve

    • @drhkleinert8241
      @drhkleinert8241 3 месяца назад

      And as fun fact: Reeve was an unknown actor that time, and to play the headrole nearto lots of Big Stars as small roles and cameos must be pressure...Reeve was catapultet to the top stars after this Movie. Sadly it was his only successful role.

  • @rockinrichardsmoviereviews1901
    @rockinrichardsmoviereviews1901 Год назад +18

    The dialogue in this is so intelligent and so well-written.It's also just beautiful to watch.The cinematography is spectacular!

  • @roadrunner3100
    @roadrunner3100 Год назад +15

    I was 12 when this came out and thought it was magical, like you said; a boy staring at the screen in wonder. Christophe Reeve made it look easy which it surely wasn't. There are three sequels to this, but Superman II is by far the best. Christopher Reeve and Robin Williams attended the Julliard School together and became and stayed very good friends. When Reeve had is horrible accident which left him a quadriplegic, Robin made sure to visit him whenever he could and just hang out and laugh for while. Robin was a true friend.

  • @daveseesmovies
    @daveseesmovies Год назад +81

    "If you don't love me as Clark Kent, you don't get to love me as Superman."
    Well said.

    • @MrDeathpilot
      @MrDeathpilot Год назад +10

      33:13 "If you can't love me as Clark Kent, then you don't get to love me as Superman."
      That's not fair.
      Lois isn't seeing the Clark Kent that grew up in the beginning of this movie.
      She's seeing a nervous, bumbling, fake personality.

    • @MrIcelander
      @MrIcelander 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@MrDeathpilot ...by a man who proclaims to "never lie!" 😏

  • @Bossman68123
    @Bossman68123 Год назад +39

    The way he played the two characters was perfection…the way he changed his posture, way he spoke, his mannerisms etc between superman and clark Kent

    • @CoastalNomad
      @CoastalNomad Год назад +1

      I am pretty sure this was some inspiration for how Michael Keaton portrayed the differences between Bruce/Batman.......

    • @gspendlove
      @gspendlove Год назад +4

      His hair is also parted differently and his makeup is subtly paler as Clark. He really nailed both roles.

    • @anzaeria
      @anzaeria Год назад +2

      I guess you could say they were one character - but two sides of one character. And I agree - Reeve was awesome at playing Kent / Superman. I don't think any other actor has done it quite as well.

  • @Rancoroth419
    @Rancoroth419 Год назад +7

    This movie made people believe Superman was real and could really fly lol. This movie, Citizen Kane, Star Wars, the first Jurassic Park, groundbreaking special effects for their times.

  • @CDMVIDZ
    @CDMVIDZ 3 месяца назад +5

    I had just turned 9 years old the year this movie hit theaters and my dad, bless his heart, let me see it with him at the opening night midnight show (provided I took a nap that afternoon in preparation). I was still coming down off the OG Star Wars high that hit every young boy just 18 months before and didn't think anything could hit as hard as Star Wars, but GOOD LORD did this movie blow me away as a kid. A few years later my dad would take me to the single greatest double feature of all time: RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK at 12:30 pm followed by SUPERMAN II at 3:15 the same day. It'll never get any better than that.

  • @THOMMGB
    @THOMMGB Год назад +195

    When this movie first came out, no one had ever seen tubes-of-light titles like that before. Those titles, coupled with John Williams' Superman music blew everyone away. Also, Superman 2 continues the story, so you gotta watch.

    • @RltchieI
      @RltchieI Год назад +4

      Preferably the more recent Richard Donner cut rather than the original theatrical release.

    • @alexojideagu
      @alexojideagu Год назад +12

      @@RltchieI The theatrical cut is better. The donner cut looks unfinished and has inferior music cues

    • @eyallev
      @eyallev Год назад +5

      interesting question.
      given the opening, it seems superman 1 and superman 2 were suppose to be a single movie (otherwise, you have a Chekhov's gun with no payoff), now if you were to stich the two into a single movie, I suppose you could have the rocket superman throws into space, be the trigger that gets things rolling in superman 2 (instead of what happens in the start of 2).
      was this the original plan for the movie, because it does kinda seem that way?

    • @RltchieI
      @RltchieI Год назад +2

      @@alexojideagu we will have to agree to disagree on that one. Especially given the majority of 2 was Donner’s with some extra bits spliced in from the new guy to get his name on the film. I’d rather have as close to the original concept than a mongrel with filler to tick the boxes for a director credit. But whatever floats your boat.

    • @DarkClaw0912
      @DarkClaw0912 Год назад +2

      Preferable the Richard Donnor Cut of Superman 2

  • @mouseketeery
    @mouseketeery Год назад +173

    When this film first came out, the tagline was "You'll believe a man can fly" because the flying effects were considered state of the art at the time. I think the cheesy villains thing is less annoying in this film because they were drawing on the original comics and 1940's serials. It was pretty much the first comic-book movie.

    • @silkwesir1444
      @silkwesir1444 Год назад +17

      Not only was it state of art of the time, it established a new state of the art!

    • @michaelminch5490
      @michaelminch5490 Год назад +15

      We did believe a man could fly.

    • @jannasomewhere2889
      @jannasomewhere2889 Год назад +8

      It was the first major big-budget feature film based on a DC character. But there were comic-book-based serials in the 1940s (Batman in '43, Captain America in '44 and Superman in '48). Donner's lavish treatment took Superman out of B-movie kid flix territory and made it entertainment for audience members of any age.

    • @AutoPilate
      @AutoPilate Год назад +2

      @@jannasomewhere2889 there’s also Adventures of Captain Marvel in ‘41.

    • @jannasomewhere2889
      @jannasomewhere2889 Год назад

      @@AutoPilate Yep, that one as well. Shazam!

  • @Pentarax
    @Pentarax Месяц назад +1

    The way Reeve was able to play both Clark and Superman so differently is amazing.

  • @JM-er2yl
    @JM-er2yl Год назад +7

    I was seven when I saw this in the theater. Not only was Christopher Reeve the first actor I had a crush on, but the scene where he catches Lois when they're "flying" is still one of the most romantic ever put on film.
    Christopher Reeve will always be Superman!

  • @davepalliaser4798
    @davepalliaser4798 Год назад +64

    I still remember the tag line for the movie, it was so heavily advertised. "You will believe a man can fly" The special effects in the theatre were mind blowing for the time.

    • @signedbookcollector3408
      @signedbookcollector3408 Год назад +3

      The special effects are still good by 2022 standards

    • @fergalhughes165
      @fergalhughes165 Год назад

      Wasn't 'Supergirl''s tagline a few years later, "You'll believe a girl can fly".

    • @flaggerify
      @flaggerify Год назад

      The effects were not great for the time. Poor optical effects and obvious models. "2001" made 10 years earlier had far better effects.

    • @lanagievski1540
      @lanagievski1540 Год назад +1

      @@flaggerify Do you realise how ridiculous you sound comparing a movie’s effect made in the late 70’s to 2001? Obviously it’s going to be more advanced. What they’re saying is that it’s held up remarkably well which is true.
      Edit: Misunderstood what 2001 was referencing

    • @flaggerify
      @flaggerify Год назад

      @@lanagievski1540 Read it again.
      ""2001" made 10 years earlier had far better effects."
      2001: A Space Odyssey made in1968.

  • @johansmallberries9874
    @johansmallberries9874 Год назад +68

    The shot where he takes off from the roof after the helicopter rescue is still one of greatest in-camera effects in movies. Reeves truly made wire work look fluid.

    • @dosgamer74
      @dosgamer74 Год назад +5

      Indeed. Reeve has said in interviews that his passion for flying (he was a certified glider pilot at the time) allowed him to convey the mechanics of flight on film.

    • @logandarklighter
      @logandarklighter Год назад +4

      @@dosgamer74 I believe he flew hang gliders. So he was already used to hanging in a harness and holding the proper position for "flying". And yes - he definitely SOLD the flying in a way no one else really has since. That's really HIM on wires with pre-filmed back projection film running behind him for most of the flying scenes!

  • @fantasycamp4000
    @fantasycamp4000 Месяц назад +1

    Just a few things. Famous actors in this. Glen Ford plays Clarks father. The actress who played Lois Lane(Noel Neill) in the tv series is the woman riding on the train when clark runs by her window. The editor of the daily planet is Jackie Cooper a child actor fron early cinema. The symbol on supermans chest is not an S as we know it, it represents something from Krypton.

  • @tomstanziola1982
    @tomstanziola1982 Год назад +3

    These effects were amazing in their day. I can still remember the first time I saw this in the theater. 1978. I was 16 years old, and I WAS BLOWN AWAY!!!! We really believed a man could fly.

  • @sydneybristow5588
    @sydneybristow5588 Год назад +51

    As a child of the 70s, I can tell you that these effects were mind blowing.
    The movie actually still stands up even to today's standards.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад +3

      Yeah it looked waaay better than I expected.

    • @lethaldose2000
      @lethaldose2000 Год назад +4

      The running looked funny even back then, but I let it slide. As long as they could make the flying look awesome. And they pretty much did.

    • @antoniochasten3192
      @antoniochasten3192 Год назад +4

      Agreed. My mom took to me to see it for my 7th Birthday in 1978 and I've seen this film lord knows how many times since then and it does hold up pretty damn good 44 yrs later.

    • @Arthaius
      @Arthaius Год назад +2

      @@ct6852 - Sadly, I have been made aware of a distressingly common theme today : I am watching many reaction channels and over and over and over again people keep saying how surprised they are at how good these movies and effects are, and I just don't get it... why does everyone expect them to be bad? True there are some pretty bad movies in the past, but, there are also some pretty poor movies now - it isn't really about when it was made, it's probably more about effects budget coupled with talent level of cast, if you make a movie with a $500.00 budget and hire actors who have had maybe one or two (or none) roles worth of experience, yeah your movie will probably suck - doesn't matter when it was made.
      Also, I have noticed a similar trend with music reaction first time channels, people listen to 80s music or whatever and are like "Wow, I can't believe these people from "so long ago" could make such good music .... don't these fools know how long ago Elvis and the Beatles were? How about Beethoven? Nothing is bad because it's older, it's only bad if it was made will less quality.

    • @Arthaius
      @Arthaius Год назад +1

      @@lethaldose2000 - I am just throwing out a guess but from what I can tell, the running was actually real running, they just had the train moving extremely slowly, and he was running regularly then they probably just sped up the film speed is my guess, of course I don't know, never looked it up, but that's my theory.

  • @OptmiusPrime114
    @OptmiusPrime114 Год назад +45

    Superman: The Movie is the movie that paved the way for every superhero film that has been released since then!

    • @tammygordin8851
      @tammygordin8851 Год назад +1

      That is a great point.

    • @richwagener
      @richwagener Год назад +2

      I’ve heard a story that Kevin Fiege has screened this film before making marvel films for inspiration. Not sure if it’s true. I think he said it in a speech once.

    • @richwagener
      @richwagener Год назад +1

      I posted a link to it elsewhere on this video.

    • @maceomaceo11
      @maceomaceo11 Год назад +1

      If this had been anything other than a massive box office draw, that would have been the end of any Hollywood studio ever putting major money behind a superhero movie again.
      You're welcome MCU.

    • @cteal2018
      @cteal2018 Год назад +1

      Being alive seeing Superman '78 as a child in the theatre, and still being a fanboy today of the capes and spandex today, I completely agree!

  • @kylecartwright1609
    @kylecartwright1609 Год назад +3

    Parts of this still gives me goosebumps and makes me teary. I wish I could have seen this in the cinema. But my 1st time was on TV in the 1980s. The helicopter scene gave me big smiles as a 4 year old and still does today at 43. And still to this very day, the love story between Kal-El and Lois gives me goosebumps and tears all at once.
    Watching your video of a first viewing made the feeling of seeing it for the first time very refreshing and through adult eyes. My love for this film will indeed stay with me until my dying day.

  • @douglassnyder214
    @douglassnyder214 Год назад +2

    This is a such a great movie. Sometimes, when I'm at work and I want to give my administrative assistant an assignment, I yell "Miss Tessmacher!"

  • @zarathos9397
    @zarathos9397 Год назад +20

    The “S” on his chest doesn’t mean Superman. It is the crest of the house El and that’s why Jor-El was wearing it in the beginning of the film.

    • @brandonflorida1092
      @brandonflorida1092 Год назад

      Only today. Originally, it was the English letter "S" which his Earth mother put there when she sewed it.

    • @gspendlove
      @gspendlove Год назад

      That is the truth, in-universe. In a meta sense, the "S" originated with with Superman's creators, Joel "S"iegel and Jerry "S"huster. They put the "S" on Superman's chest.

  • @jchua4
    @jchua4 Год назад +57

    What I'll always love about John Williams is that he never fails to make a movie standout with his memorable score...Star Wars, Harry Potter, Indiana Jones, Home Alone, Jaws, E.T., etc. Even though I'm a huge Batman fan, THIS Superman has THE GREATEST superhero theme song of all time. Christopher Reeve played him beautifully, RIP.

    • @molasorrosalom4846
      @molasorrosalom4846 Год назад +2

      Clark's behavior made him insignificant and he would blend in.
      Where people wouldn't take a second look at him.

    • @jaymac7203
      @jaymac7203 Год назад +1

      Yeah he's the source of so much childhood nostalgia 😍

    • @knoahbody69
      @knoahbody69 Год назад +1

      1941 was an awesome score, but the movie flopped.

    • @jchua4
      @jchua4 Год назад

      @@knoahbody69 Not Spielberg's, Bob Gale's or Zemeckis' finest film. BUT, I agree, great score for 1941! A great array of legendary actors in their younger years that I feel brought this fair comedy to cult status. Got to give the film some credit, at least it received 3 Oscar nominations.

    • @miguelrubiorincon3904
      @miguelrubiorincon3904 Год назад +1

      I agree completely but the Danny Elfman,s Batman 89 theme is very iconic and brilliant too . For me this two scores are the best by far in superheroes type films.

  • @Rancoroth419
    @Rancoroth419 Год назад +2

    I remember when growing up, i'd have bad days, couldn't sleep, and late at night, i'd catch this movie, watch it until dawn, and feel better about whatever was bothering me at the time. The S is the symbol of Hope on Krypton. Superman is the ultimate symbol of Hope. My favorite parts of the Superman movies is the ending as he's circling the Earth, and just as he veers to go offscreen, Reeves breaks the 4th wall, looks at the camera and smiles. Thank you, Mr. Reeves.

  • @HarrisMiller-qw6xh
    @HarrisMiller-qw6xh 7 месяцев назад +3

    Great film back in the day, one part that will always stick in my memory was the end when he patrolling earth, and just as he pulled away he looked straight at the camera and smiled, and thought he smiled just for me and no one else, it stuck with me even now I'm 63 ill never forget it ❤

  • @johnrigs6540
    @johnrigs6540 Год назад +58

    Christopher Reeve showed every single actor to come after him exactly HOW to play a Superhero in a feature film. He was the first actor to ever take it seriously and who brought that special level of warmth, humanity , humor and reality to the genre.
    Every actor who has worked in the genre ever since owes him a real debt of gratitude.
    Because he showed them all how it’s done.
    For my generation - he will always be our Superman!

    • @thedragonreborn9856
      @thedragonreborn9856 Год назад +1

      Brandon Routh did a great follow up job

    • @paulpolpiboon9535
      @paulpolpiboon9535 Год назад

      @@thedragonreborn9856 Not really.
      He was a carbon copy of Reeve. And he didn't even wear the suit. I found him bland and like an empty mannequin, strangely his face even looked like a mannequin at times.
      Christopher Reeve didn't copy George Reeves before him, George Reeves didn't copy Alyn before him, Dean Cain didn't copy Christopher Reeve before him, nobody copied the preceding actor; they just copied the comic book.
      Routh copies Christopher Reeve, technically not Routh but Bryan Singer did , to cast+ direct a carbon copy of Reeve.
      It looked like a movie about Christopher Reeve playing Superman rather than a movie of Superman

  • @4000mack
    @4000mack Год назад +37

    Speaking from someone that was there in the theater. This experience was like watching the Matrix in "99" kinda, Groundbreaking.
    Seeing the kind, Superman scream the way he did when Lois died. My god, it f'ed up the entire theater! It's the first time you ever seen Superman angry/Pissed in any fashion.

    • @brandonflorida1092
      @brandonflorida1092 Год назад

      Not remotely the first.

    • @Slevencolevra
      @Slevencolevra Год назад +3

      Facts: Sometimes you get to see a 🎥 Film. That is absolutely ground breaking. Matrix, Jurassic Park, Star Wars, the Abyss, terminator 2 , LOTR and the thing. It's a shame because the Special Effects got 30 times better. However the wokness dumbed down all those story telling abilities.
      All of those franchises are dying today.

    • @brandonflorida1092
      @brandonflorida1092 Год назад +2

      @@Slevencolevra There is good work being done today here and there, but mostly people are being fed junk food with high fructose corn syrup. Most of the younger viewers simply don't know any better because it's all they've seen.
      BTW, I totally agree about "The Thing." The 1951 original was pretty good too.

    • @harveylee51
      @harveylee51 Год назад +1

      @ J Mack you just brought up a memory for me it's true i grew up with this SUPERMAN and it still is one of my favs that scene still sends chills down my spine when he screams at the sight of dead lois .
      Never mind rewinding the world didn't make sense it makes sense according to Superman logic 😉. love Cassie's reactions keep quality movies alive CHEERS.😃

  • @jovetj
    @jovetj 3 месяца назад +2

    17:56 He works for the newspaper so he can get word of all the things going wrong so he can go fix them.

  • @philiphowell8061
    @philiphowell8061 Год назад +2

    I was born in November 1974 I'll be 49 this year I've just found you on RUclips and watching you watching my Childhood heroes growing up is brilliant watching you with your beautiful young eyes from a different generation perspective seeing your reactions is just brilliant. Take care Phil from London England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿⚘

  • @easyv7775
    @easyv7775 Год назад +75

    The chemistry between Reeve and Kidder was unsurpassed by any other Superman/Lois pairing. They were like a classic 1940s comedy movie, like Hepburn and Tracy.

    • @mizkomunikation9478
      @mizkomunikation9478 Год назад +4

      No lies detected. I loved Man of Steel, but the Superman/Lois chemistry just wasn’t on this level, and that’s assuming it was there at all. Also, the portrayal of Clark in this movie was just chef’s kiss perfection.

  • @leslauner5062
    @leslauner5062 Год назад +61

    Cassie, when we saw this film in 1978, we were completely blown away by the special effects in it. This was the first film that showed a man fly convincingly. It was glorious! I must've gone to see this film 8 or 9 times in its first cinematic run.

    • @Christobanistan
      @Christobanistan Год назад

      I think it's the first superhero movie ever, at least the first with a budget.

    • @jpwcpa
      @jpwcpa Год назад

      Just a year or two before this movie came out, there were the adventures of live-action superheroes Captain Marvel and Isis to watch on Saturday morning tv. They could both fly, but definitely not convincingly. Of course, in the case of the gorgeous Isis, it was easy to overlook the lack of a special effects budget.

    • @leslauner5062
      @leslauner5062 Год назад

      @@jpwcpa I was an avid watcher of both series...damn I miss the 1970's.....

    • @Christobanistan
      @Christobanistan Год назад

      @@jpwcpa Were those movies?

    • @jpwcpa
      @jpwcpa Год назад

      @@Christobanistan No, they were 30-minute long live-action TV shows on Saturday mornings, as an alternative to Saturday morning cartoons. The show with Captain Marvel was called Shazam, IIRC, and the show with Isis was called The Adventures of Isis. I believe you can find clips or even entire episodes here on RUclips.

  • @nanlobue6354
    @nanlobue6354 Год назад +2

    The 1978 ads for the film said, "You will believe a man can fly!"

  • @celticlass8573
    @celticlass8573 Год назад +2

    The years between 1977 to around 1989, were AMAZING years to be a kid and teen, with respect to movies. Starting in 1977, we had Star Wars, Grease, Gremlins, Ghostbusters, Indiana Jones, Top Gun, Terminator, Stand By Me, Neverending Story, War Games, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Bill & Ted, Back To the Future, Beverly Hills Cop, Die Hard, Tron, Princess Bride, Beetlejuice...

    • @drhkleinert8241
      @drhkleinert8241 3 месяца назад

      Yes, best time of Hollywood ever, starts with Jaws 75 and then brings out lots of REAL Blockbusters and Megastars like Stallone, Ford, Willis, Schwarzenegger, Gibson, Glover etc...There was a time BEFORE Spielberg and after...Lucas, Cameron...

  • @marleybob3157
    @marleybob3157 Год назад +106

    Marlon Brando's "Superman" deal was branded “unprecedented” at the time. He ultimately received $3.7m plus 11.75 percent on the backend for what amounted to less than 20 minutes on screen as Superman's Kryptonian father Jor-El. Cary Elwes (who played Wesley in "The Princess Bride") was sixteen and worked behind the scenes in "Superman". His job was to get Marlon out of his trailer. “Marlon had no incentive to be on time, because his agent had struck the most amazing deal for him,” Elwes said. “Every day that the picture went over, he got another million dollars." Elwes swiftly discovered that the best way to lure Brando out of his trailer was mainly with food. “Once you fed Marlon, he was in a much better mood,” the actor recalled. “So I tried to find delicacies that appealed to him, which were limited at Shepperton at the time. He mainly wanted desserts.”

    • @logandarklighter
      @logandarklighter Год назад +8

      That's an amazing bit of backstory! Is there footage on RUclips of Cary Elwes recounting this tale?

    • @vilefly
      @vilefly Год назад +4

      At those stakes, I'd have set the trailer on fire.
      "Rise and shine, ham bone! Let's go! Get out, or we'll bring the marshmallows! What's the matter? I thought you liked the smell of burning ego in the morning! Mush! Mush! Oh, I forgot. You want your pancakes with or without cocaine on top?"

    • @raymondcarver476
      @raymondcarver476 Год назад +1

      I watched some interview with someone talking about this movie. DOn't remember who it was, but from what I remember hearing, people were a bit nervous around Marlon when he was on set, I think because he might not have been the friendliest person. I could be wrong, but that's what I think I heard. Gene Hackman was on set watching Marlon work, and was grinning from ear to ear. Someone asked him why he was grinning. He said that he had a few million reasons to be grinning!!

    • @PowerCookie1
      @PowerCookie1 Год назад

      Thats how he got so fat

    • @colliric
      @colliric Год назад +2

      His deal makes more sense when you remember it was actually for the two films.
      His scenes were great in the Donner cut of the sequel, I'm glad they restored them.

  • @CJMU86
    @CJMU86 Год назад +98

    21:25 This scene is why Christopher should have had an Oscar nomination. Look at the way his stature changes, the straightening of the shoulders. A physical transformation from Clark to Superman, all just by taking off his glasses. Even the sound of his voice changes. And then changing back when he backs out of revealing his true identity. Playing two different people in the same shot. Amazing acting.

    • @joseanl
      @joseanl Год назад +9

      when Cassie says "she doesn't see he is superman??" No, Loise sees a klutz of a man, nasaly voice, slightly bent over all the time and weird. That's the perfect disguise

    • @RossM3838
      @RossM3838 Год назад +7

      @@joseanl Lois is in love with Superman while she likes Clark. Her mind is on Superman We in the audience know they are the same but if we put ourselves in lois’ place we can see that there is no reason, at least at first, to see them as the same person Other than that they sort of look like each other

    • @chrisharris9577
      @chrisharris9577 Год назад +1

      Yep

    • @patticrichton1135
      @patticrichton1135 Год назад +1

      @@joseanl absolutely!!!

  • @ahwayzcool4630
    @ahwayzcool4630 Год назад +6

    I was 8 years old when my dad took me and my brother to see this! Movie was amazing and magical at the time. Still is even today. To me Reeves will always be THE #1 Superman.

  • @kobayashimaru8114
    @kobayashimaru8114 2 месяца назад

    I remember watching this as a child in the 80s (too young to catch in theatre). I thought it was the greatest thing ever. I remember running around the house in my Superman PJs with a kitchen towel as a cape. Christopher Reeve is still the figure I see in my head when I hear "Superman".
    I'm still impressed at some of the flying scenes, especially take-off/landing. Doing it in-camera gives it a realistic feel even though it's slower and not as slick as modern CG.

  • @burningdaylights
    @burningdaylights Год назад +75

    The great thing about this film is how wholesome and optimistic it is. It's just pure hearted in a way we don't see now, but speaks honestly to us, rather than seeming trite.

  • @Randomcorpse
    @Randomcorpse Год назад +71

    This was such an event, when I was a kid. The Superman movies (especially the first 2) were part of a great era, with the original star wars movies and Indiana jones.

    • @ThePoorBoy
      @ThePoorBoy Год назад +5

      It's incredible how John Williams tied these films together for us musically. We had it good as kids...

    • @Adino1
      @Adino1 Год назад +6

      I was 3 when they had Superman 1 & 2 back to back on HBO when I was a kid
      They are the first movies I can clearly remember watching and they kept my attention for 4 straight hours, left a big imprint on me

    • @logandarklighter
      @logandarklighter Год назад +4

      Don’t forget the First couple of Star Trek films! And Tron. And The Last Starfighter. Krull! Excalibur! Dragonslayer! And the original Battlestar Galactica was on TV. And Buck Rogers. Star Blazers (Space Battleship Yamato) premiered in the top 9 major TV markets in 1979. And then to the entire syndication market in 1980.
      It was an awesome time to grow up as a Sci-Fi/Fantasy/comic-book fan!! 👍😁

    • @Randomcorpse
      @Randomcorpse Год назад +1

      @@logandarklighter Well if we're going to include TV.... There was Doctor Who with the best Doctor, Tom Baker, and 1979/1980 there was Monkey. A British dubbed, Japanese show, about Chinese mythology, based on an Indian religion, where a gorgeous swimwear model played a boy priest. (and young people try to tell *us* about diversity)

    • @Christobanistan
      @Christobanistan Год назад +3

      @@logandarklighter No doubt, I was 4-14 in the 80s. It was like God Himself placed me on the exact right year to be born! 🤯

  • @donmorton4597
    @donmorton4597 Год назад +7

    This was the first true superhero movie. I remember seeing it in the theater as a 7 year old kid and I did believe a man could fly.

  • @paulcastle3171
    @paulcastle3171 11 месяцев назад +2

    Thoroughly enjoyed the reaction ( especially the running)..! I was nine years old when I first saw this film and I can’t overstate just what an impact it had, not just on me but tens of millions of people. The effects at the time were revolutionary, in fact the tag line for the movie was ‘You’ll believe a man can fly’. It contains the scene that to this day has never been equalled in terms of crowd response: the helicopter rescue. When this happened the entire cinema just went crazy with applause and cheering. It’s also forgotten how impressive the cast is. Don’t forget, this movie was an enormous risk. The very first big screen, massive budget comic book film. To have Brando, Hackman, Glen Ford, Ned Beatty, Terence Stamp, Trevor Howard, Suzanna York was unprecedented. At the centre of it all though, is the great Christopher Reeve. A complete unknown before this, his casting as Superman / Clarke must go down as one of, if not the, greatest casting decisions in cinema history. He is pitch perfect and has set the bar at an impossible to reach level for all other interpretations of the character. The movie retains its magic and has a spirit and quality that has been very rarely matched. Todays CGI offerings, while occasionally impressive visually have none of the charm and warmth on display here and John Williams immortal theme and in fact, the whole soundtrack would be amongst his very best. Sure, the effects are dated by today’s standards, but that’s not the point…. It’s the heart and for me it captures a moment in time, before the internet, before social media, before mobile phones, when people came together to experience something magical and innocent. When everything seemed possible and there was nothing that couldn’t be done. That times long gone, but luckily we have movies like this to remind us.

  • @DarkClaw0912
    @DarkClaw0912 Год назад +27

    One of my favorite visual effects is when Clark takes off his glasses while standing in Lois' apartment after the "date with Superman" scene. Clark straightens up and looks different. Reeves was a tremendous actor and gave legitimacy to the idea of Clark's glasses working as a disguise.

  • @tackysum
    @tackysum Год назад +48

    Lois: "Who are you?"
    Superman: "A friend"
    Makes me smile every time.

    • @johnnyskinwalker4095
      @johnnyskinwalker4095 Год назад +3

      That completely define what Superman is. Always gives me shills.

    • @MrUndersolo
      @MrUndersolo Год назад +3

      I love when he looks at that phone booth and decides he can't use it.

    • @michaeljung1662
      @michaeljung1662 Год назад +1

      Yep - Reeve's Superman knew exactly who he was and why he did what he did. Tom Welling and Henry Cavill's Superman would probably respond to "Who are you?" with a "I DON'T KNOW!" and fly away crying dramatically.

    • @Doutsoldome
      @Doutsoldome Год назад

      @@michaeljung1662 lol Yeah, indeed.

  • @rockinrichardsmoviereviews1901
    @rockinrichardsmoviereviews1901 Год назад +3

    Christopher Reeve should have been nominated and won the Oscar for this role!Yes even playing Superman a comic-book superhero.He brought so much to the role.His performance was off the charts!!!!

  • @danielduran201
    @danielduran201 22 часа назад

    I saw this movie 3 different times on a 60' screen when it was first released. Dolby surround sound.
    There are certain movies that you want to see at the theater and this was made for that
    experience. R.I.P.
    Christopher Reeve.

  • @jakehawke8196
    @jakehawke8196 Год назад +33

    I saw this in the theater when I was 8 or 9.
    I still get chills every time I hear that Superman-music start up.
    Also, when Pa Kent falls over in the farmyard in that wide shot... that was the first time that I saw a person die. I still remember it. Very moving, especially because he was such a good guy.

    • @Tr0nzoid
      @Tr0nzoid Год назад +4

      My favorite thing, and just about the only thing I remember about the 2006 "Superman Returns," was the revival of the music and opening sequence. Now that I think about it, it was probably my first time experiencing that in the theater.

    • @nivekian
      @nivekian Год назад +2

      My earliest movie going experience I remember, was seeing this. Like 1978, I was aboyr 4. Was OBSESSED with Superman for years. Capes & Costumes. A lot of us were.

  • @bluesorcerer83
    @bluesorcerer83 Год назад +64

    The real and only Superman, indeed, and also Richard Donner's magnum opus. Too bad no one has been able to replicate this level of respect for the character in any subsequent live-action adaptation.

    • @johnpaullogan1365
      @johnpaullogan1365 Год назад

      i think the team behind smallville did a great job for clark kent. it was honestly too good which led to it lasting far too long for the rules the corporate overlords of wb dictated

    • @zacharylewis2802
      @zacharylewis2802 Год назад +3

      Henry Cavill has the look and acting ability. He should be the definitive Superman, but he had horrible material to work with.

  • @mrimadger
    @mrimadger 3 месяца назад

    Ever since I was a kid when I watch this movie I turn the tv all the way up for the super scream after she dies. That piece of audio is the single best technical accomplishment in this movie imo.

  • @zenkizenki
    @zenkizenki 2 месяца назад +1

    the song 'Can you read my mind' was one of my mom's favorites

  • @reptomicus
    @reptomicus Год назад +26

    Reeve's charisma is off the charts in Superman. That's why it's so damn hard to cast another. Having the look is one thing, but the screen presence makes it work.

  • @djrommybalibalita5747
    @djrommybalibalita5747 Год назад +59

    Honestly one of the greatest super hero stories of all time ☺️🐻

    • @3Kings_Industries
      @3Kings_Industries Год назад +6

      one of the best actors to play Superman as well. Truly embodied the hero till his dying day.

  • @paulpolpiboon9535
    @paulpolpiboon9535 Год назад

    @17:50 "why did he work at the Daily Planet"
    The reason in the comics forever is because he knew being close to a live-information institution he could react immediately to any crisis and be more effective for his intentions of saving the day. He also understands the value of information, he's now always up to date deep behind the scenes and can make better heroic decisions with valid information.
    But your thoughts of checking what they might know about him is kinda devious of you, yet you seem so sweet lol

  • @willb289
    @willb289 Год назад +3

    Still remember seeing this at the age of 12. From the very beginning with the kid narrating about the Daily Planet, this movie oozed being epic. Before this movie, superheroes and all that were fun and definitely a comic book thing. This movie made a superhero real and made Superman a true role model of goodness. Can't quantify how monumental this movie was back in the day and still is in some ways even today.

  • @petrusjnaude7279
    @petrusjnaude7279 Год назад +57

    One of the reasons I loved Christopher Reeve's portrayal of Clark Kent/Superman is the clear difference in personality between Clark and Superman.

    • @williamrandolph1566
      @williamrandolph1566 Год назад

      Even though I grew up on George Reeves as Superman, that was always my chief complaint about HIS portrayal. Outside of the very first episode where Reeves played Kent as mild-mannered and Superman as over-the-top macho, as the show progressed, the was absolutely no difference between Clark and Supes....as portrayed by Reeves.
      Christopher Reeve played them perfectly as two completely different people with different hairstyles, posture, mannerisms, and overall personalities. Reeve was masterful

    • @darthfinality
      @darthfinality Год назад

      @@williamrandolph1566 it's also a case of bad directing for the show and great directing for the movie.

    • @williamrandolph1566
      @williamrandolph1566 Год назад +1

      @@darthfinality I read that George Reeves refused to play Clark Kent as meek and mild-mannered. He argued that in order for him to be believable as a good reporter, he would have to be more "hard-nosed".

    • @andrewmurray1550
      @andrewmurray1550 Год назад

      @@williamrandolph1566 I kind of see the Lois and Clarke Daily Planet partnership more like Maxwell Smart and Agent 99. 99/Lois being the beauty and brains and Clarke/Maxwell being the tries-hard-but-often-fails comic relief - although Clarke purposely portrays that bumbling persona where for Smart it comes "naturally".

  • @ct6852
    @ct6852 Год назад +39

    Superman Theme by John Williams is way underrated. I think it's one of the best he's ever done.

    • @NBLP7001
      @NBLP7001 Год назад +8

      "Without John Williams, bikes don't really fly, nor do brooms in Quidditch matches, nor do men in red capes. There is no Force, dinosaurs do not walk the Earth, we do not wonder, we do not weep, we do not believe." Steven Spielberg

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад +1

      @@NBLP7001 He's pretty damn magical. I got to see an orchestra score Jurassic Park live and it was soooo cool.

    • @tcmn1982
      @tcmn1982 Год назад +3

      How old you are to think and talk something so absurd? Superman score is one of the best scores created for a film in history.

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад +1

      @@tcmn1982 Yeah that's what I said. But Williams never got nominated for it?

    • @sup9542
      @sup9542 Год назад +2

      Not just the main theme but the love theme, I think it's called. That's the one that I've always thought is super underrated. If you watch the full end credits, the way it just swells up at the end with that love theme, it's one of his best compositions.

  • @ebbhead20
    @ebbhead20 11 месяцев назад +2

    Also, you missed the amazing scene where Supe flies off just to knock on the door as Clark. That's all one scene and people was losing their minds when it came out. Few knew how that was done.. 😊

  • @JedHead77
    @JedHead77 Год назад +46

    The film that set the standard for all superhero films to follow, and that proved they weren’t “just for kids”.
    ❤️💛💙

    • @ChallengeIdeas
      @ChallengeIdeas Год назад

      Then they started making superhero films that aren't at all for kids. 😞

  • @Dash277
    @Dash277 Год назад +33

    I knew you'd love Clark in this. And the score to this still gives me goosebumps. This movie is the best interpretation of Superman I've ever seen. He is infinitely powerful, humble, honest and just relentlessly good.

    • @DeltaAssaultGaming
      @DeltaAssaultGaming Год назад +5

      Superman is how the US sees itself.
      Batman is how the world sees the US.

    • @dougallen9689
      @dougallen9689 Год назад +3

      @@DeltaAssaultGaming Batman is how the U.S. wishes the world would see it.
      Most of the world sees the U.S. as Homelander.

    • @clit_niblr0375
      @clit_niblr0375 Год назад

      @@DeltaAssaultGaming - The U.S. likes to believe itself to be Jesus Christ.
      The Spanish Inquisition/Salem Witch Trials is where the U.S. is heading.

  • @Lynnamon
    @Lynnamon 9 месяцев назад

    To answer your question about why he’s a reporter, it’s actually a simple answer. It puts him in a position to find out bad news, so that way he can help people quicker. Also, yes, Clark has a knack for writing.

  • @fantasycamp4000
    @fantasycamp4000 Месяц назад

    As someone who grew up watching the tv series as a boy, and then having so many years in between before this movie came out. I had goosebumps when christopher reeve first put on the cape and saved that helicopter from falling.

  • @gregclifford7368
    @gregclifford7368 Год назад +19

    All these movies, Superman, Indiana Jones, Ghostbusters, back to the Future....all the original, all the best, all the best scores, all the best time in movies. Todays teens, 20 somethings will never experience a time when music, fashion, movies everything were at their peak. Creative magic and true originality was everywhere, no politics, no social justice warriors, the future was bright. After the mid-90s with the introduction of social media, internet, 24 hour news....the world was never the same.

    • @brandonshaw2120
      @brandonshaw2120 Год назад +2

      So true. The CGI-laden crap of today just looks like a shit video game to me. That's another thing...I'm not a gamer, but what passes for video games nowadays look AWFUL. They all look the same and all seem to BE the same. Give me Nemesis, Bubble Bobble, Shinobi or Wonderboy in Monster Land at an arcade with proper joysticks over that shite any day!

  • @Uncultured_Barbarian465
    @Uncultured_Barbarian465 Год назад +80

    I love this movie, and it holds a special place in my heart. Growing up we were poor and didn't get to see a lot of movies, but we made a day of it when we saw this. Went to the budget theatre and I was amazed by this, and then we went to a Greek diner down the street and I got my first taste of gyros. My folks are together in the afterlife now, but I appreciate them for so many things, one of them being my love of movies.
    .
    When we saw this back in the 70's, we though the effects were great. And I love Gene Hackman, I'll watch him in almost anything. He's a national treasure. And I love my Superman like this, the big blue Boy Scout he's supposed to be, a symbol of hope.

  • @NoName-jq7tj
    @NoName-jq7tj Год назад +4

    This is a magical film. It gets screened often in one particular theatre in London one a year.

  • @nzblack
    @nzblack Год назад +31

    If you like Christopher Reeve, watch him in Deathtrap (1982), directed by Sidney Lumet. It has many plot twists and which references itself as a play within a play. It is in two acts with one set and five characters. Deathtrap was the longest-running comedy-thriller on Broadway, and was nominated for four Tony Awards, including Best Play.

  • @davidcosta2244
    @davidcosta2244 Год назад +62

    You also must give credit to Gene Hackman for playing an excellent Lex Luthor.

    • @sup9542
      @sup9542 Год назад +2

      He played the role great, because the role was supposed to have a comedic flair. If they asked him to play a really serious dark Luthor, he would have been great at that too. It just wasn't what Donner was going for. He took Superman's side of the movie very seriously but he was more lighthearted with Luthor's.

  • @AlexSadof
    @AlexSadof Год назад +20

    My uncle took me to see this when I was 5 years old and I 100% remember the experience being one of the happiest of my life. I immediately got my mom to buy me Superman Underoos and I'd run around the house pretending to fly.

    • @hallieharker4384
      @hallieharker4384 Год назад +1

      We didn't have Superman Underoos, but my brother did have Superman pajamas that looked kinda like long johns. I remember him tucking in a red-orange bath towel at the neck and pretending to be Superman! It was when this movie and Superman II came out that my Mom had to explain to us kids that some things we saw in movies were only pretend and that the actors and actresses weren't really doing those things, they were just pretending. I seem to remember she explained that Superman and Lois Lane only looked like they were flying because they had wires holding them up. I think she told us that so that we wouldn't really try to fly!

    • @footofjuniper8212
      @footofjuniper8212 Год назад +1

      I had a Superman beach towel that you could wear like a poncho. It had a hole in the middle, and when you draped it over yourself, it had his "body," front and back, on either side.

  • @crhu319
    @crhu319 Год назад +2

    Truly great actors in the first few scenes: Marlon Brando, Glenn Ford ...
    And Hackman! Absolute genius casting!

  • @rafaelperdigao121
    @rafaelperdigao121 День назад

    Reeve was Superman on screen and in real life.
    I grew up seeing his legacy, inspiring my personality from the blue scout with the red cape. There are good actors who took on the role, but only he, REEVE, was and always will be the TRUE MAN OF STEEL.
    PS: Star Wars and Superman Theme (And many other Epic themes) was composed by John Williams.

  • @757optim
    @757optim Год назад +24

    When Superman came off of the pages of comic books and into "real life" on television (kids could recite the introduction verbatim), he was portrayed by George Reeves. When he came to the silver screen in 1978, those who remembered the TV show may have been a little skeptical that the Superman they knew could be portrayed to their satisfaction. The movie was a great success, even for those who remembered, and it was just a little spooky Superman was a guy named Christopher Reeve.

  • @ctmdarkonestm
    @ctmdarkonestm Год назад +45

    that quiet moment when he takes off the glasses and you see his complete change in posture from Clark to Superman shows just how great a performance Reeve put in here.
    you were dead on right about Tessmacher being 35 at the time of the movie.
    another little thing that helped was casting up all the smaller parts. aside from Marlon Brando playing Jor-El (and looking wildly different from the Godfather even though it was not too many years apart), Papa Kent was Glenn Ford who had been the lead actor in a bunch of westerns, the henchman Otis was Ned Beatty who was in big movies for decades (and voiced the stuffed bear Lotso in Toy Story 3)

  • @michaelminch5490
    @michaelminch5490 2 месяца назад +1

    "You will believe a man can fly."
    Yes, we did.

  • @lordofillusions
    @lordofillusions 2 месяца назад

    I was 8 years old when I saw this movie in the theatre in 1979. To this day, the John Williams score sends a shiver up my back and I puff out my chest a little when I hear it. Christopher's ability to act with earnestness through campy dialogue was truly skilled; he really could pull off "swell" totally naturally. Even though I loved DC's "The Watchman", that deconstruction lead superhero films down a dark deconstruction path not seen in this earlier film, and it's better for it. Christopher was able to pull off embodying a symbol of hope which still resonates with millions of fans - this is why he is their 'true' Superman.

  • @seraiharper5553
    @seraiharper5553 Год назад +35

    I love all the naughty innuendo running through this film - it marks it as a product of the 70's. Lois's sly questions, Superman's knowing grins, it's all so delicious and playful. None of that would be possible in a Batman film with its dark characters and unrelenting bitterness. Superman is all about positivity and striving to be better, so his story has room for lightness now and then. And Chris Reeve was so perfect. He was also the lead in what is, in my opinion, the most lovely romance movie ever made, "Somewhere in Time". Oh, he was so wonderful in that. You MUST watch it, I guarantee you'll love it. * sigh *
    By the way, the reason no one sees that he's Clark is because he _can't_ be Clark. Kal-El crafted his cover identity very carefully to make sure of that. It's why Clark is shy, weak, why he stutters and is scared so easily. He can't show any strength because that ensures that no one will ever _expect_ any, and thus it'll be nearly impossible for anyone to realize they're the same person. (It's also why he wears glasses, as through most of the 20th century, glasses were associated with weakness and timidity.)

    • @ct6852
      @ct6852 Год назад +3

      Yes, Lois. Superman can GET IT. lol.

    • @Tr0nzoid
      @Tr0nzoid Год назад +2

      I like the subtle moment after Clark and Lois meet. He bumps into Lois and she jumps, looks down, and holds her gaze for a bit.

  • @lincoln6presentsadventures521
    @lincoln6presentsadventures521 Год назад +31

    I was 7 years old when my father took me to see this in the Theaters!
    I can't help but to STILL see this movie through the experience of that 7 year old boy. It's one of the BEST memories I can remember sharing with my father! Amazing!
    Great Reaction!

    • @joker3092
      @joker3092 Год назад

      Agreed. You have to see it through the prism of it's age/time to appreciate and enjoy it.

  • @The.Ronin.Kuzuri
    @The.Ronin.Kuzuri 2 месяца назад

    I love how each version of Superman is different yet holds the same ideals that make him who he is. Truly goes to show how much of an impact he's had! I think you should check out the 75th anniversary Superman short, I have a feeling you'd enjoy seeing his evolution from 1938-2013

  • @melltenfys
    @melltenfys 3 месяца назад

    This Superman sincerely was a role model for me growing up, I always wanted to be supergirl, both in the play pretend kind of way and in life in general, helping people and doing what is possible to help others just cause its the right thing to do.
    This is very much a movie that transcends just being a movie. To me, it changed my life forever. And this movie was already about 20 years old when I was born.

  • @JohnSmith-po2eh
    @JohnSmith-po2eh Год назад +8

    This is and always will be the best superhero movie. The acting, the production, the direction, the music, the story…. I saw this in the theater. I was blown away. Please know the effects didn’t even exist at the time. They had to invent them. Thank you for watching it.

    • @captainthruster9484
      @captainthruster9484 Год назад

      In a way I agree, Batman 89 and The dark Knight are right up there

    • @Esus4
      @Esus4 Год назад

      This movie was made before digital effects which first came out a year later in Disney's The Black Hole. They refused to give that film that an Oscar because they considered digital effects basically cheating.