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Continuity, Criticisms, and Captain Panaka
by: Dan Wallace
date posted: Jun 19, 2006 8:21 PM  | 
updated: Jun 19, 2006 9:00 PM
The Art of Superman Returns
Superman Returns hits theaters June 28. In bookstores now is The Art of Superman Returns, featuring the drawings, paintings, and sketches of a legion artists, plus an introduction by director Bryan Singer.

Last June I traveled to Sydney Australia on behalf of Chronicle Books to prepare for this project, which I alluded to in this blog entry. I was only there for two days, but the days were packed. I spent a day and a half with head production designer Guy Dyas, half a day with costume designers Louise Mingenbach and Dan Bronson, plus time with the script. (Later I interviewed Bryan Singer and screenwriters Dan Harris and Michael Dougherty.) The overall impression I got? People were passionately committed to this project. People genuinely loved Superman. Nobody emitted a "just a job" vibe.

Let me state at the outset -- I'm a huge Superman fan. Before I ever got the offer to write The Art of Superman Returns, I was just another fanboy watching the bluetights.net production diaries, and drooling over the art deco architecture used for the Daily Planet. A month later, I was walking around on that same set. For a Superman geek, it was surreal, bordering on dreamlike.

I realized, of course, that I needed to be professional, jotting down notes and monitoring my tape recorder. But let's be honest, I was awed to be on set, and I felt that if I didn't take it all in I'd forget it.

I've read of blind people who have suddenly had their sight restored -- even though they can "see," in many cases they can't really understand something until they touch it. That was me, blind in the island of the sighted. I was shown Superman's suit on a mannequin. After getting over the initial giddiness (Dude! That's Superman's suit!) I compulsively touched the fabric and the raised S medallion, rubbed the gluey heaviness of the cape, and hefted the thick-soled leather boots while tracing their laser-cut S insignias with a fingertip. While standing on the set for the Fortress of Solitude, I reached out to clap my hand on a fiberglass crystal pillar. While following Guy Dyas up a frozen arctic trench -- surgical booties in place as we delicately retraced the steps of Lex Luthor -- I crushed a tiny shaving of shredded paper between my thumb and forefinger, to see the guts of the stuff that doubles as snowflakes. While walking through the Daily Planet bullpen...well, I didn't touch anything, since it was a dressed set. But I felt the scuff of the carpet on the soles of my shoes.

So what I have now is a very tactile sense of this movie. When I see publicity photos of Brandon Routh in costume, I remember the slight variation in surface texture of the patterned "blue suit" material. When I see the outdoor plaza of the Daily Planet building, I remember the cool metal of the push bars on the revolving doors.

I'm a huge fan of "Art Of" books. One of my favorite old-school possessions is The Art of Star Wars, published well before the movie was relabeled Episode IV: A New Hope. For any movie, but particularly for a movie on this scale, the craftsmanship that goes into concept sketches, storyboards, key frames, production paintings, and computer models is astonishing. I'm proud to be the guy to bring this work to light in The Art of Superman Returns.

Guy Dyas is a gifted artist in his own right, but more importantly he had a vision for this movie. Superman Returns' three visual themes -- Krypton, Smallville, and Metropolis -- are utterly distinct and mark very specific beats in the movie. Krypton, inspired by the John Barry designs from 1978's Superman: The Movie, is pure and sterile, marked by the parallel lines that emerge from crystalline growth. Smallville is Americana as envisioned by Norman Rockwell and Andrew Wyeth, with an impossibly distant horizon tinged red by sunset. Metropolis (my favorite) is an art deco masterpiece -- New York City as reenvisioned by a mad architecture fanboy -- with vertical lines that provide the perfect backdrop for a soaring Man of Steel.

I can't wait to see the movie, but I already know it will be a visual stunner. I'm grateful to Chronicle Books for the opportunity to knit the connective tissue of The Art of Superman Returns, but let's face it -- no one will be buying this book for the words. It truly is an artistic tour de force, and I wouldn't have it any other way.

Dan
(writing projects and current releases)

  NerfHerdersAnonymous
Life, the Star Wars Universe and Everything
date Posted: Jun 19, 2006 8:30 PM
I love "Art of.." books too! I'm sure that comes as no surprise :P hehe

:8}
I feel a little ashamed...I flipped through this gem two days ago at Borders and didn't even check to see who wrote it. It's now on my list of "must buy". So cool you did this one!

Leah
RojoTrooper
Star Wars Recycled Art Project
date Posted: Jun 19, 2006 8:31 PM
Kudos on the book!

The Superman Returns trailer gave me the same kind of chills that the Star Wars Prequels had..

I need to pick that one up!

The Stooge
Star Wars Joke-A-Day
date Posted: Jun 19, 2006 8:54 PM
Tooooooo cool! I can't wait to see it!

Advance word is that the movie got everything right -- apparently those on-set vibes you were feelin' got translated to film. I can't wait!
DJ Maul: Got Feet?
DJ Maul's Dancin' Cantina Party
date Posted: Jun 19, 2006 9:41 PM
excellent story...the studio should pay you royaltes as Im sure this blog probably sold a few more tickets...

i will keep my eyes open for the book, id love to check it out.
alec@usticke.org
date Posted: Jun 19, 2006 10:51 PM
I just read all the SW prequel Art Of books while on jury duty. I look forward to the Art of Superman Returns. Nice.
  independentjac
"How long can any man fight the darkness, before he finds it in himselft?"
date Posted: Jun 19, 2006 11:06 PM
sweet! I will be sure to buy that when I see it at the book store.....can't wait for the movie
Hedec Ga
War Journal of Hedec Ga
date Posted: Jun 20, 2006 7:32 AM
Hey, I saw the other day that you wrote this. Congratulations! What an honor to be on the set and everything... I'm really excited about this movie. They seemed to have stayed true to the Christopher Reeve movies, even down to the riff on John Williams' themes and that's something they didn't have to do. Bryan Singer could have "re-envisioned" it, as is the trend these days, but instead he carried on the great cinematic tradition began by Richard Donner. Very nice.
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