Superman, James Gunn
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"Yes, it’s about politics," he said. "But on another level, it’s about morality. Do you never kill no matter what — which is what Superman believes — or do you have some balance, as Lois believes? It’s really about their relationship and how ...
"Superman" filmmaker James Gunn says his movie is political since it's about the "lost" US value of basic human kindness. That is our country, "director James Gunn said at a press event following the release of the film's first trailer.
The Man of Steel became a political lightning rod this summer with the release of the new movie, but world's most wholesome hero has actually been under attack since 1954, when Dr. Fredric Wertham published the anti-comics treatise 'Seduction of the Innocent.
Superman has had a connection to immigrants from the beginning. The superhero’s creators, Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, were both the children of Jewish immigrants to the United States, from Lithuania and Ukraine, respectively, according to an article published by the Library of Congress.
In a time of misinformation, manufactured outrage, and political gridlock, one of the most honest voices in the room comes from a guy wearing a cape.
Director James Gunn is revealing the political themes of his new "Superman" movie and oh boy... Many are turned off by it.
First introduced in 1938 by writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster in Cleveland, Ohio, Superman remains one of the most enduring figures in popular culture. According to the comic book lore, he is the sole survivor of the planet Krypton, sent to Earth by his parents after their home faced annihilation.
Gunn’s Superman blends hope, politics, and moral conflict in a fresh, family-friendly reboot. Pop Culture & Art July 07, 2025. facebook twitter whatsup linkded email-James Gunn Twitter/DC
To be certain, there are political themes in “Superman.” The main villain is a raging, self-centered billionaire who uses media, social and traditional, to spread lies and hatred. The secondary villain is a doddering, power-hungry elderly man with an unruly mop of hair and a flock of advisors who constantly shower him with unearned praise.
When the video of his birth parents makes him wonder whether his destiny is evil, it takes only a trip to his adoptive parents, Martha (Neva Howell) and John (Pruitt Taylor Vince), in Kansas, to set his mind at ease with a moral lesson of trivializing simplicity.