Delivery & Return:Free shipping on all orders over $50
Estimated Delivery:7-15 days international
People:21 people viewing this product right now!
Easy Returns:Enjoy hassle-free returns within 30 days!
Payment:Secure checkout
SKU:91212410
The Superman movies (Reeve) were always a childhood delight, even if the third one is too comedic, and if the fourth one is too much of an attempt to re-make Superman II, and if all of them are dated (the charming saccharine stuff about truth and justice... Ah, for the innocence of those days...).Donner's vision for the Superman films (1 & 2) were ahead of their time. Filmmakers did not want to try putting superheroes onto the big screen, out of reasons of credibility. Yet Donner took the risk, and made a fantastic first outing.He did shoot the first two movies back-to-back. Unfortunately, he was fired, and Superman II was partly re-shot. You can find details all over the internet, and while I overall prefer Donner's vision, some of Richard Lester's alterations were not bad. (Do note, the special edition of II is a "what if", based on existing footage and screen tests. It's not HOW his vision would have fully been, especially as the Paris scenes and spinning around the world to prevent time travel would have been eliminated and used elsewhere respectively.III is Lester's vision, which is a little too campy at times, but still has some substance. In particular is Ross Webster (in what was originally meant for Lex Luthor) wanting to make kryptonite. In the comics, the red kryptonite is what makes Superman go berzerk, whereas in S-III the kryptonite is still green (a pity it wasn't red, since Superman looked decidedly suspicious at the green crystal). III is a mixed bag but is somewhat enjoyable overall...IV feels like a bad remake of S-II, which is unfortunate as it was great to have the full and proper cast back. (With Donner's firing, some of the cast left the franchise or had scenes cut down, but they were persuaded back for IV.) Unfortunately, the mojo just isn't there, and Lex's kid looks is the personification of 1980s fashion (best left unseen unless you're wearing dark sunglasses and coated in SPF-500,000 sunblock...)Pity 'Supergirl" wasn't included...But we've all seen the movies and have varying opinions and I can't hate IV, either.I could spend a day tackling the extras, which pretty much define "definitive".My package came with Superman II and the Donner Cut both slightly popped out of their packaging, but not enough to be bopping around the case to get scratched, and Blu-Ray discs have a coating to prevent scratching.The set I bought has the 3D logo emblazoned on the front and seems to be a US release, based on verbiage on the box. Some have received import sets, but there is no difference - apart from the box design (that I know of). For the <$60 I paid, I don't care that much.The sound quality is top-notch, especially given the limitations of the source material used for recording. As always, John Williams (amongst the others who scored the movies) always set the bar for movie soundtracks high and it's a delight to listen to.The Blu-Ray quality are sharp, as you would expect. Details are fine, compression artifacting is minimal, blacks and grayscale contrasts (shadow detail) are very nice, and grain is remarkably limited. Some grain is good, as too much noise/grain removal strips detail, but for this set they got the balance perfectly. You will see more grain in multi-layered edited scenes (e.g. blue screen with Kypton in the background in the opening of Superman II). But compared to other recent releases (which still get high marks for quality control), the level of grain reduction is handled extremely well, especially in live action scenes requiring little post-production layering.Some scenes do have negative scratches on display - this form of cleanup was well-handled overall, but some got through the restoration process.And some digital enhancing was used to remove wires... It's nice to see some of this type of editing was put into place, meant to keep true to the original production but to remove gaffes. They didn't add CGI fluff in the background just for pointless theatrics.But, especially for III and IV Superman's costume, Clark's denim jeans, and planet Earth were remastered in a teal color rather than the original blue. This is distracting. Some of this might be due to the source material and editing means available in the 1980s, of course. But as some websites pointed out, his outfit had been the proper blue in earlier releases but a deep gorgeous teal for the Blu-Ray release. So far, it's noticeable but not disconcerting, but if they removed wires from Superman, it would have been cool if they remastered all scenes to show as much uniformity between film elements as possible.UPDATE EDIT: I was wrong; Superman II is also afflicted by "the Man of Teal". Color accuracy is incorrect with blues, but the sharpness of the imagery just about makes up for it, IMHO. I wish the mistake hadn't been made, since I don't think this hue adjustment was deliberately made. Especially as some scenes don't show the change as overtly as others.Overall, this is a solid set - if you can handle the occasional blue->teal color shift in Superman's outfit, Clark's denim jeans, and Earth in some of these films, then it's a no-brainer. The overall restoration work, and slew of extras, IMHO, makes this set well-worthwhile despite the technical gaffe.