Wouldn't most people be happy about that? I mean, even the people who
didn't like him in SR - wouldn't they be happy he was moving on?
According to most reports, Warners wants that too.
It's funny, 'cause while I agree with the sentiment, I can't think of one topic that has ignited more passion in places like this than the casting of Superman. Even the suit arguments pale in comparison to Who. Should. Be. Superman. So the belief that it could end by casting yet *another* actor in the role makes me chuckle. Right now, it's just two actors. Can you imagine if and when it becomes THREE? Get yer helmets on kids, we're in for a WILD ride.
Hee! Well, I felt the same way about Routh. I thought he was a horrible actor and
made a horrible Superman. But ooopzzz... there's that argument again.
In a way, I agree with you. But that's just ONE poll. There were many others that were taken before SR when the TV show had only been on the air for 2 or 3 years. The results were similar. At
MSNBC, 74% of 66 thousand people voted for Welling. At
CNN, 55% of 28 thousand voted the same, etc. So what you have is evidence of a great deal of support by the general public for one actor, and it's not going away! This is even *after* another actor was cast in the role in a critically acclaimed blockbuster film. If you were the suits at Warners, wouldn't you be thinking, "What's up with that?"
Now the question comes down to, should they cast the same actor again and hope he catches on after two films, should they cast a new actor and hope HE can win over the general public, or should they just cast the actor that a lot of people have been begging for since as far back as 2003?
Hmmm... decisions, decisions.
Well, there's also the argument that if the queen had balls, she'd be king, but I understand your point.
I think a lot of people voting for Routh do so just because he was cast in the film, not because he or the film were particularly amazing. Not saying YOU are doing that, but I have seen the argument that "Routh is Superman now, so why change?" George Lazenby was "James Bond" by virtue of a casting decision. Val Kilmer and George Clooney were "Batman" by virtue of a casting decision. But how many people really see those actors AS those characters? Whether it was the actor, the movie, or the public's preconceived notions themselves, those actors didn't click in the role.
There really is no way of knowing how the public will react to a particular actor until he's cast. That said,
something is afoot when one actor keeps being "fan-casted" for a particular role. Call it the Christian Bale effect. Maybe Warners is thinking, well it worked before, lets try it again? I dunno. It's a no-brainer to me, but it's not
my decision. *shrugs*
Anyhoo, here's something to squee about no matter what happens...
I :heart: