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all-star superman

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prescribeddrone
Batman25JM
rwe1138
kidspider2099
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1all-star superman Empty all-star superman Sun Feb 06, 2011 6:41 pm

kidspider2099

kidspider2099
Zombie Ninja
Zombie Ninja

I can't wait for this dvd I know i am totally buying this one. I waited on the other dc animated movies this one i am not waiting on. I will buy it soon after it comes out. I love this story and i want to see what include and what the leave out.

2all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Sun Feb 06, 2011 7:17 pm

rwe1138

rwe1138
Moderator
Moderator

Nobody tell Knize!

http://panelsonpages.com/?page_id=903

3all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Sun Feb 06, 2011 7:35 pm

kidspider2099

kidspider2099
Zombie Ninja
Zombie Ninja

i doubt he will watch it

4all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Sun Feb 06, 2011 8:09 pm

Batman25JM

Batman25JM
Zombie Ninja
Zombie Ninja

I just hope I like this. I haven't even been able to finish the first ASS trade because I wasn't digging it. I hope the movie is less Morrison-y.

5all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Sun Feb 06, 2011 8:42 pm

prescribeddrone

prescribeddrone
Zombie Ninja
Zombie Ninja

I can't wait for it, I loved ASS. Laughing

6all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Fri Feb 18, 2011 11:19 pm

elijahdprophet

elijahdprophet
PoP! Brewmaster
PoP! Brewmaster

Just watched it. Not going to write a full review but what I am writing I will put in spoiler tags since this isn't officially out yet.


Spoiler:
I feel like this is probably my favorite of the DCU animated movies since Return Of The Joker. I am especially excited to get the blu-ray when it is released, because the is a commentary with Bruce Timm and Grant Morrison, as well as a featurette on the writing of the original series.

That being said, I also think it will be very polarizing (how could it not be, it is based on Morrison). It felt very much like a movie for the fans of the series. Some of the storyline hopping and trademark 'between the panels' action Morrison is famous for comes off as a little odd in this format. If they had pushed for 90 minutes or slightly longer I think it would have allowed them to connect the dots between the various elements more cleanly.

Ok, fine, this is a review. 4.5 out of 5.

PS, the scene based on my sig image is left in the movie and I need to make an animated gif out of it.



7all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Fri Feb 18, 2011 11:42 pm

prescribeddrone

prescribeddrone
Zombie Ninja
Zombie Ninja

I had it for a week or two on blu ray and yeah, it was amazing.

8all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Sat Feb 19, 2011 1:52 am

Sandman

Sandman
Ninja
Ninja

I did not like it at all. it was just odd. i never read the books i guess i just don't get it. i did not really care for it

9all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Sat Feb 19, 2011 8:03 pm

Nymn

Nymn
Pirate
Pirate

I liked it, but it's not anywhere near being my favorite of the DTV's. Disappointed that they left out
Spoiler:
That was my favorite part of the comic.

10all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Tue Feb 22, 2011 3:27 am

prescribeddrone

prescribeddrone
Zombie Ninja
Zombie Ninja

http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=30943


CBR News: When Warner Brothers and DC decided to adapt "All Star Superman" to animation, did they approach you about it and make you aware of their intention?

Grant Morrison: Oh, yeah. I knew way back from the very beginning. In fact, they asked me to take a go at the script, but at the time I just wasn't available and I was really busy with other stuff. So, it didn't work out that way. But yeah, I knew early on that the movie was happening.

Series creator Grant Morrison weighs in on the animated adaptation of "All Star Superman"

What were your thoughts on them turning your story into a film? Some people often argue that comics, especially something like "All Star," simply can't be translated into a movie.

I don't know. I think comics is kind of a movie of a different kind. They both share the same idea of a good story. Everyone likes a good story, so I think it's one of the things of translating from one medium to another. That was why I was interested in seeing it. I was always interested in seeing everything moving and that transformation that it goes through. It was an experience for me to see what they could make out of it and I was very pleased with the results.

When talking about "All Star Superman," people often refer to it as the Silver Age Superman with Modern Age sensibilities. But if you look at the comic, there are so many different eras of Superman present in the issues. When you originally sat down to write it, what went through your head as you created the Superman we ended up seeing on the page?

It was really trying to get down, "What is the essential Superman?" There are really three different eras, and I read all of them, from the 1938 Superman, the scrappy socialist who can only leap an eighth of a mile, to the 1950s Superman, who is always in major peril but his problems were still human problems, whether losing his hair or getting fat or growing old. He was kind of the most normal of them all. Then, the superhuman Superman of the 70s, who is just a scorecard of a guy fighting bad guys and other superheroes.

I tried to think about, "In all through these versions, what stayed the same?" Because something always stayed same. Every writer who does Superman has to make it seem like this is the new definitive Superman. So, even if there has been a lot of different versions, for me it was about finding the core of it. I found that in some of those '50s and 60s comics, what made them great was, just as I said, they were about real human emotions and real human stories, but played out in this huge scale of other planets and people from the future and relatives from other worlds and monsters and robots.

But really, it's about walking the dog and going out with a girl and messing things up. I think that's why maybe people think of "All Star Superman" as a bit more Silver Age in the sense of trying to do new, modern real human stories, but on the giant scale of Superman. That's the most interesting thing, is the "man." The best stories are just about this guy trying to make sense of stuff and the girl doesn't like him as much as he wishes she would. The bad guy hates him, but he likes the bad guy. That real, small human emotional stuff works great when you blow it up to cosmic proportions.

A lot of people who aren't Superman fans always complain that he's not interesting because he's so powerful. "How is there drama when he can punch a planet in two?" But like you said, it's about the events being cosmic, but the story being about the man.

The best Superman stories, particularly in that era I was talking about, is stuff like "The Death of Superman" and "Superman's Return to Krypton." There were really love stories or stories of grief, but as I said, you do them on a biblical scale with cosmic weaponry and space ships and it looks great. I think comic books should be about that stuff. I love the comics that have big energy and superheroes in big conflicts. As you said, Superman can be as powerful as you like, but his heart can be broken and that's why it doesn't matter if he can throw planets. If you break his heart, he's useless. The emotional stories are always the big thing with Superman.

Looking at the film, they obviously had to edit out scenes and couldn't include everything from the comic. Was there anything that you wished they got to include that they didn't?

There's always things that you think, "Oh, it'd be nice to have that," but I was more impressed with the fact that they got so much in. I was really surprised when Atlas and Samson came out. I thought, "There was no way they'd get these guys in." But it really comes to life. The same goes for the story with the Kryptonians. I really like the almost epic nature of it -- showing these different days as we're counting down toward Superman's death. So, honestly, I was most impressed with the fact that they got so much of it in. When I went back and read the book, and I'd think, "Oh, it'd be nice if we could have seen the Bizarros, or great if we'd seen the goth girl alone at the top of the skyscraper," but there's so much there that it's kind of a miracle. It's a big book, with 250 pages, and they managed to get it into a feature length movie.

Was there a scene in the film where you were particularly fond of how it turned out in its translation from page to screen?


Morrison was impresed with the adaptation of Frank Quitely's art to the animated screen

Oh, God, there's lots of them. Particularly, the moment when Solaris arrives and it just ramps up to this cosmic thing. I don't think we've seen anything like that in Superman for a long time, certainly not on screen. This is quite openly sci-fi, fantasy, you know, "Face the Scourge of Worlds." That kind of over-the-top dialogue I think really, really works well for Superman. When he comes on screen and starts talking like that, it takes it onto this very epic level. So, I really like that. But so much of it, just the way they captured Frank Quitely's set ups and composition and the new visuals with how they presented it in a really nice, long, letterbox shape, which I liked.

In regard to what you said before -- how Superman never gets the girl and how he sees Lex -- does this encapsulate your definitive take on the character? Is this your version of what Superman comics should actually be like?

Yeah. This was, "If I was doing it every month, it'd be like this." Not to say that's the only way. I'd be really sad if Superman didn't changed, and he changes for every new generation -- sometimes even faster than that. But I love all the different versions, even the ones that are very different from "All Star Superman." I think if I was to do it again, for instance, I'd like to do the early Superman, who just lifts trucks and who can be hurt by a bursting shell. I'd like to do something really interesting with that guy. The young, angry Superman. The different versions always fascinate me because they all add up to this huge, gigantic, multi-generational story. It's something quite unique.

When it comes to that idea of evolving Superman through the generations, in the ending of "All Star," Superman is converting into pure energy. Looking at how people have evolved, with technology especially, we're coming closer to the Superman ideal. Do you think Superman has to keep evolving because he always needs to be more than we can be as humans?

Absolutely. Superman was always a little bit ahead of us. Back in the first stories, he's a muscle man, he's a strongman. I do love that element of him, the tough guy element of Superman. He should never cry or anything like that. He should always be a tough guy because he was raised on a farm, pitching hay. He's a tough kid. But, yeah, I think that he's always ahead of us. In the '50s, it was a different story because they weren't trying to be realistic in those days. The original Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel Superman is kind of like "The Ultimates" or like "Watchmen." It's really trying to be set in the real world with this one super-strong guy that can jump around. When it got to the '50s, the emotions were real but the energy we used were more from the realm of the '50s mind. So, I think Superman is always ahead of what we think the idea of the Superman is.

Right now, today, we're kind of like cyborg people. Everyone has a phone that links them to a global brain so they don't have to remember any information or names or phone numbers. We have machines that can take you around the world and communicate. We've actually become kind of superhuman, and the idea for me was the next thing was a transcended Superman, and that's what it is at the end. There's a mythical image of him, of a guy in the heart of the sun continually working to save humanity at the very highest level. And at the same time, he's kind of passed on his DNA, so you know there's going to be a Son of Superman sequel, almost. So, I wanted to show that there's this highest, transcended version of Superman at the end, but also, it's a man who's passing on his DNA, passing on everything that he is in the form of a son or a daughter.

That's actually something I wanted to close out on. When the series first ended, you mentioned you had the idea for at least two more stories you still wanted to tell. Are those still ideas you want to explore one day?

Superman is a great character, and Superman, honestly, I could write for that character eternally. So, yeah, given the chance I'd love to do those stories one day. There's a whole bunch of them. I keep coming up with new ones, that's the problem. A new Superman story just comes up. Part of one of the things I wanted to do with the whole Son of Superman thing was to take that whole thing with the old Super Sons stories and update that, make it modern and have the son of Superman and Batman. The first page would be Superman and Batman shaking hands and saying, "Congratulations old friend. We've stopped all crime." One day, I might get to them or some version of it. There's a little bit of that in the "Multiversity" series that I'm doing. Some of these stories always come back in some form. But yeah, I'm getting close, within a couple years, of wrapping up Batman. So, the notion of doing some more Superman stuff is becoming quite interesting again.

11all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Tue Feb 22, 2011 1:39 pm

jaydee74

jaydee74
Zombie Ninja
Zombie Ninja

I'm so jazzed to see this.

12all-star superman Empty Re: all-star superman Tue Feb 22, 2011 6:55 pm

kidspider2099

kidspider2099
Zombie Ninja
Zombie Ninja

I will probably get this after the my money is little tied now.

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