‘Superman' Is Here. Is James Gunn's Box Office Flight a Gust of DCU Fresh Air, or More of the Same?
Anne was in New York this week to join Ryan in-studio at the IndieWire offices to discuss the movie and more, Ryan having just seen it at the Regal Times Square during the first afternoon 2 p.m. public screening. While Anne enjoyed the screwball-romantic chemistry between Corenswet and 'Marvelous Mrs. Maisel' breakout Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane, Ryan loathed the experience and found it to be another serving of superhero slop as depressing as any other (despite some winky, cheeky banter). Like other superhero tentpoles before it, Gunn's new 'Superman' descends into a 45-minute maelstrom of CGI nonsense, yet another good-vs.-evil battle that crosses times and dimensions and may be easy to follow (at least compared to other Marvel or DC final battles) but is ultimately hard to care about or invest in.
More from IndieWire
'Practical Magic 2' - Everything We Know So Far
James Gunn Cast Bradley Cooper for 'Superman' Cameo Because He 'Could Walk in the Footsteps' of Brando
Corenswet is plenty handsome and charming as the character originated on the big screen by Christopher Reeve and created in the comics by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. But the fact is no Superman movie has been as good as Richard Donner's 1978 take, which Anne and Ryan can both agree on. (Same goes for another summer tentpole, 'Jurassic World Rebirth,' another franchise wherein the first movie was the only true great one.) This 'Superman' movie's message of good prevailing over evil grew tiresome for Ryan, but then again, what possible psychological nuance were we expecting from a fun-in-the-sun summer blockbuster? He felt exhausted and defeated, whereas Anne found things to like about what's going to be one of the season's biggest films, the casting especially.
Later in the episode, and since we took a break for Fourth of July, we finally parse the New York Times' list of the 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century, crowned by Bong Joon Ho's historic Best Picture winner 'Parasite' at #1. We factor in some recency bias for that choice — though we aren't denying it's a fantastic film — as well as its timely take on class disparity that is strongly resonating in America today. (The Times' list of 500 participants included no film critics.) We offer up our own favorites, which veer wildly, though we both agree 'No Country for Old Men' (#6 on the Times' list) is a lock for any best-of-century Top 10. (Also check out IndieWire's best films of the 2020s, which published earlier in June.)
Elsewhere, we take a look at new TV series including 'Dept. Q,' a British crime thriller on Netflix from Scott Frank and Chandni Lakhani that Anne loves. Ryan, however, raves about 'Girls' creator Lena Dunham's return to TV with 'Too Much,' starring Megan Stalter as a Dunham-adjacent who moves to London and falls in with a quote-unquote bad boy (Will Sharpe) after a bad breakup. It's as much a send-up of millennial culture as it is a tribute to the great British romantic comedies of the '90s and aughts, like 'Notting Hill' and 'Bridget Jones's Diary.'Best of IndieWire
The Best Thrillers Streaming on Netflix in July, from 'Vertigo' and 'Rear Window' to 'Emily the Criminal'
The Best Lesbian Movies Ever Made, from 'D.E.B.S.' and 'Carol' to 'Bound' and 'Pariah'
All 12 Wes Anderson Movies, Ranked, from 'Bottle Rocket' to 'The Phoenician Scheme'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
AMC Lincoln Square closed after video shows flooding
NEW YORK CITY (PIX11) – An AMC in Manhattan is closed after videos posted to social media show the movie theater flooding during Monday's storms. The location on Broadway and West 68th Street is 'temporarily closed' on Tuesday, according to a message on the theater's website. Is your subway station flooded? Don't try to go inside, MTA says 'We apologize for the inconvenience, but this theatre is temporarily closed for unforeseen maintenance. Please continue to check back here for updates,' reads the message. A video posted to TikTok Monday show water bursting out of the ceilings, dousing the concessions area and covering the ground. Another video posted to TikTok shows moviegoers evacuating the theater. 'Didn't get to watch the last 15 minutes of Superman,' wrote Yasmine. 'AMC Theatre Lincoln Square flooded, whole theatre had to evacuate.' A spokesperson for AMC did not immediately respond to PIX11's request for comment. Subway stations and streets also flooded during the intense rainstorm Monday evening, including the 28th Street station in Manhattan. Emily Rahhal is a digital reporter who has covered New York City since 2023 after reporting in Los Angeles for years. She joined PIX11 in 2024. See more of her work here and follow her on Twitter here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Geek Tyrant
18 minutes ago
- Geek Tyrant
Three Superhero Moments James Gunn Never Wants to See Again in the Movies — GeekTyrant
James Gunn, co-CEO of DC Studios and director of the upcoming Superman movie, recently talked about the three superhero moments that he never wants to see again, telling The Times: 'There are three things I don't ever need to see again in a superhero movie. I don't need to see pearls in a back alley when Batman's parents are killed. I don't need to see the radioactive spider biting Spider-Man. And I don't need to see baby Kal coming from Krypton in a little baby rocket.' It's not that Gunn is dismissing those origin stories, he's just acknowledging how oversaturated they've become. He pointed out how other films don't feel the need to spell everything out. 'We have watched a million movies with characters who don't have their upbringing explained, like when we see Good Night, and Good Luck we don't need to know the early life of Edward R. Murrow to explain how he became a journalist. Who cares?' That line of thinking directly informs his approach to Superman . Rather than rehash Clark Kent's journey from Smallville farm boy to Krypton's last son, Gunn's film introduces a Superman already in action. This version of the character is in year three of his superhero career, and the world around him has been dealing with metahumans for centuries. Instead of starting at square one, Gunn is launching the movie with a Star Wars-style opening crawl to get audiences up to speed. Gunn has also confirmed that The Brave and the Bold , DC's upcoming Batman movie, will feature a seasoned Caped Crusader, not another early-years vigilante weighed down by flashbacks of alleyway trauma. When previously talking about Superman, he said: 'We just start in the middle of the action. Superman already exists. Lois and Clark already know each other. Lex [Luthor] hates Superman's guts from the beginning, although they don't know each other personally. So we start right in the middle of the action. It takes place over a short amount of time.' I'm on board with this direction for movies. We don't need to keep seeing the same old origin story, and I'm glad that DC Studios will be moving away from that and trying something different.


Forbes
25 minutes ago
- Forbes
After ‘Superman,' It's Time To Let Go Of ‘The Batman' Joining The DCU
Superman/The Batman DC For years now, ever since James Gunn was announced as the leader of the new DCU, an open question, if not common request, is that Matt Reeves' The Batman 's Batman, played by Robert Pattinson, would be the Batman for that new universe. The most promising thing James Gunn has ever said about the idea is 'never say never,' but the longer this goes, and especially in the wake of Superman , the less likely this seems to be. And at this point, I think it's just time to give it up. The evidence is mounting that this just is not going to happen: James Gunn has spoken repeatedly about the script for Batman: The Brave and The Bold , the announced DCU Batman film, which is constantly being worked on as we speak. Matt Reeves finally submitted his long awaited The Batman Part II script and there's no reason to think at all that he designed it to try to fit in with the DCU. If he did that's what, Gunn and us waiting for a DCU-based Batman script that may not even be used if they do Brave and the Bold ? Nothing about that makes sense, nor would a script for The Batman Part II that does not connect to the DCU if Pattinson's Bats was going to be in the DCU. He's going to have to connect to Superman, Supergirl and all of that without having to wait a decade to do so. Another recent report is that the original plan for Clayface was to have that movie exist in the Reeves universe, but it was pulled over to the DCU instead. The Batman WB Finally, if you've seen Superman , boy, it would be tough to put those together. I know that tone shifts are frequent in comics, but those are worlds apart. It's also already been established in the DCU that Batman has been active for 15 years, so this would be a huge timeskip for Pattinson's version, leaving that existing set of storylines almost entirely behind. I also don't think that Gunn would want to wait until 20230 or whatever it might be for a third Batman film to directly connect to the DCU. He probably just wants The Brave and the Bold and more freedom to do his DCU stuff without worrying about Reeves and balancing the other world. This is just not going to happen at this point. Would it be fun? Sure. Pattinson Batman is great, the movie is great, The Penguin is great. But it's not going to work. We have to give it up. Follow me on Twitter , YouTube , Bluesky and Instagram . Pick up my sci-fi novels the Herokiller series and The Earthborn Trilogy