Dok
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2020
- Messages
- 135
So the canon version of the first movie is the 188-minute version?
They're all canon, technically. That's just the one with the most information about the events, if that makes sense. Sort of like The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings Extended Editions, which don't overwrite the movies but instead add to them.So the canon version of the first movie is the 188-minute version?
I don't include adaptations.Is the movie special (https://dc.fandom.com/wiki/Superman_III_Movie_Special_Vol_1_1) a canonical adaptation? Also is there any way to explain why Jason does not appear in Superman 3-4? Thanks
Apparently that's set in the comics universe.True, Jason could just be off screen with Lois. Is Superman: Miracle Monday also canonical? Its not an adaptation and could fit sometime after Superman Returns or right after Superman 2
The most problematic is probably the technological evolution of this world. It has 70s technology, 00s technology, then goes to 80s technology. This is quite obvious between Superman Returns and Superman III.Yeah, Lois Lane is barely in Superman III and IV, so Jason's absence is actually the least problematic element of reconciling Returns with the original films.
Ignoring the absurdity of that number (which is way past the known universe)"The president confirmed reports that Superman has indeed embarked on a special peace-seeking mission to a galaxy scientists estimate may be serveral hundred billion light-years away."
Isn't it implied in Supergirl that the surviving kryptonians know Superman? Because in Returns, Superman has no idea there are other kryptonians alive, and he should be aware Supergirl has visited Earth if he caught up on all the news of the previous 5 yeras.Watching Supergirl and reading Superman Returns: Prequel, I suppose that the film could technically still take place between Superman II and Superman Returns.
Quote from Supergirl:
Superman went to search for Krypton survivors in Superman Returns. The comic has him discovering that Krypton has been discovered on the news at the Kent Farm, and he leaves earth soon after a conversation with Martha. I guess this would mean he talked to the president shortly after. This would put Supergirl close to the events of the 2001 flashbacks.
Of course, this is unintentional, but it just doesn't sit right with me that Superman leaves Earth AGAIN.
They would know him regardless. They seem to follow Earth culture from inside "inner space".Isn't it implied in Supergirl that the surviving kryptonians know Superman? Because in Returns, Superman has no idea there are other kryptonians alive, and he should be aware Supergirl has visited Earth if he caught up on all the news of the previous 5 yeras.
Technically speaking, I agree. If they go in that direction for Earth-89, I'll definitely end up treating it like that.Having actually seen Crisis now, it's really a potential fix-all for any continuity issues anywhere: since Crisis did occur and was resolved in multiple potential futures of The Flash, any of the Earths could have been destroyed and remade multiple times with slightly different variations at any given point. Martha's Superman III death, the non-Keaton Earth-89 Batmen, the different cuts of any given DC movie, any of them could be the effects of earlier iterations of Crisis.
Timeline confirmed. Nuclear Man... alive?
I don't entender very much, why Batman's Earth, why do not other Earth, like Earth, i don't know, Earth-78?In my headcanon, all six films (seven if you count the Donner cut) exist in both Earth-89 and 96, but the Earth-89 version has a slightly different timeline that makes Superman I-IV be placed during the 2000s, while Earth-96 has a slightly different timeline for Superman Returns, making it be around the 80s.
So the timeline would be:
Earth 89
2000: Superman: The Movie, Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut
2001: Superman II, Supergirl
2006: Superman Returns
2013: Superman III
2015: Superman IV: The Quest for Peace
2020: Crisis on Infinite Earths
Earth 96
1978: Superman: The Movie, Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut
1979: Superman II, Supergirl
1984: Superman Returns
1980: Superman III
1985: Superman IV: The Quest for Peace
1989: Batman
1992: Batman Returns
1995: Batman Forever
1997: Batman & Robin
Earth-96 has the "true" version of Superman I-IV, where all the tech and dates are exactly what we see in the film, while in Earth-89 the films are happened slightly differently from what we saw on screen, with the tech and dates corresponding to the 2000s.
Earth-89 has the "true" version of Superman Returns, where all the tech and dates are exactly what we see in the film, while in Earth-96 the film happened slightly differently from what we saw on screen, with the tech and dates corresponding to the 80s.