Superman: Unbound | |
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![]() DVD cover | |
Directed by | James Tucker |
Screenplay by | Bob Goodman |
Produced by | James Tucker Alan Burnett |
Starring | Matt Bomer Stana Katic John Noble Molly Quinn |
Cinematography | Al Jean |
Edited by | Christoper D. Lozinski |
Music by | Kevin Kliesch |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Warner Home Video |
Release dates |
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Running time | 75 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $3,309,292[1] |
Superman: Unbound is a 2013 animated direct to video superhero film based on the 2008 comic book story arc "Superman: Brainiac" by Geoff Johns. It was directed by James Tucker and scripted by Bob Goodman. It is the 16th film in the DC Universe Animated Original Movies series. The film's sneak preview was included with Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 and Injustice: Gods Among Us.[2]
Plot[]
Offering herself as a hostage, Lois Lane is caught in an aerial confrontation between her terrorist captors and the unpredictable Supergirl before Superman arrives to save the day. Soon after, knowing Superman's civilian identity, Lois attempts to get Clark Kent to make their relationship public despite his fear of the consequences, but their argument is halted by a Daily Planet staff meeting before Kent leaves after being alerted to an approaching meteor. Intercepting it, Superman learns the meteor is actually a robot that he promptly defeats before activating its beacon and taking it to the Fortress of Solitude. With help from a fearful Supergirl, Superman learns the robot is actually a drone controlled by a being named Brainiac, a Coluan scientist who subjected himself to extensive motor, skeletal and cybernetic enhancements, turning him from a human like, thin, and hairless being to a muscular, red eyed giant with computer like components and enhanced physical abilities comparible to Superman's. Supergirl, horrified at seeing Brainiac, reveals from her experience with the monster. Brainiac seized and miniaturized Krypton's capital city of Kandor prior to the planet's destruction with her father and mother attempting to track him down before they mysteriously lost contact with Krypton. She is now worried that Brainiac will do to the world what he did to Kandor.
Fearing more drones would come, Superman flies through the galaxy with a Kryptonian spacecraft in an attempt to track down Brainiac before finding his drones attacking a planet. Though he attempts to stop them, Superman witnesses Brainiac capture the planet's capital like he did with Kandor before firing a Solar Aggressor missile to consume the planet in its exploding sun. The explosion knocks Superman unconscious and he is brought on board Brainiac’s skull shaped, tentacled ship. Coming to in the examination room, he fights his way through the vessel before he discovers a room full of bottled cities prior to being attacked by Brainiac. At this point, confirming that he spared Krypton because of its eventual destruction, Brainiac is shown that he has been collecting information on all the planets he visited and uploading it into his neural core before destroying them. Using Superman's spacecraft and his telepathic abilities, Brainiac discovers that he has been living on Earth. Brainiac decides to chart a course to Earth while sending Superman into Kandor. Inside Kandor, his strength waning due to the artificial red sun, Superman meets his uncle Zor-El and aunt Alura. They explain that Brainiac was instructed to learn all that is knowable about the galaxy. Being a cyborg, Brainiac interpreted his directive literally and realized that he could not achieve this goal because life keeps changing. His knowledge of one world would become out-of-date as soon as he moved on to the next world. Brainiac therefore destroys civilizations after studying them so that they cannot change further, thus leaving him with a literally complete and up-to-date knowledge of them.
Superman formulates a plan and escapes Kandor using the subjugator robots. From there, Superman disables Brainiac's ship and takes Kandor with him back to Earth. At that time, Lois learns from Supergirl why Superman left and alerts the Pentagon of a possible invasion by Brainiac, who eventually repairs his ship and arrives in Metropolis.
Despite everyone, including Supergirl, doing their best to fend his drones off, Metropolis is encased in a bottle and both Superman and Supergirl are captured. Having hooked Superman up to his ship, Braniac reveals that Earth offers nothing to him, tortures Superman by overloading his mind with data to obtain Kandor and attempts to destroy the planet. However, telling his captor what Earth means to him, Superman breaks free and then frees Supergirl and convinces her to stop the Solar-Aggressor from hitting the sun. Remembering Zor-El's words about Brainiac's ideals, Superman knocks him out of the ship and they crash into a swamp. As he fights Braniac, Superman forces the cyborg to experience the chaos of life itself outside of the safe, artificial environments he has created. Eventually, the combined mental and physical strain takes its toll on Brainiac and he combusts and is reduced to ash and molten machinery. After restoring Metropolis, taking Kandor to another planet to restore its normal size and establishing a Kryptonian colony where they can rebuild, Superman makes his love life with Lois as Kent public with a marriage proposal.
In the post-credits Brainiac's remains that are placed in the Fortress of Solitude glow indicating that Brainiac still has some degree of his power.
Cast[]
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- Matt Bomer as Clark Kent / Superman
- Stana Katic as Lois Lane
- John Noble as Brainiac
- Molly Quinn as Kara Zor-El / Supergirl
- Diedrich Bader as Steve Lombard
- Alexander Gould as Jimmy Olsen
- Frances Conroy as Martha Kent
- Stephen Root as Zor-El
- Jason Beghe as Terrorist Leader
- Sirena Irwin as Alura
- Wade Williams as Perry White
- Melissa Disney as Thara Ak-Var
- Michael-Leon Wooley as Ron Troupe
- Will Yun Lee as Parasoldier Leader
- Ian James Corlett as Kryptonian #1
- Andrea Romano as News Anchor #2, Superman's Ship
Reception[]
Superman: Unbound received positive reviews. Based on 5 reviews, it has a rating of 100% on Rotten Tomatoes with an average rating of 7.4/10.[3] IGN gave the film a 6.5 out of 10.[4] Brian Lowry of Variety stated "the 75-minute film boasts some impressive animation and action sequences – essentially getting the job done, without by any means approaching the operatic majesty of the studio's recent two-part epic The Dark Knight Returns".[5] Common Sense Media gave the film a 4 star rating out of 5, commenting "Superman fights, learns life lessons in animated thriller".[6]
References[]
- ↑ "Superman Unbound - DVD Sales". The Numbers. Nash Information Service. Retrieved 2014-08-26.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Harvey, Jim (2013-03-04). "Blu-Ray, DVD Package Artwork For "Superman: Unbound" Animated Feature Release". Worldsfinestonline.com. Retrieved January 30, 2015.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Superman: Unbound". rottentomatoes.com. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 30, 2015.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Superman Unbound: The Review". ign.com. IGN. Retrieved January 30, 2015.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Review: 'Superman: Unbound'". variety.com. Retrieved January 30, 2015.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Superman: Unbound". commonsensemedia.org. Retrieved January 30, 2015.
{{cite web}}
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External links[]

Superman franchise media | ||
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Comic strips | Superman (1939–1966) •
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Radio | The Adventures of Superman (US, 1940–51) • The Adventures of Superman (UK, 1988) | |
Live-action serials and films | Serials | Superman (1948) • Atom Man vs. Superman |
1951 film series | Superman and the Mole Men • Stamp Day for Superman (short film) | |
1978 film series | Superman (1978) • Superman II (The Richard Donner Cut) • Superman III • Supergirl • Superman IV: The Quest for Peace • Superman Returns | |
DC Extended Universe | Man of Steel • Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice | |
DC Universe | Superman | |
Animated films | Superman animated shorts (1941–1943) • Brainiac Attacks • Doomsday • All-Star Superman • Unbound • Superman/Batman: Public Enemies • Superman/Batman: Apocalypse • Superman/Shazam!: The Return of Black Adam • vs. The Elite • The Death of Superman • Reign of the Supermen • Red Son • Man of Tomorrow • Battle of the Super Sons | |
Documentary films | Look, Up in the Sky: The Amazing Story of Superman • The Death of "Superman Lives": What Happened? • Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story | |
Television | Live-action | Adventures of Superman • The Adventures of Superboy (pilot) • Superboy • Lois & Clark • Smallville • Supergirl • Krypton • Superman & Lois |
Animation | The New Adventures of Superman • The Adventures of Superboy • Superman • The Animated Series • Krypto the Superdog • Legion of Super Heroes • My Adventures with Superman | |
Novels | The Adventures of Superman (1942) • Superman: Last Son of Krypton • Miracle Monday • Superman: Doomsday & Beyond • Lois & Clark: A Superman Novel • It's Superman! • Superman Returns • Enemies & Allies | |
Video games | Superman (1979) • Superman: The Game (1985) • Superman (1987) • Superman (1988) • The Man of Steel (1989) • Superman (1992) • The Death and Return of Superman • The New Superman Adventures • Shadow of Apokolips • The Man of Steel (2002) • Countdown to Apokolips • Returns • MultiVersus | |
Music | "You've Got Possibilities" • Superman III (soundtrack) • Superman Returns (soundtrack) • "Save Me" (Remy Zero song) • Man of Steel (soundtrack) • Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (soundtrack) • Metropolis Symphony | |
Parodies | Captain Caveman (The Flintstone Comedy Show segment) • Mighty Mouse • My Hero (UK TV series) • Stupor Duck • "Superduperman" • Super-Rabbit • Underdog (TV series) • Super Grover (Sesame Street) | |
Other media | It's a Bird... It's a Plane... It's Superman (musical) • The Adventures of Seinfeld & Superman (advertisement) | |
Toys | Lego Superman | |
Related characters | Lois Lane in other media • Lex Luthor in other media • Supergirl in other media | |
Related articles | Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation • "Crisis on Infinite Earths" • Hollywoodland • Lucy and Superman • "Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex" • National Comics Publications, Inc. v. Fawcett Publications, Inc. • Sunman (1992 video game) • Superman curse • Superman ice cream • "Superman and Paula Brown's New Snowsuit" • "The Reign of the Superman" • Superman and Lois Lane • Superman '78 |
Supergirl | ||
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Creators | Otto Binder • Al Plastino • Curt Swan | |
Supergirls | Kara Zor-El • Matrix • Linda Danvers • Cir-El • Laurel Gand • Power Girl • Ariella Kent | |
Characters | Supporting | Alura • Batgirl • Cat Grant • Comet • Justice League • Lana Lang • Lena Luthor • Lucy Lane • Mary Marvel • Maxima • Streaky the Supercat • Superman • Zor-El |
Enemies | Anti-Monitor • Black Star • Brainiac • The Council • Cyborg Superman • Darkseid • Decay • Despero • Female Furies • Insect Queen • Lesla-Lar • Lex Luthor • Livewire • Psi • Reactron • Satan Girl • Silver Banshee • Twilight | |
Titles | Adventure Comics • Supergirl • Supergirl and the Legion of Super-Heroes • Superman Family • Elseworld's Finest: Supergirl & Batgirl | |
Other media | Supergirl (film) • Supergirl (TV series) (characters • episodes |
Warner Bros. Animation | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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See also | List of Warner Bros. Animation productions • Warner Animation Group • Warner Bros. Feature Animation • Warner Bros. Cartoons • Warner Bros. Family Entertainment • Hanna-Barbera • Cartoon Network Productions (Cartoon Network Studios • Williams Street • Hanna-Barbera Studios Europe) • Unproduced projects • List of Warner Bros. theatrical animated feature films |