I SEE SPIDEY
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^You have some great ideas Kal Mart.
this is what i call ''thinking outside the box''I'd like Lois to be rushing to the scene of a near disaster that was averted by something that people just can't explain...she's there to get the scoop, but finds out there's already some tall guy in glasses that she's never seen before who says he's from the Daily Planet too...interviewing some cops and bystanders. She doesn't think much of him, but she's a bit put off by being beaten to the punch. She gets him back by stealing a cab from him...but when she arrives back at the Daily Planet...there's that friggin' guy again...already there in the office! WTF? It's then that he's introduced to her by Perry as Clark Kent, the newly-hired reporter.
hmmm...I like that idea.what if it was a bullet train like thing like they got in japan and all that.

From what I've read from Robinov & Horn they had very little intention of doing a sequal once the figures started rolling in. Robinov is quoted as saying the film didn't quite work & Horn was quoted in saying it should have done $500m minimum..
"'Superman Returns' will be profitable for us," says Warner Bros. production president Jeff Robinov. "We would have liked it to have made more money, but it reintroduced the character in a great way and was a good launching pad for the next picture. We believe in Bryan and the franchise. Clearly, this was the most emotional and realistic superhero movie ever made."
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003019246

Great ideas, KalMart. Anyone know how to pitch a spec script to WB?![]()
That is a great idea for their first introduction. I would love to see that.I'd like Lois to be rushing to the scene of a near disaster that was averted by something that people just can't explain...she's there to get the scoop, but finds out there's already some tall guy in glasses that she's never seen before who says he's from the Daily Planet too...interviewing some cops and bystanders. She doesn't think much of him, but she's a bit put off by being beaten to the punch. He tries to introduce himself, but she cuts him off when she asks another question to the cop about just what got that speeding bus with bomb-rigged terrorists stuck up in the top floor of that abandoned building.
"Who knows...", says a cop. "People said some sort of hurricane or something just came in and....it's crazy, who knows?"
She then gets that guy back by stealing a cab from him...but when she arrives back at the Daily Planet...there's that friggin' guy again...already there in the office! WTF? It's then that he's introduced to her by Perry as Clark Kent, the newly-hired reporter.
I don't think that's a good idea. The film would be trampling over itself and may become confusing & complicated. It needs to keeps some natural flow or order of things. Besides, the reason for introducing Krypton/Jor-El in the beginning is to established the "gift" to humanity and set up future threats and/or villains for future films(sequels).Yeah, but my take is that we don't see Krypton/Jor-El in the first movie. we star the second movie kinda like STM
As an offshot.... say they later decided that they wanted to reboot completely...would that contract only apply to a direct sequel either way?
Perhaps more related...doesn't that kind of a deal also act as insurance for Singer that he'd get dibs on a sequel, and on the other end that Singer wouldn't be lured away from continuing like with, say, what happened with Fox/X3?
Robinov didn't make those comments until two years after SR was released.
And then two months later, the studio locks Singer into a pay-or-play contract to make a sequel. Studio's don't pay directors millions of dollars for a film they have no intention of making.