‘An honor’
Midway through the filming of “Superman Returns,” star Brandon Routh received an envelope in the mail.
It contained two pendants and a letter. The pendants, each emblazoned with a red S, said simply: “Go Forward.”
The note from Dana Reeve, the widow of “Superman” Christopher Reeve, said much the same thing.
“She said she thought I’d be a good Superman. She wished me luck,” says Routh, 26, best known up until now for a guest role on the “Gilmore Girls” TV series.
“I can’t tell you what that was like to get her blessing,” he says. “I was nervous, because I had never heard from the family, and it’s frightening trying to fill Christopher Reeve’s shoes.”
But Routh will attempt just that as “Superman” swoops into theaters June 30 with more than just a $180 million budget on its shoulders.
The film, which enjoyed one of the most pronounced marketing campaigns at the ShoWest convention of theater owners in Las Vegas last week, carries the hope of a lucrative summer at the box office – and expectations that people will get excited about going to the movies again.
For Routh and director Bryan Singer, there’s also a personal stake in the film doing well.
“From comic books to radio to TV to the movies, everyone knows this character,” says Singer, who also is doing a documentary on the history of Superman. “And they have an idea of who he should be. Those can be big expectations.”
Routh realized just how awesome when he received the Superman tags from the Christopher Reeve Foundation, an organization that promotes research on paralysis.
“I wrote her back but never got to speak with her,” Routh says. “Still, it was such an honor. And it made me realize how important it is to respect not just the characters in this movie, but the people who were a part of it.”
Indeed, the new “Superman” abounds with legacies.
Singer says he plans to use the late Marlon Brando in the new film. Brando, who played Superman’s father, Jor-El, in the 1978 “Superman” and died in 2004, will return in the same role.
Singer says he found stock footage of Brando shot by director Richard Donner in 1978, which will provide Brando’s voice. Special-effects crews will digitally re-create Brando’s image, Singer says.
The new film will revisit the origins of the Man of Steel. Singer is well aware he’s treading on hallowed ground.
“This isn’t just any comic book character,” he says. “Superman is America. He’s as iconic as it gets. That’s a pretty awesome responsibility.”