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Two productions were staged the next year. Both the St. Louis Municipal Opera and the Kansas City Starlight Theatre (in 1966, titled Superman) [4] re-staged the show, and Bob Holiday played Superman in both productions. Each was an open-air venue, requiring the use of a large crane to facilitate Superman's flights.
Margot Kidder (Lois Lane - Superman: The Movie, Superman II, Superman III, Superman IV: The Quest for Peace; Bridgette Crosby - Smallville) Jack Larson ( Jimmy Olsen - Adventures of Superman ; Old Jimmy Olsen - Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman ; Bo the Bartender, Superman Returns )
Superman Returns: An IMAX 3D Experience was released simultaneously in 111 IMAX-format theaters worldwide, which included 20 minutes of converted 3D film material. It was the first Hollywood full-length live-action film to be released in this combined format. [73] One of the key scenes Singer took out was "the Return to Krypton sequence".
The action also sees Superman fighting a huge monster and a mysterious black-suited figure. Take a look below. David Corenswet plays the new Superman, taking the mantle from Henry Cavill.
New oral history of "Airplane!" traces the making of the beloved parody of 1970s disaster movies. 'Airplane!' creators to tell all about their surprise 1980 hit movie at Dearborn event
The CW has unveiled the first full-length look at Tyler Hoechlin in full, caped super-regalia for the upcoming series Superman & Lois, and the latest incarnation of the Man of Steel carries what ...
Superman (also marketed as Superman: The Movie) is a 1978 superhero film based on DC Comics featuring the eponymous character, played by Christopher Reeve.It is the first of four installments in the Superman film series starring Reeve as Superman.
The plane catching scene at the end is strikingly similar to a scene in Superman Returns (2006), in which Superman (Brandon Routh) stops an airplane from crashing into a baseball stadium (that resembles former Yankee Stadium) by pressing his weight into the nose and carefully lowering it onto the field.