-- The secrecy surrounding "Man of Steel," due  June 14, is pretty extraordinary, but composer Hans Zimmer was able to  give CNN a glimpse of what to expect when 
we caught up with him this week regarding the score he did for "The Bible."
 
Asked if the two projects  had anything in common, since both involve a savior figure (Jesus,  Kal-el) sent by his father to Earth, Zimmer laughed and said, 
"Yes. Yes  is the answer. Once you see Superman, you'll see how close you are with  your question."
 
"Both stories are  passions," Zimmer continued, 
"about a struggle to do the right thing.  For Superman, it was a really simple question for me. What does it take  to become a good man? To be good? And what does that mean in our more  and more complex society? Do any of these values still resonate with  us?"
 
Zimmer said he came to  this understanding about director Zack Snyder's take on Superman (which  reboots the series, instead of coming in at a later point a la "Superman  Returns") because he was questioning how he would score the film and  not remind audiences of John Williams' 
iconic fanfare theme. 
 "Look, that was daunting," Zimmer confessed. 
"Seriously. He's the  greatest film composer out there, without a doubt, and it happens to be  one of his iconic pieces of music, so I spent three months just  procrastinating and not even getting a start on the thing, because I was  so intimidated: 'Oh my God, I'm following in John Williams'  footsteps.'"
His way around this, he  said, was to look at the Superman story in a 
"very different way." "I  kept thinking of the story as, What if you are extraordinary, and your  entire ambition is to join humanity? To become human? What does it mean  to become human? What does it mean to be an outsider who really wants to  join the human race?"
 
"Man of Steel," which  replaces Brandon Routh with Henry Cavill, is the origin story of  Superman, starting with a young Clark Kent discovering that he has  extraordinary powers and is not from planet Earth. As he grows up, he  learns where he came from and what he was sent to this planet to do, as  he becomes a symbol of hope for humanity. The film also stars Russell  Crowe as Jor-el (Kal-el's birth father on Krypton), Diane Lane and Kevin  Costner as Martha and Jonathan Kent (his adoptive parents), Michael  Shannon as General Zod (so expect some trouble there), Laurence  Fishburne as Daily Planet editor Perry White, and Amy Adams as  reporter/love interest Lois Lane. (
"She's fun and sassy, in control,  getting into trouble, and always looking for a headline!" Adams enthused  earlier). 
While it remains to be confirmed, the 
latest rumor is that Mackenzie Gray is playing Lex Luthor, although he doesn't appear in 
the trailer.
 
Coming off three Dark  Knight films directed by Christopher Nolan ("Batman Begins," "The Dark  Knight," and "The Dark Knight Rises"), Zimmer also didn't want to do 
 "another really dark" superhero movie.
 "Everything's tinged with irony  and sarcasm and bitterness and darkness these days," he said. But this  Superman is something lighter, he said,
 "celebrating everything that was  good and fine about America," such as small towns 
"where people don't  lock their doors, neighbors get together, and families are families."
 
"What was important for  Superman was the simple fact that none of us pay much attention to the  Midwest," Zimmer said. 
"I know America mainly by the big cities, but if  you go into the Midwest, there is a people there and there is a country  there. And I thought it was important that the decent folk, simple folk  be the heart of the story, and a character who is guileless, who isn't  complicated in the sort of flawed way our Dark Knight is, and isn't  political in any way. He's just striving to become a better part of  humanity."
 
This perspective on  Superman, the German-born composer said, is something that he came by in  part because he's a foreigner. 
"I think partly what we foreigners are  good at is looking at America, not in a judgmental way, but wide-eyed,  and seeing the things you take for granted and presenting them in a new  way," he added. 
"Like for 'Thelma and Louise' and the Grand Canyon, most  American kids wouldn't want to go there for their holiday, but to us  it's a magical, magnificent place."
 
Sonically, this  treatment of America comes across via a grouping of pedal steel guitars  (instead of the usual string section), banging titanium and steel  sculptures, and organizing "a who's who of drummers" in a 12-member drum  circle, including Jason Bonham, Sheila E. and Pharrell Williams. 
"The  great thing about Superman is that everybody loves Superman," Zimmer  said with a laugh.
 "It's very easy making the call and saying, 'Hey, can  you come?' I remember phoning Pharrell and him saying, 'I'm right in  the middle of producing the Beyonce album in Miami.' 'Jason Bonham's in  Miami, and he's getting on a plane!' Next morning, there's Pharrell,  looking a little bleary-eyed."
 
As a producer on "Man of  Steel," Nolan, who also collaborated on the story, initially acted as a  sounding board for some of Zimmer's ideas (
"getting rid of my demons,"  as he put it) but soon stepped aside so he wouldn't be 
"a mistress in  the mix" between Zimmer and director Zack Snyder, especially since  Zimmer's involvement in the whole project stemmed from a  misunderstanding in the first place.
 
"A journalist asked me  (at an 'Inception' party) if I was going to do Superman, and I hadn't  even heard of it, so I went, 'Absolutely no way,'" Zimmer said. "Somehow  in the noise of that party, that got misconstrued as 'Absolutely Hans  is doing it.' It was all over the Internet  that I was doing Superman, and I'd never even met Zack! So I phoned him  up, 'I'm really sorry, this wasn't my doing, this is a  misunderstanding.' And he said, 'Oh! It's great that you phoned. Maybe  we should meet and talk.'"
 
So they did, and Nolan  urged Zimmer to sign up.
 "I remember him going, 'Of course you can do  it. What's the big deal? I did Batman.' And I said, 'Excuse me, you went  to Warner Bros. with an idea of how you were going to do Batman, and  you're saying I'm supposed to do Superman, but I don't have the idea in  my head.' I have to sneak up on it!" And with Snyder, now he has.