The
character of Superman has a long time association with the late
Christopher Reeve who did an excellent and convincing job as
both Clark Kent and the nearly invincible Man of Steel.
The filmmakers knew that the person selected had to be convincing
as a trinity of people and personalities:
1) Kal-El
2) Clark Kent
3) Superman
The person would have to fit the mental view that people have
formed as to what Superman looks like and would have to be someone
relatively unknown. The challenges would be much that Richard
Donner faced when he selected Christopher Reeve to be the original
super hero.
Donner says that the person selected has “got to bring
to life the son of Jor-El. He’s got to bring reality and
purity to this character. He’s got to then evolve into
a super hero. If in any way he is tainted with past references,
it would be a major mistake. I think Bryan (Bryan Singer, director
of Superman Returns) faced the same conundrum. The moment you
associate the actor with another role, you lose the character.
To make a man fly and believe it, it had to be an unknown then,
and I think today it’s even more true.”
More true indeed. Director Bryan Singer and his casting team
spent months searching for the perfect person to revive the
role made famous by Reeve. They found an audition tape, for
an earlier planned Superman project, of 26-year old Brandon
Routh, an actor who had grown up in the mid-west and pretended
to be Superman as a child, flying around in his pajamas.
“Just talking to him I got a sense of his mid-western
upbringing and all the classic ideals that come from that sort
of childhood, which are the same kinds of ideals that Superman
embodies,” says Singer. “Then, of course, there
is his physical presence. He looks like he walked off a page
in the comic book. Pretty much at that point, he became my first
and only choice because I felt confident he could handle all
three roles – Kal-El, Clark Kent, and Superman.”
And so the part was cast and Routh’s childhood fantasy
became a reality as he donned the clothes of Clark Kent for
the first day of shooting. The reality set in.
“My first shot was walking across the farm yard and I
felt it then too. It’s such an all-encompassing experience,
playing this character. It’s a big responsibility to be
true to Bryan’s vision, and to embody someone that so
many people around the world have seen in their minds.”
And it helps when you’re a little like Clark Kent too.
Routh is 6’3” and was raised in Iowa. He’s
always been a bit shy and screenwriter Michael Dougherty found
the resemblance to Clark Kent to be refreshing.
“Clark comes naturally to him because he is Clark,”
says Dougherty. “He’s this guy from Iowa who is
6’3 and good looking, but shy and kind of awkward at times.”
Routh was able to tune out those Clark Kent tendencies, however,
and stand tall as one of Earth’s most beloved super heroes.
He was no longer in his pajama’s pretending. Now it was
real and the city of Metropolis welcomed him with open arms.