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Superman Ultimate Collector's Edition (Superman: The Movie / Superman II / Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut / Superman III / Superman IV: The Quest for Peace / Superman Returns) (14 DVDs)
 
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Superman Ultimate Collector's Edition (Superman: The Movie / Superman II / Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut / Superman III / Superman IV: The Quest for Peace / Superman Returns) (14 DVDs)

Brandon Routh , Kevin Spacey , Bryan Singer , Kevin Burns    PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)   DVD
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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4.4 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This IS No Fantasy..., Dec 1 2006
By 
Robert J. Lewis (Toronto, ON) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Superman Ultimate Collector's Edition (Superman: The Movie / Superman II / Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut / Superman III / Superman IV: The Quest for Peace / Superman Returns) (14 DVDs) (DVD)
Bitchy message-board junkies take a bow: the creators of this very special DVD fully acknowledge that it was the outcry from the fan community that made this ultimate geek supplement a reality. I don't mean to use the term "geek" pejoratively--count me in among the adolescent comic book nuts who fell hard for Richard Donner's definitive 1978 "Superman" adaptation and its equally accomplished 1980 sequel. Hell, nearly 30 years later I'm still an adolescent comic book nut, and like many have long wondered what the follow-up would have been like had the Salkinds not drop-kicked the director unceremoniously out of the picture and brought in "A Hard Day's Night"/"Help" vet Richard Lester to gut Donner's existing footage and refashion a shtickier take on The Man Of Steel's smack-down against Kryptonian nogoodnicks General Zod, Ursa, and Non.

Well, none-too-coincidentally timed as part of the hoopla over Bryan Singer's long-in-development "Superman Returns", the accommodating folks at Warner Bros bankrolled Donner's 26-years-overdue chance to fashion the sequel he never got to finish.

The result is "Superman 2: The Richard Donner Cut", and while it doesn't really work as a self-contained film, it makes for an utterly joyous one-time viewing experience (I can't imagine revisiting it often, though), and a clarion call to all future producers of superhero adaptations to install someone behind the camera with not only the directorial prowess to pull off the technical demands but a reverence for the source material as well. As much as I'm a fan of the "official" "Superman 2", Lester saw Big Blue's universe as a vehicle for slapstick and campy melodrama (which he put into overdrive by turning "Superman 3" into a showcase for Richard Pryor), whereas Donner regarded the world's first superhero as a genuine 20th century myth. His ersatz cut, then, is a more serious one than Lester's, but nowhere near as poker-faced as Singer's quasi-sequel.

Much of the footage is previously-unseen (outside of an extended network TV edit) and just wonderful: Brando's been restored as Jor-El (replacing Susanna York's holographic Lara) in all of his majestic glory (which came with a hefty, then record-setting price tag, hence his removal from Lester's version), even if some of the disembodied head effects are cheesy and give him the look of a silver-haired Zardoz (the scowl of contempt Jor-El gives Lois as Kal-El agrees to surrender his powers is worth every penny of the millions Brando pocketed for a few days' work). Gone is the entire Paris/nuclear terrorists opening (which in Lester's defense, was a good scene)--instead, the prologue backtracks to "Superman: The Movie" and we see that it was Luthor's first missile (the one due for Hackensack, NJ) that shatters The Phantom Zone prison after Superman re-routes it. The lengthy Niagara Falls "newlywed" undercover bit with Lois and Clark is thankfully truncated, with Lois' discovery of Clark's alien alter ego now played out from rehearsal footage (Lois pulls a gun on Clark and fires, even though it's just a blank), given that Donner was dismissed before he had the chance to reshoot it with Margot Kidder and Christopher Reeve in proper costumes and makeup.

There are many alternate line readings and noticeable differences in staging and scene length throughout, with much of the second act's epic Metropolis slug fest playing out pretty much as it did in the theatrical version, with some new FX (a Statue Of Liberty gag) to dazzle (such as optical printing and miniatures circa 1987-1980 can provide). Some of the southern town comedy has been trimmed, and Zod is certainly a nastier hambone here than he is in Lester's cut (evidenced by when he takes an M-16 and gleefully opens fire in The White House on unarmed soldiers).

What prevents "The Donner Cut" from succeeding completely is its lack of a proper climax and coda, which drops the "magic kiss" that wipes Lois' memory in Lester's version and merely repeats the identical footage from the climax of "Superman: The Movie". Donner had planned to shoot "Superman" 1 and 2 as a single film and release it in two parts (ala Lester's own "The Three Musketeers" and "The Four Musketeers", and the recent "The Matrix Reloaded" and "The Matrix Revolutions") with the plan for the globe-reversal gag to undo all of the damage caused by Luthor in the first adventure and the Krypton villains in the second. But when plans changed to release "Superman" as a stand-alone movie in time for Xmas 1978, it became the wrap-up for the first tale (where it is more powerful, following Lois' death after Superman honours his promise to Ms. Teschmacher and chooses the lives of faceless millions over the life of the one he loves).

Considering it's something of Bizarro version, the image quality is surprisingly consistent--considering most of this material has sat in canisters for decades now--and looked great in its 2.35:1 aspect ratio on my 42" plasma. As well, the cut has been given a complete 5.1 sound mix and there's a very candid commentary from Donner and co-writer/"creative consultant" Tom Mankiewicz in which neither is afraid to name names (although Donner only refers to Lester as "the other director"). I'm generally not one for tinkering with old films that were fine in their time, but the flying scenes in this one had me thinking: am I the only one who thinks it wouldn't be a bad idea to re-composite some of the sloppier effects shots? If we can pump Dolby 2.0 stereo up to DTS surround, why not get rid of obvious matte lines and differences in film grain?

"Superman 2: The Richard Donner Cut" is available individually or as part of Warners' "Superman: The Ultimate Collection" 14-disc boxed set, which includes all of the Reeve films, the Singer update, every Fleischer Bros. cartoon, George Reeves in "Superman And The Mole Men" feature, the very rare "Superpup" half-hour pilot, as well as the 2 hour documentary "It's A Bird, It's A Plane" and documentaries both vintage and newly produced for each feature. The Salkind's atrocious "Supergirl", once rumoured to be included, has been wisely left out. But couldn't someone have sprung for some footage from the Broadway show?

NOTE: The initial package was released on November with two defective discs--Disc 1 was missing a 2.0 sound mix for the original "Superman: The Movie", and Disc 3 didn't come with the promised audio commentary for "Superman 3" (not Lester's unfortunately). I'm happy with the 5.1 mix on the former, and could do without the very existence of the latter in any form, but I say if you shelled out the big bucks for the set, you're entitled to all of the proper package contents. A quickie Google search will get you the necessary contact/return details, and if you waited until after Xmas, the corrected discs were reported to ship as of January, 2007.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Almost A Perfect Set, Feb 4 2007
By 
S. Lennox (New York) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Superman Ultimate Collector's Edition (Superman: The Movie / Superman II / Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut / Superman III / Superman IV: The Quest for Peace / Superman Returns) (14 DVDs) (DVD)
The Superman Ultimate Collector's Set is certainly worth the price for everything you get; there's not really much more that can be said that isn't already in the description for the set. Personally I found the two documentary dvds about the story of Superman through the years and the making of the original Christopher Reeve movies to be very entertaining, especially the new interviews with the cast and crew of the Reeve movies. A 1978 documentary that includes interviews with Reeve, Gene Hackman and even Marlon Brando was very good as well, especially the bizarre comments from Brando explaining his hefty fee for the movie. The alternate version of Superman II (The Richard Donner Cut) is also another highlight; it's amazing to see how much unused footage there was of the movie originally. The commentaries are enlightening as well, although Richard Donner strangely has a tendency to refer to himself in the third-person, and Superman IV's screenwriter spends too much time trying to explain why the movie went so wrong. The amazingly high quality of the original Superman cartoons of the early 1940's are quite something to see, even if some of them are rather politically incorrect now (Japoteurs?). Odd, but amusing, is the over half hour of deleted footage from Superman IV (which still didn't really help the movie), as well as the 1958 pilot of Super-pup, which had the Superman characters in animal costume form, and the WWII Private Snafu cartoon (as Snafuperman).

My only complaint about this particular set is that despite waiting until the third week of January to order this from Amazon, to avoid getting the set with the incorrect dvds (hoping it would be cleared up by then), I still received the wrong-dvd set. So, like many others, I made my request for the proper ones. In my case it took about 3 weeks to receive the mailer after I requested it; and another 2 weeks before I received the corrected dvds. However, I think it was worth it just for an interesting 50 minute documentary from 1983 on the making of Superman III that included interviews with Reeve and the director Richard Lester.

Incidentally the phone number for replacing the dvds (as mentioned in the customer notice) has a poorly recorded message telling people to email their name and address to: warner@unigistix.com
The message also says that prepaid mailers will be mailed out to the emailed address to exchange the incorrect dvds.

It's not a major problem, and many people will probably be happy with the incorrect dvds, but for those who paid for and want the set as advertised it is a bit of an annoyance. If not for that mishap this would easily be a 5-star set, perfect for any Superman fan, young or old.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An Amazing Set, Dec 25 2006
By 
Mark K. Doiron "MKD" (PEI, Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Superman Ultimate Collector's Edition (Superman: The Movie / Superman II / Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut / Superman III / Superman IV: The Quest for Peace / Superman Returns) (14 DVDs) (DVD)
I know there has been alot of good and bad said about this Ultimate Superman Boxset, and believe me, I've been reading up on what everyone is saying ie. packaging, disc errors, etc. I have to say, that since getting the set myself I can't see what so many people are arguing/complaining about. The packaging is great...probably one of the nicest sets I've ever bought, and yes, there are two discs that are missing material: an old 2.0 track for Superman and some audio commentary or something from Superman III..is it really a loss? And if it is then call the 1-800 number and Warner will send you the proper replacement. Bottom line...the set itself is truly incredible. Everything you want to know, or watch of Superman is here and for the price it's greatly worth it. I am an avid DVD buyer and I love boxsets/collector sets etc. This is by far one of the nicest I have.

For some who may be reading this to determine whether they should get this set or not, do not let all the negative talk of "defective discs" and "poor packaging" sway you. The material included is what matters and when it comes to total hours of Superman viewing...this set takes the entire cake and then some. Buy it!!!
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