By Alex McPherson

David Corenswet makes an excellent lead in James Gunn’s colorfully zany and overstuffed “Superman,” a film that marks an amusing, if largely unremarkable, revival for the titular world-saver and the DC Cinematic Universe.

Gunn — who previously directed the “Guardians of the Galaxy” films and 2021’s “The Suicide Squad” — doesn’t opt for another origin story here. Rather, “Superman” starts three years after Superman’s aka Clark Kent’s aka Kal-El’s (Corenswet) public debut as the newest “metahuman” on the scene.

Gunn assumes that we’re already familiar with the basics of the backstory, so Superman’s transport to Earth from Krypton and his subsequent upbringing in rural Smallville, Kansas, is conveyed via text, which saves time while sacrificing some emotional heft down the road.

We’re instead launched into the action as Supes plummets down into the frozen tundra in Antarctica. He just lost a battle against “the Hammer of Boravia,” who vows retribution after Superman stopped Boravia’s attempted invasion of its neighboring country, Jarhanpur. 

It turns out the Hammer of Boravia is being controlled by Superman’s arch nemesis, the bald-headed baddie Lex Luthor (Nicholas Hoult). Lex has developed his own pair of metahumans and envies Superman’s worldwide popularity. He enlists his legion of followers and sycophants to control the media narrative and paint Superman as an outsider to be banished.

Lex also works with members of the US government (because of course he does), who are growing increasingly wary of Superman’s power and actions, especially since Boravia is a geopolitical ally.

Rambunctious CGI Superdog Krypto (who, thankfully, gets tons of screen time) rescues Superman from an icy fate, roughly dragging him to the nearby Fortress of Solitude, and, with the help of some self-deprecating robots, heals the Man of Steel with solar radiation. Superman is back in action and eager to take down Hammer. 

But he has to show up the next day as Clark Kent to work at the Daily Planet, where he’s often publishing one-on-one interviews with himself as Superman. He’s also been dating fellow reporter Lois Lane (Rachel Brosnahan) for three months — she knows his secrets — and navigating some murky waters in their relationship.

Superman’s values of goodness, kindness, and “the right thing to do” butt heads with far-more-complicated reality, particularly regarding his involvement in the war between Boravia and Jorhanpur.

Lex eventually unearths something that rocks the public’s confidence in Superman, and Superman’s confidence in himself. Superman must confront and stand up for what he believes in while getting help along the way from the “corporate-sponsored” Justice Gang — the egotistical Guy Gardner aka Green Lantern (Nathan Fillion), Hawkgirl (Isabela Merced), and Mister Terrific (a scene-stealing Edi Gathegi) — and the intrepid reporters at the Daily Planet. The fate of the world is once again on the line, plus the future of comic book movies in general.

Fortunately, “Superman” delivers where it counts, for the most part. Gunn clearly has passion for the source material and injects his signature blend of wackiness and peculiarity throughout, giving his ensemble space to shine and charm as entertaining versions of characters many of us have grown up with.

What’s also here, unfortunately, is the bloat common to modern superhero cinema. There’s a tension between the film’s surprisingly pointed social commentary and its ultimate reversion to messy spectacle, making this “Superman” more a light trifle than a substantial, memorable meal.

Corenswet is an appealing Caped Kryptonian, corny and dedicated, vulnerable despite his superhuman strength. We don’t get a whole lot of Clark Kent here — his scenes are mostly shared with Lois, portrayed with verve by Brosnahan, in a role that perhaps doesn’t give her enough room to be more than a romantic plot device by the third act — but Corenswet shoulders the weight of Christopher Reeve’s legacy effectively. 

Corenswet captures the character’s sincerity, naivete, and, increasingly, self-doubt over the sort of person he is meant to be. He is most successful in the film’s more character-focused moments, like a tense argument with Lois about ethics early in the film, but watching him soar through the air and punch bad guys so hard their teeth fall out remains satisfying.

Along with that, Gunn shows Superman saving the lives of innocents, both human and animal alike, noticeably taking time to emphasize individual acts of heroism amid the urban destruction and “pocket dimension” nonsense. 

Hoult is equally threatening and pathetic, giving his Elon Musk-esque villain cartoonish mania and believable insecurity. Gathegi stands out among the rest of the ensemble with his droll comedic timing. The rest of the ensemble — including Skyler Gisondo as quick-witted Daily Planet reporter Jimmy Olsen and Sara Sampaio as Lex’s assistant, Eve Teschmacher — smoothly fit into Gunn’s “comic book come to life” philosophy without getting much opportunity to stand out amid the film’s scatterbrained subplots.

Indeed, “Superman” has several mini-stories going on at once that, while important to the overall plot, take time away from Superman’s arc, making clear that this film represents the start of a franchise, not just a standalone story.

It’s all quite visually striking — Henry Braham’s wide-lensed cinematography helps make the film’s more imaginatively bonkers and surprisingly weird sections easy to follow, if a tad bland in more “grounded” places— but “Superman” blends together in a jumble of noise and predictability (with some childish, distracting sexism thrown in for good measure) when the third act wraps up.

Gunn maintains his trademarks as a filmmaker, incorporating expected quip-filled humor, catchy needle drops (alongside a reverent score by John Murphy and David Fleming), and 360-degree shots of cartoonish violence when it strikes his fancy.

There’s merit to how unapologetic the film’s politics are. Gunn paints clear parallels from the Boravian conflict to current events and how those with vested interests at the highest levels of power continue cycles of evil. Gunn’s faithful rendition of Superman (essentially a refugee) honestly believes in “doing good,” no matter the consequences.

This choice is quietly radical, albeit hammered home with melodramatic force via the screenplay. Sure, “Superman” places these topics in a standard mold at the end of the day, but there’s still honor in spreading these messages in a summer blockbuster.

What “Superman” ends up being, then, is an above-average comic book film that subverts expectations in some ways while playing the same old tune in others. Nerds will be satiated, and bigots will be angered. A “super” film, however, this is not.

“Superman” is a 2025 fantasy-action-adventure-superhero film written and directed by James Gunn and starring David Corenswet, Rachel Brosnahan, Nicholas Hoult, Nathan Fillion, Isabel Merced, Wendell Pierce, Skyler Gisondo, Sara Sampaio, Anthony Carrigan, Edi Gathegi, Alan Tudyk, and Beck Bennett. Its run time is 2 hours, 9 minutes, and it’s rated PG-13 for violence, action and language. It opened in theatres July 11. Alex’s Grade: B

By Lynn Venhaus

What superhero fatigue? With clear-eyed focus and a reverence for the comic book mythology, writer-director James Gunn has restored Superman to his altruistic roots, his stranger-in-a-strange-land dilemmas, and the always necessary spirit of fun and adventure this beloved symbol needs to possess.

Most important of all, this iconic American superhero, first seen in an Action Comics book in 1938 (later DC), is decency personified – kind and untarnished humanity, universalistic. In this new direction, he is not invincible, but he stands tall for all the right reasons.

The result is the best “Superman” film since “Superman II” in 1982 and the best on-screen characterization of both the man and the myth since Christopher Reeve donned the red cape. David Corenswet’s heartfelt portrait of the noble Kryptonian trying to save the world from constant nefarious threats is a genuine beacon of goodness.

David Corenswet

Corenswet is captivating in ways the wooden Henry Cavill in the darker “Man of Steel” and Zack Snyder’s “Justice League” films, and Brandon Routh, one and done in the 2006 ‘Superman Returns,” could never be.

Corenswet projects everything you want in a Superman – strong, selfless, hopeful, honorable, loyal and caring.

In Gunn’s bold world-building, Metropolis is a place where robots, metahumans and ‘pocket universes’ converge, and a fragile geopolitical society is easily manipulated by megalomaniac tech billionaires with power-mad intentions.

Such is the latest rendering of super-villain Lex Luthor. Nicholas Hoult tears into the ruthless, selfish nature of a sociopath with gusto. His wealth gets him far, and he’s trying to control the media and the public image of the alien “Kryptonian” as the perpetual outsider, raising suspicions about his intentions. A corrupt slimeball, he doesn’t care about truth, nor justice, and has acolytes and syncophants at his beck and call.

Nicholas Hoult is Lex Luthor.

As is customary, an epic battle of good vs. evil is at the heart of this, and sure, all the state-of-the-art computer-generated visual effects are on display – fancy gizmos, shiny tools, strange creatures and weird synthetic forces built to be killing machines. However, it seems less video-game action to convey the mayhem in this go-round.

Those familiar with this fantastical universe will recognize characters the casual fan won’t, but that doesn’t detract. In recent years, Marvel has lost its way because the movies required homework, but not in this DCU case. It’s easy to get up to speed about the “Justice Gang” metahumans.

The addition of Green Lantern (a hilariously cocky Nathan Fillion), sarcastic Hawkgirl (easily annoyed Isabel Merced) and impatient Mister Terrific (amusing Edi Gathegi) is fun because the actors are convincing, as is an unrecognizable Anthony Carrigan (“Barry”) as Metamorpho. Superman does most of the heavy lifting, but he can’t be everywhere, and that’s when the support shows up.

Nathan Fillion as Guy Gardner, aka The Green Lantern.

Gunn, from St. Louis, wears his comic book heart on his sleeve. He gets it. You feel how much he cares about getting this right, about making a Superman for a new age, yet holding the values we’ve always believed him to represent.

Gunn doesn’t get bogged down in origins, plopping us into a fully realized crazy modern world that keeps the Daily Planet staff busy with chaotic breaking news. Lois Lane and Clark Kent are already a ‘sorta thing,’ although not public, and the chemistry between Rachel Brosnahan as the crackerjack reporter and Corenswet as the earnest Clark is palpable.

Their testy interview scene is a dandy way to introduce their relationship, as she struggles to reconcile his two ‘sides,’ raises uncomfortable ethical questions.

Meeting his adoptive parents, Martha (Neva Howell) and Jonathan (Pruitt Taylor Vince) Kent, at their Kansas farm is illuminating. Making them older works, and in their minimal screen time, tug at the heartstrings as the loving mortals who raised their special kid.

Pruitt Taylor Vince is Pa Kent, talking to his son, Clark (David Corenswet.

Superman’s inner torment is exacerbated when a glitchy tape of his parents on Krypton, Jor-El and Lara (Bradley Cooper and Angela Sarafyan) is restored by Luthor’s henchmen and used to cast aspersions on ‘the immigrant.’ He loses the faith of many fans, now suspicious. Or in today’s lingo, basically “cancelled.”

How does he get back in the public’s good graces, especially when he’s incarcerated in a shady maneuver by Luthor?

The plot thickens, with Luthor intending to profit from a war — Boravia plans to invade Jarhanpur. The international consequences as well as life-threatening danger in America are colliding in a high-stakes way.

Meanwhile, the Daily Planet is investigating Luthor’s business dealings, and Jimmy Olsen (Skyler Gisondo) has an inside source. The newspaper staff is suitably articulate, skeptical and trustworthy, with Wendell Pierce as no-nonsense editor Perry White and ex-SNL Beck Bennett as sportswriter Steve Lombard.

Rachel Brosnahan is Lois Lane.

By the time Lex is throwing everything in Superman’s path, including look-a-like clones, lethal bad girl The Engineer (María Gabriela de Faría) and a gigantic glitch in the cosmos, our bloodied and battered Superman valiantly is tasked with taking care of the world order – and sanity – for at least a little while until the next DC Universe adventure.

Entertaining new additions include a frisky superdog Krypto who often misbehaves, helpful robots in the Fortress of Solitude who are as likable as C-3P0, and comforting use of John Williams’ original 1978 “Superman” theme through composers David Fleming and John Murphy . There are some fun cameos and plentiful Easter Eggs too. Will Reeve, son of Christopher Reeve, is a reporter.

Gunn, who helmed all three “Guardians of the Galaxy” films plus 2021’s “The Suicide Squad,” has made the visuals pop, the aerial flying zippy, and the story interesting. Henry Braham, the cinematographer he used for those aforementioned films, is back with a clear understanding of the assignment.

Although, in fairness, by the time we’re seeing multiple battling clones, bombardment of raptors in the sky, and crumbling infrastructures, the film needed to wrap up – and do so quickly.

Nevertheless, this thrilling new direction bodes well for franchise-building, which DC Studios heads Gunn and Peter Safran are intent to do.

With heart, hope and humor, Gunn faithfully honors the inspiring “‘Superman’ legacy, first created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, with an unwavering integrity and optimism.

This Superman believes in the goodness of mankind, and the importance of kindness in an increasingly hostile, cruel and cold world. To be reminded of what Superman has always meant in pop culture, and how he’s captured our fancy for nearly eight decades, is a remarkable feat.

While the film may not be perfect, this “Superman” comes close to redefining the superhero’s place in our hearts and imaginations. And it checks all the boxes as a splendid summer blockbuster.

“Superman” is a 2025 fantasy-action-adventure-superhero film written and directed by James Gunn and starring David Corenswet, Rachel Brosnahan, Nicholas Hoult, Nathan Fillion, Isabel Merced, Wendell Pierce, Skyler Gisondo, Sara Sampaio, Anthony Carrigan, Edi Gathegi, Alan Tudyk, and Beck Bennett. Its run time is 2 hours, 9 minutes, and it’s rated PG-13 for violence, action and language. It opened in theatres July 11. Lynn’s Grade: A.