The Mego Museum needs your help!
The Mego Museum needs your help!

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Man of Steel costume at Comic-Con

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Hector
    replied
    Originally posted by kingdom warrior
    I like the Kryptonian feel to it.....so it makes sense and why would he then put his undies on top of an alien costume design? If this was a 1940's Superman, wool would look great and he would have the strongman look of the times.....

    Chris's costume had a Bridal weight spandex and the machine that made the weave was retired in 2005 so it's hard to replicate Reeves Costume.....plus every Superman should have his own look....... as much as people say Kirk Alyn's Costume is the same as George Reeves there is no truth to it....every Superman shield was hand cut so they all are slightly different.......Kirk's cape was also short and his boots were laced up....George's Cape was made to look like a Roman Centurion which is the way I like it.
    Agreed...




    I personally like the new suit...makes Supes more alien-like and regal.

    Having said that...Chris Reeve's suit is the best of them all.

    Leave a comment:


  • Hector
    replied
    Originally posted by Earth 2 Chris
    In most versions, Ma Kent DID make suit, the suit was made from Kal-El's indestructible baby blankets.
    Yet somehow Ma Kent was able to sew that indestructible suit...

    Leave a comment:


  • kingdom warrior
    replied
    John Bryne's explanation was Superman's body generated an invisible "aura" that surrounded him and contributed to his invulnerability. anything held close to him were protected from harm his cape, could easily sustain damage in battle so he would fly to have Ma Kent make him a new one......
    Last edited by kingdom warrior; Jul 13, '12, 12:26 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • SUP-Ronin
    replied
    Edit - I got my answer. I don't mind it. We'll see how it comes across on film.

    Leave a comment:


  • kingdom warrior
    replied
    I like the Kryptonian feel to it.....so it makes sense and why would he then put his undies on top of an alien costume design? If this was a 1940's Superman, wool would look great and he would have the strongman look of the times.....

    Chris's costume had a Bridal weight spandex and the machine that made the weave was retired in 2005 so it's hard to replicate Reeves Costume.....plus every Superman should have his own look....... as much as people say Kirk Alyn's Costume is the same as George Reeves there is no truth to it....every Superman shield was hand cut so they all are slightly different.......Kirk's cape was also short and his boots were laced up....George's Cape was made to look like a Roman Centurion which is the way I like it.

    Leave a comment:


  • Earth 2 Chris
    replied
    In most versions, Ma Kent DID make suit, and until Byrne's 86 Man of Steel reboot, the suit was made from Kal-El's indestructible baby blankets. I think even George's super-suit was supposed to be indestructible, and he had normal back-up costumes, but I could be mixed up on that one.

    Although not clearly stated, it seems Ma did make the Superman suit in Superman: The Movie. The red, blue and yellow blankets are very obvious in the baby's rocket/spaceship, and when Clark pulls the crystal out at the North Pole to create the Fortress, you can see the red, blues and yellows of the costume in his backpack.

    Chris

    Leave a comment:


  • Mikey
    replied
    For Clark's suit, I was always lead to believe.

    Ma Kent made him the suit out of EARTH cloth and it's NOT indestructible

    The "S" logo is from Krypton and is GLUED on the suit

    When Supes get shot etc it's always in the logo (which is indestructible)

    The suit, on the other hand gets worn out fast ---- Notice how many suits George Reeves kept in his secret closet

    Leave a comment:


  • huedell
    replied
    MIB: In 1986 DC Comics changed up Superman's level of vulnerability... it changed the impression of the character in his 50 years
    of being in comics, and ultimately led to his death at the hands of Doomsday. That's the angle they should take nowadays.

    Mikey: Ma Kent making Supes' suit would not translate smoothly to the screen. Finding a way to sew indestructible
    clothes together with a stray thread (or however she did it in the comics way back when) would come off overly-campy
    no matter how hard they tried differently (IMHO).

    Leave a comment:


  • Earth 2 Chris
    replied
    ^Could be Mikey. Apparently the folks on Krypton wear similar clothes.

    Chris

    Leave a comment:


  • Mikey
    replied
    I always thought Clark's mother Martha made him the Superman suit.

    This suit makes that old idea impossible unless Martha owns a scuba suit factory

    So, where did Supes get his this suit ?

    Was it in his ship already and made on Krypton ? LOL

    Leave a comment:


  • MIB41
    replied
    I think Superman suffers from the same story woes the Hulk does. In this day of modern movies, he just doesn't have enough of a personal story arc to keep people riveted for over two hours. Like the Hulk, he is virtually unstoppable except under special circumstances. And for Superman, the general public has gotten just about every story angle on his love life from the Smallville series. So replaying the Lois storyline AGAIN is just about as old hat as knowing his villains will use Kyrptonite against him. So, like the Hulk, he may be better served as just a supporting character in a Justice League movie if they can't bring anything new to the concept.

    So, for this film, I don't think the challenge will be what kind of outfit he's wearing so much as how good a story they can pull off that doesn't read like every other film ever made. They really need to think outside the box. I think that approach is why Smallville worked. They didn't put him in tights and pretend no one could recognize him with thin-rimmed glasses on. They made his abilities the secret and it worked extremely well. So for this film, they need to introduce something that allows people to see him in a new light. Hopefully that is why Christopher Nolan was brought in? Time will tell.

    Leave a comment:


  • huedell
    replied
    Originally posted by jds1911a1
    At least in the batman films they can come up with a valid reason why the suits aren't spandex
    Well, Batman is human, so he could benefit from armor.... and, yes, it's tougher to "realistically" justify why Supes
    would (or should) change up his 1930s circus-performer/1980s hairmetal fashion sense.

    But the amusing thing (to me) is that Batman gets a pass because it's a more realistic scenario.
    Why does Batman... or any other hero... have to be so hyper realistic? Superheroes aren't real people to begin with.
    All the realism in the world ain't helpin' me with a movie vibe.

    I'm game for the more rubbery suit.... I like the bright red aginst the medium blue. Works for me.

    Human or not, it's time Superman changed it up a bit, if only to prep his look to synch up w/other modern heroes
    for a JLA movie.

    Leave a comment:


  • ctc
    replied
    >I am reminded that Spandex can work if the guy has the right build.

    I've seen cosplayers that show how much like the actual comic you can make an outfit. I think the rubber suits are kinda like the piping on the tights in the comics: it's an attempt to add more visuals for a new format. You've got so much going on in any movie nowadays a dude in tights looks kinda plain and doesn't stand out.

    ....not that I'm AGREEING with the practice....

    >At least in the batman films they can come up with a valid reason why the suits aren't spandex

    Sort of. Even that bothered me 'cos in the comics Batman didn't need armour; he relied on speed and skill. The armour is an attempt to "realistic" things up for a wider audience. At least he can move his head in the new suits.... to escape the '89 Batman all you had to do was stand beside him.

    Don C.

    Leave a comment:


  • jds1911a1
    replied
    I really don't care for rubber super suits and for superman even less so. As I have been catching the reruns of Lois and clark on hub recently I am reminded that Spandex can work if the guy has the right build. This suit - too Eradicator superman for my taste. At least in the batman films they can come up with a valid reason why the suits aren't spandex

    Leave a comment:


  • Earth 2 Chris
    replied
    I think I fixed the image, but if not, here's the link.



    Chris

    Leave a comment:

Working...
😀
🥰
🤢
😎
😡
👍
👎