Friday, June 30, 2006

Superman Movie made by anti-Americans


Ever since artist Joe Shuster and writer Jerry Siegel created the granddaddy of all comic book icons in 1932, Superman has fought valiantly to preserve "truth, justice and the American way." Whether kicking Nazi ass on the radio in the '40s or wrapping himself in the Stars and Stripes on TV during the Cold War or even rescuing the White House's flag as his final feat in "Superman II," the Krypton-born, Smallville-raised Ubermensch always has been steeped in unmistakable U.S. symbolism.
But in the latest film incarnation, scribes Michael Dougherty and Dan Harris sought to downplay Superman's long-standing patriot act. With one brief line uttered by actor Frank Langella, the caped superhero's mission transformed from "truth, justice and the American way" to "truth, justice and all that stuff.""The world has changed. The world is a different place," Pennsylvania native Harris says. "The truth is he's an alien. He was sent from another planet. He has landed on the planet Earth, and he is here for everybody. He's an international superhero."
We were always hesitant to include the term 'American way'
Seems like a bad weekend to open the movie if the film-makers are ashamed of patriotism.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Not to defend those folks, but now days many Hollywood movies make most of their money internationally. I have a feeling they made the change so the movie would play better in London.

Although they could have dubbed it over for foriegn release.

William said...

I found a great deal of helpful info in this post!
http://genial-cat.coolpetdevice.com | site | site