Last year in a Man of Steel poster, Superman was shackled in handcuffs. Now he's flying high.
Continuing the action-oriented theme of recent previews, the latest one-sheet for Zach Snyder's adaptation of the D.C. Comics icon shows a blurred image of the hero soaring towards the Sun -- lens flare included.
For many, the difficulty with Superman isn’t heat vision or flight, or even that a slouch and a pair of glasses in no way make a viable disguise. Their disconnect arises from his very character, the idea that a person who can do so much, who can have so much, would be selfless rather than self-serving. They reject that kind of heroism in fantasy, because they claim it doesn’t exist in reality.
In what may be a first, Warner Bros. has partnered with Walmart to exclusively sell tickets to a screening of the new Superman movie the night before the movie officially opens.
Tickets are to go on sale at 8 a.m. May 18 in 3,700-plus Walmart stores for the advance screening that will take place June 13. Man of Steel opens June 14.
Man of Steel has revealed its third trailer, and it's a doozy. From baby Kal-El being sent away from Krypton to Clark discussing his alien roots with Pa Kent to menacing confrontations with General Zod, it gives a much fuller sense of the film's scope than previous trailers had revealed.
In a new teaser for Warner Bros.' Man of Steel that aired during Sunday's MTV Movie Awards, the Superman villain (Michael Shannon) shares his proposition with the world.
With Bruce Wayne dining al fresco somewhere in Europe, it's up to Clark Kent to take on the mantle of DC's Very Serious Superhero.
In this first full look at the Christopher Nolan-produced, Zack Snyder-directed Man of Steel, it is clear that even a nearly invincible model-like he-man can suffer internal longing and emotional pain. This is Superman's origin story for the 21st century, placing the lost boy in a bleak Kansas town where he cannot be himself, having to hide the few bits of his truth that he knows.
The new poster for Zack Snyder's Superman film, Man of Steel, debuted Monday on The Dark Knight Rises official Facebook page and finds the hero handcuffed, with an army behind him.
Superman fanatics will get a longer look at Henry Cavill in the red and blue when the first full-length trailer for Warner Bros.' Man of Steel debuts before Peter Jackson's The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey.
"It's fun. I can't wait for The Hobbit, so it will be fun to see our crazy Man of Steel trailer and then enjoy the Hobbit because that's going to be great," Man of Steel director Zack Snyderconfirmed to MTV News. "It just feels like a fun Christmas thing to do, drag the whole family out for that action."
With a cape and greenscreen, and the tailwind of 20 years of anticipation, Brandon Routh was flying toward fame as Superman. Until he hit box-office kryptonite, that is.
The Dark Knight has risen, Spider-Man has amazed and The Avengers did a blockbuster (if a little messy) job of avenging. But don't expect them to take a break anytime soon.
Audiences got their first look at Zack Snyder’s interpretation of Superman Saturday when Warner Bros. premiered not one but two different teaser trailers for Man of Steel.
How well received was the footage of Man of Steel? One fan was literally brought to tears after seeing it, reduced to a blubbering mess as he said how much he loved it.
If there's a Justice League in Warner Bros.' near future, it will be without Christopher Nolan.
The filmmaker, promoting The Dark Knight Rises over the weekend with press junkets in Los Angeles as well as attending a hand-and-foot ceremony at Grauman’s Chinese Theatrer, said he has no plans for any Justice League movie—or any more Batman movies, for that matter.
After donning the Bat symbol, composer Hans Zimmer is putting a big "S" on his chest.
Zimmer, who shares scoring duties with James Newton Howard on Christopher Nolan’s Batman Begins and The Dark Knight and is working solo on The Dark Knight Rises, has been tapped to compose the score for Man of Steel.