Of the eight theatrically released live-action Superman movies, only three have scored a âFreshâ rating on Rotten Tomatoes. So, of the four Christopher Reeve installments, Superman Returns, Man of Steel, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, and the theatrical cut of Justice League, which are the three? The answer may prove to be somewhat surprising.
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On one hand, the fact that the first pair of Reeve installments, Richard Donnerâs 1978 classic Superman: The Movie and Donner/Richard Lesterâs Superman II (1980), are two of the three is not surprising. What is surprising is that fan-favorite Henry Cavill didnât lead a single Fresh-rated Superman movie. Thatâs right, the other Fresh Superman movie is Bryan Singerâs fairly bland Superman Returns.
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The irony is that, while marginally appreciated by critics at the time (it only got a 74% compared to Superman: The Movieâs 93% and Superman IIâs 83%), Superman Returns has mostly been forgotten. For the most part, itâs a meandering film, and while Brandon Routh gives his all to the part and certainly looks a bit like Christopher Reeve, he doesnât possess the late actorâs charisma.
Itâs also a movie with a massive budget and very few action sequences. In other words, it had a massive price tag, yet couldnât even really function as a suitable crowd-pleaser. And, when all was said and done, it didnât make nearly enough to be profitable. Specifically, Superman Returns had an unadjusted budget of $204 million, and it didnât even double that figure, resulting in it being more of a one-and-done than the shot in the arm the IP needed.
Even still, Superman Returnsâ rep is better than Superman III and Superman IV: The Quest for Peace. To its credit, Superman III did comparable business to Superman Returns at the box office, but its critical reception was worse at 29%. Not Superman IV worse (10%), but worse.
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Which Came Close?
With 340 reviews under its belt, the DC Extended Universeâs kickstarter, Zack Snyderâs Man of Steel, has a very-nearly-fresh score of 57%. It certainly wasnât the reception Snyder or Warner Bros. were hoping for, but the shared universeâs subsequent pair of installments showed that it could do worse than Man of Steel. To the DCEUâs credit, it could also do better (see: Blue Beetleâs 77%, The Suicide Squadâs 90%, Birds of Preyâs 79%, Shazam!âs 90%, and Wonder Womanâs 93%).
But, for the most part, the franchiseâs Rotten Tomatoes scores were on par with Man of Steel (The Flash at 63%, Wonder Woman 1984 at 58%, and Aquaman at 66%). Others fared worse, such as with Aquaman and the Lost Kingdomâs 33%, Black Adamâs 39%, Shazam! Fury of the Godsâ 49%. The DCEUâs critical nadirs were Suicide Squad with a paltry 26% and the aforementioned Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, which earned a better but still catastrophic 29%.
As for Justice League, it depends to which version one is referring. The theatrical version of Justice League scored a 39%, which seems a bit high. Fortunately, Zack Snyderâs Justice League effectively saved that projectâs reputation from sinking into total oblivion. And not just with fans, as critics gave it a much higher score of 71%.
Similar to Zack Snyderâs Justice League, Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut (2006) was released years after the theatrical cut and received a much better reception. The difference is it doesnât have a rating on Rotten Tomatoes. But, letâs face it, that cut is many Superman fansâ favorites for good reason, and it stands to reason critics would feel the same way.
So, all in all, there really should be six Fresh Superman films: Donnerâs Superman, Donner/Lesterâs Superman II, Singerâs Superman Returns, the Superman II (original) directorâs cut, Zack Snyderâs Justice League and, given its improved reputation as the years have gone by, Man of Steel.
So, the question is, how will James Gunnâs 2025 reboot, which is the first movie in the DC Universe franchise perform with critics? Given his track record with the Guardians of the Galaxy trilogy and the already-discussed The Suicide Squad, it might just be No. 1 for the Man of Steel.