Superman vs. The Elite | |
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Blu-ray cover | |
Directed by | Michael Chang |
Produced by | Sam Register Bruce Timm Alan Burnett |
Written by | Joe Kelly |
Starring | George Newbern Pauley Perrette Robin Atkin Downes Catero Colbert Melissa Disney Andrew Kishino |
Edited by | Christopher D. Lozinski |
Production company | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/> |
Distributed by | Warner Home Video |
Release date | <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
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Running time | 76 Minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $2,862,930[1] |
Superman vs. The Elite is an animated superhero film based on the comic book story "What's So Funny About Truth, Justice & the American Way?" in Action Comics #775 (March 2001). Adapted by Joe Kelly who also wrote the comic book story and directed by Michael Chang. The film featured the return of George Newbern as Superman and David Kaufman as Jimmy Olsen reprising their roles from the DC animated universe.[2] Released on June 12, 2012,[3] it is the 14th film in the DC Universe Animated Original Movies.
Plot[]
Lois and Clark witness the deaths of multiple people in the streets at the hands of the Atomic Skull who was killing people to draw out Superman. Superman defeats Atomic Skull by throwing him into a lake. After this, Superman gives a speech at the United Nations about the greater good that is found within everyone. During this the leaders of Bialyia and Pokolistan begin to fight due to their peace treaty being broken, Superman leaves the United Nations to stop their armed forces from destroying each other. As Superman arrives in Bialya, the Pokolistani forces release a bio-weapon on the Bialyan military which destroys most of their ground forces. As Superman gets the soldiers to safety from the bio-weapon, the Elite arrive just in time to help Superman destroy it.
Superman returns to Metropolis to report the news and also gain more information on the Elite. Superman and Lois fly to England to find out if they, and the world, can trust the Elite. It is revealed through Manchester Black that he gained his powers near puberty and used it for the first time to save his sister Vera from being hit by a train. The Elite and Superman arrive on the scene to save the civilians on a subway train which was trapped underwater due to a terrorist attack. After Superman and Black save the passengers, Black interrogates the terrorists that bombed the train nearly killing them. Superman begins to be concerned about the motives of his new-found friends.
Back in Metropolis, Lois tells Clark that there is no birth record or death certificate of Manchester's sister Vera. This makes Clark further question the Elite's origin and what they are really trying to accomplish. When Manchester broadcasts a message for all the world to hear, he tells them that they will take care of all the world's villains by killing them. After the broadcast, Superman travels to Bialya. While there, Superman is hit by an EMP which weakens him. Closing Pokolistani forces are about to attack him when the Elite attacks. Powerless to stop the Elite, Superman passes out. He eventually awakens at the Elite's base of operations, a sentient macroorganism called Bonnie, and is teleported back to Earth after he fails to convince the Elite that they don't have to kill to be heroes.
Atomic Skull breaks out of prison and looks for revenge on Superman. The Elite arrives but have little success against the overpowered Atomic Skull. When Superman arrives, he coordinates an attack with the Elite to get all the extra power away from Atomic Skull. After Atomic Skull's power is drained by Coldcast, he is executed by Manchester Black under the vote of a boy whose father was one of Atomic Skull's victims. The Elite tell Superman that they have killed both the Pokolistanian and Bialyan leaders and that peace can reign supreme in that area once again. Angered, Superman punches Manchester in the face and the Elite take it as a statement of war against the world's "favorite heroes." They tell Superman that they will kill him for this outrage.
The next day, Superman stands in the middle of Metropolis telling the Elite that he is ready to fight. Asking them to do it somewhere safe, they teleport to the Moon where they begin their fight, with the people of Metropolis watching via Bonnie. Both sides are evenly matched until Black telekinetically induces a seizure in Superman. Coldcast then unleashes a massive blast of electromagnetic energy on Superman, and to those watching the battle on Earth, it appears that Superman has been obliterated. However, moments later, the Elite start hearing Superman's voice all around them. In his taunts, Superman states that he has finally been convinced that he needs to start killing villains--beginning with the Elite. Superman then begins to take out the Elite one by one; first he injects Menagerie with a poison that causes her sym-beasts to abandon her and apparently kills her. The Hat attempts to exploit Superman's known weakness to magic but is suffocated by a super-speed generated whirlwind and sucked into the funnel.
Against Coldcast's wishes, Manchester teleports them to Metropolis to use the innocent civilians as cover. Black gives the order to combine their powers to destroy Metropolis when Superman appears. After Superman knocks Coldcast into orbit, he confronts Black. Manchester attacks Superman with everything he has but fails to harm the Man of Steel. Through his heat vision, Superman lobotomizes Manchester, stripping him of his powers. Believing his death to be seconds away, Manchester tells Superman that the world knows he is no better than they are and will never again trust him. Superman reveals that he faked killing the other members of the Elite and had his Super-Robots protect all of the civilians present and to create the illusion that he had killed indiscriminately. They were really transported to the Fortress of Solitude to be stripped of their powers, then sent to a prison. In addition, Bonnie was offered a way to return home. In the end, the people of Earth see that violence and killing never really was the right way for justice and accept that Superman's way is best for all of mankind. After that, he flies off with Lois and they kiss.
Voice cast[]
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- George Newbern – Clark Kent / Kal-El / Superman
- Pauley Perrette – Lois Lane
- Robin Atkin Downes – Manchester Black
- Catero Colbert – Nathan Jones / Coldcast[4]
- Melissa Disney – Menagerie[4]
- Andrew Kishino – The Hat[4]
- Dee Bradley Baker – Atomic Skull/Joseph Martin[4]
- Ogie Banks – Terrence Baxter[4]
- Grey DeLisle – Young Manchester Black[4]
- Paul Eiding – Pa Kent[4]
- Troy Evans – Pundit[4]
- Jennifer Hale – Kid Playing Superman[4]
- David Kaufman – Jimmy Olsen[4]
- Pamela Kosh – Abigail[4]
- Jeff LaPensee – Falling Man[4]
- Marcella Lentz-Pope – Vera Black[4]
- Dave B. Mitchell – Shocktrooper[4]
- Sumalee Montano – Newscaster[4]
- Laraine Newman – Newscaster #3[4]
- Nolan North – Pokolistani Ambassador[4]
- Henry Simmons – Efrain Baxter[4]
- Stephen Stanton – Bialyian Ambassador, Cartoon Superman, Manchester Black's Father[4]
- Tara Strong – Young Vera Black[4]
- Fred Tatasciore – Perry White[4]
- Bruce Timm – MI-5 Agent[4]
- Julie Wittner – Cowering Woman[4]
- Rick Zieff – Desiccated Man[4]
Production[]
The film was first announced at Comic Con 2011, during the screening of Batman: Year One, as one of the films from the DC Universe Animated Original Movies line for 2012, by producer Bruce Timm.[5] Joe Kelly, writer of Action Comics #775, "What's So Funny About Truth, Justice & the American Way?," adapted his own work into the film. He was quoted as saying, "The story tackles themes that go way beyond a typical superhero story...politics, the price of power and America's place as a force in the world are all viewed through the lens of the DC Universe. Even if fans aren't paying close attention to these issues, they're all over the media. You can't escape them. So with the state of affairs being what it is, I can't think of a better time to see Superman confront these themes...I'm a big fan of taking real world issues and working them out through our "superhero" stories—but this one goes beyond strict allegory. Like the original comic story, the film is thought provoking without being preachy and really delivers a punch." He also said that, in terms of expanding the comic book issue into an animated film, and the differences between the two; that he "had Alan Burnett. Alan helped me cut to the heart of the story and personalize it for an audience who might not have known the original comic...the original story was about anti-heroes and comic fans and trends in the industry that were disturbing to me when it was written. For the story to work as a film, we needed to get beyond that while keeping the core of the story: that Superman serves a purpose and his moral code is relevant even in the modern world. This is where the expansion into "world politics" really helped."[6]
Theme music[]
Superman vs. the Elite utilizes the same musical main theme that was composed by Robert Kral for the previously released animated film Superman: Doomsday.
Critical response[]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an 80% score based on five reviews, with an average rating of 7.2/10.[7]
Home media[]
Superman vs. The Elite was released on DVD and Blu-ray with a combo pack. Features include: a sneak peek at Part 1 of the animated film version of The Dark Knight Returns, two featurettes "The Elite Unbound: No Rules, No Mercy" and "Superman and the Moral Debate", audio commentary, two episodes of Superman: The Animated Series, and Action Comics #775 as a digital comic.[8] The combo pack was released on June 12, 2012.[9]
It is the final film by Warner Premiere, as Warner Home Video shut the company down two months later. Though, titles still continued to be released under the Warner Premiere label until 2013.
See also[]
- What's So Funny About Truth, Justice & the American Way?
References[]
- ↑ "Superman vs. The Elite - DVD Sales". The Numbers. Nash Information Service. Retrieved January 30, 2015.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
- ↑ Harvey, Jim (29 May 2012). "George Newbern Talks Playing Superman, New Media From "Superman Versus The Elite"". World's Finest. Retrieved 11 August 2013.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
- ↑ JIM HARVEY (2012-04-23). "DC Entertainment Rebrands Warner Home Video's DC Universe Animated Original Movie Line". The World's Finest. Retrieved 2012-06-28.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
- ↑ 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18 4.19 4.20 4.21 4.22 4.23 Harvey, Jim (5 June 2012). "Complete Cast And Crew Details For Upcoming Animated "Superman Versus The Elite"". World's Finest. Retrieved 11 August 2013.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
- ↑ Harvey, Jim (28 February 2012). "Cast And Crew, "Superman Versus The Elite" WonderCon World Premiere Updates". World's Finest. Retrieved 11 August 2013.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
- ↑ Goldberg, Lesley (March 14, 2012). "Joe Kelly Previews DC/Warner Home Video's 'Superman vs. The Elite'". The Hollywood Reporter. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/joe-kelly-dc-superman-vs-evil-warner-home-video-299656.
- ↑ "Superman vs. The Elite". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2015-03-05.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
- ↑ Harvey, Jim (28 June 2012). ""Superman Versus The Elite" Animated Feature Makes Fine Debut On Home Video Market". World's Finest. Retrieved 11 August 2013.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
- ↑ Burger, Dennis. "Superman vs. the Elite Flies onto Blu-ray June 12". Technologytell. www.technologytell.com. Retrieved 2012-03-19.<templatestyles src="Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css"></templatestyles>
External links[]
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Superman vs. The Elite |
Superman | ||
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Creators | Jerry Siegel • Joe Shuster | |
Superman family | Superman (Clark Kent) • Superboy (Kal-El • Kon-El • Jonathan Samuel Kent) • Krypto • Supergirl (Kara Zor-El • Matrix • Linda Danvers • Power Girl) • Superwoman • Mon-El • Nightwing (Chris Kent/Lor-Zod) • Flamebird (Thara Ak-Var) • The Eradicator • Steel (John Henry Irons) • Natasha Irons | |
Supporting characters | Bibbo Bibbowski • Cat Grant • David Corporon • Emil Hamilton • Inspector Henderson • Jimmy Olsen • Jor-El • Jonathan and Martha Kent • Lois Lane • Lucy Lane • Sam Lane • Lana Lang • Lara • Lori Lemaris • Steve Lombard • Lena Luthor • Maxima • Chief Parker • Professor Potter • Pete Ross • Maggie Sawyer • George Taylor • Ron Troupe • Dan Turpin • Perry White • Zor-El | |
Antagonists | Atomic Skull • Bizarro • Brainiac • Codename: Assassin • Conduit • Cyborg Superman (Hank Henshaw) • Darkseid • Doomsday • Faora • General Zod • Mercy Graves • Imperiex • Intergang (Morgan Edge • Bruno Mannheim) • Jax-Ur • Kryptonite Man • Lex Luthor • Livewire • Metallo • Mister Mxyzptlk • Mongul • Neutron • Non • Parasite • Prankster • Silver Banshee • Titano • Toyman • Ultra-Humanite • Ursa | |
Locations | Metropolis | Ace o' Clubs • Daily Planet • Daily Star • Galaxy Communications • LexCorp • Project Cadmus • Suicide Slum • List of areas, landmarks, institutions and businesses |
Krypton | Argo City • Kandor • Kryptonopolis • Vathlo Island | |
Other | Apokolips • Bizarro World • Colu • Daxam • Fortress of Solitude • Phantom Zone • S.T.A.R. Labs • Smallville • Stryker's Island • Warworld | |
Objects and material | Kryptonite • Superman robots • Supermobile | |
History and themes | Character and cast • Dynasty • Kryptonian • Origin • Powers and abilities • Publication history (Action Comics #1) • Superman and Lois Lane • Symbol | |
Ongoing publications | Action Comics • Batman/Superman • Superboy • Supergirl • Superman • Superman/Wonder Woman | |
Alternative versions | Superman | Earth-One version • Earth-Two version • Earth-Three version (Ultraman) • Earth Prime version (Superboy-Prime) • Kingdom Come version • Superman Red/Superman Blue • Clark Kent (Smallville) |
Other | Alternative versions of Lex Luthor • Alternative versions of Supergirl | |
In other media | In film | |
Miscellanea | Superwoman • Beppo • Streaky • Comet • Superman (gene) • Joanne Siegel |
Superman franchise media | ||
---|---|---|
Newspaper comic strips | Superman (1939–66) • The World's Greatest Superheroes (1978–85) | |
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 • Justice League | |
Animated films | Featuring Superman | Superman animated shorts (1941–43) • Brainiac Attacks • Doomsday • All-Star • Unbound |
With other heroes | Justice League: The New Frontier • Superman/Batman: Public Enemies • Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths • Superman/Batman: Apocalypse • Superman/Shazam!: The Return of Black Adam • Justice League: Doom • Superman vs. The Elite • Batman: The Dark Knight Returns – Part 2 • Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox • JLA Adventures: Trapped in Time • Justice League: War • The Lego Movie • Justice League: Throne of Atlantis • Justice League: Gods and Monsters • Justice League vs. Teen Titans • Justice League Dark | |
Television | Live-action | Adventures of Superman • Stamp Day for Superman • The Adventures of Superpup • The Adventures of Superboy (pilot) • Superboy • Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman • Smallville • Supergirl • Krypton |
Animation | New Adventures • Adventures of Superboy • Super Friends • Superman • The Animated Series • Krypto the Superdog • Justice League • Justice League Unlimited • Legion of Super Heroes • Justice League Action | |
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 (arcade, 1988) • Superman (NES, 1988) • The Man of Steel (1989) • Superman (1992) • The Man of Steel (1993) • The Death and Return of Superman • Superman (1997) • The New Adventures • Shadow of Apokolips • The Man of Steel (Xbox, 2002) • Countdown to Apokolips • Superman Returns • Superman Returns: Fortress of Solitude • DC Universe Online • Injustice: Gods Among Us • Infinite Crisis • Injustice 2 | |
Music | "Jimmy Olsen's Blues" (Spin Doctors' song, 1991) • "Kryptonite" (3 Doors Down song, 2000) • "Save Me" (Remy Zero song, 2001) • "Superman (It's Not Easy)" (Five For Fighting song, 2001) • Illinois (Sufjan Stevens album, 2005) | |
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) | |
Documentaries | Look, Up in the Sky: The Amazing Story of Superman • The Death of "Superman Lives": What Happened? | |
Stage | It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's Superman | |
Toys | Lego Superman | |
Advertisement | The Adventures of Seinfeld & Superman (2004) | |
Related articles | Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation • Hollywoodland • "Lucy and Superman" (I Love Lucy episode, 1957) • Kryptonite (popular culture) • "Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex" • National Comics Publications v. Fawcett Publications • Seinfeld episodes, 1994–1996 ("The Race" • "The Bizarro Jerry") • Steel (1997 film) • Superman curse • Superman ice cream • Superwoman (popular culture) • "Superman and Paula Brown's New Snowsuit" • "The Reign of the Superman" | |
See also | Supergirl in other media • Justice League in other media • Lex Luthor in other media |