Hey bosef!
bosef982 said:
To answer your "issues" though:
1. Singer has said that this may be released as not part of the sequel, but as its own story somewhere down the road. You're creating a red herring argument, a situation that was never discussed in the first place outside of fans who think that that, somehow, would ever be a good idea. Next...
Actually this was brought up in an interview with Singer.
Singer mentioned that he wasn't sure the scene would end up in the eventual directors cut dvd of Superman Returns or not. He was still undecided.
The only logical reason for that might be if he was planning to use the clip in the sequel.
Personally I am curious to know what the big deal is about the Return to Krypton scene? Superman gets to Krypton, finds its rubble, then flies back. What am I missing? Does something else happen?
bosef said:
2. I doubt they intend to. I'm sure Singer has a very clear idea where these characters are going.
Thats funny given Singer (when interviewed) couldn't even explain issues within Superman Returns.

t:
bosef said:
I've suggested any manner of ways, none of which I think will happen, but just some that could create substantive storylines. Jason could have unstable powers, and been seen as a degenerate mistake by the coming Eradicator, forcing Superman to choose between his Kryptonian heritage and Earth.
Eradicator, while not an obvious choice for the next villain, might work.
boesf said:
Richard could discover this and go insane, doing something horrible that would push him over the edge and into becoming a "sort of villian" (think harry in SM2).
This Richard thing is the key. Its going to be so easy for them to just take an easy 'out'.
bosef said:
Lois and Richard could become the guardians of Jason, protecting him from Superman's reputation.
...and Lois goes on living with someone shes not in love with then?
bosef said:
Luthor knows the kid's Superman's and could work with Brainiac or some villian to stop him.
I can see that angle being explored.
bosef said:
Or, fitting mythology, the child buckles under Superman's legacy as Superman forfiets his life to save the world from Brainiac, and in the third film, Lois and Richard must protect jason from being discovered in a world ravenous for a Superman. There are many ways they could take this, none of which are unresolvable...
That last idea is so bad they might just use it.
bosef said:
3. Read the above. You tried to use one issue as two. Singer seems to be approaching Lois and Superman's relationship as star-crossed, which I like. They CANNOT be together due to who he is and Lois is now the mother of his child, the caretaker of his entire heritage, something that is in some ways larger than their own love. It's an interesting new take on the mythos in a movie that is lamblasted by many as being "unoriginal..."
Obviously in a movie that is virtually a remake, the single element of originality will stand out.
Personally I don't mind the kid and/or love triangle elements as long as they are not the focus of the movie (which they so clearly were). This type of melodrama is not what makes Superman 'super'.
bosef said:
4. Which will make the rise of Brainiac from the growth of New Krypton and perhaps him taking station at Superman's Fortress of Solitude even the more ominous and awe-inspiring. (see, one sentence to resolve that issue).
There seems to be three seeds planted in Superman Returns.
A) Superman's blood on the piece of kyrptonite (...Bizarro?)
B) New Krypton and the crystals (...Brainiac?)
C) Something follows him back from Krypton (...Eradicator? Doomsday? could be anyone)
bosef said:
5. Which is good...how many evil corporate tycoons have I seen: Kingpin, Norman Osborn, Doctor Doom, Donald Trump...I've had my fill. The World's Greatest Superhero deserves someone more amorphous, more fluid to be his villian. Luthor returning in a different fashion, more bitter than ever, with enough knowledge to literally DESTROY Superman and all those he loves is much more compelling then a penny-pinching Bill Gates with a taste for the sadistic.
The irony here is that Lex is the one villain who actually makes far more sense as a businessman.
He should be manipulating events behind the scenes. Not getting his hands dirty.
Also if Superman Returns follows Superman II, then how the hell was Lex released from prison!? Whether Superman testified or not Lex broke out of prison in Superman 2. Superman brought him back to jail, there was no need to testify against Lex - he must have already been serving a life sentence for trying to nuke america.
bosef said:
See, each one of your issues resolved. Like I said, don't confused what you don't like with that which is unresolvable...
I think there is a marked difference between resolving something and resolving it successfully.