Brian Earl Spilner said:
Title is what's on the cover, and the poster, and the official WB site, and as it's titled for streaming on Prime. Nobody's checking the credits at the bottom of the poster, or the reverse of the DVD. You are wrong, and that's ok.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
No, I'm citing the same source that they cited, the official WB site. Showing: legal title, Superman: The Movie.
Which seems to be in opposition of your "indisputable fact".
POTDThe Porkchop Express said:
Spilner is requesting you refer to these things as Superman: The Suit and Superman: The S in all posts going forward, please.
These indisputable facts go against my argument, so I will choose to ignore them and instead reference a fan wiki.TCTTS said:Brian Earl Spilner said:
No, I'm citing the same source that they cited, the official WB site. Showing: legal title, Superman: The Movie.
Which seems to be in opposition of your "indisputable fact".
A site called Fandom saying it's the "legal title" doesn't make it so. That's just what some random Fandom editor typed.
Government-wise, there is no more official registry than the National Film Registry, which maintains/updates a list of movies deemed "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant," ones that are earmarked for preservation by the Library of Congress. And this registry, which is literally part of the national library of the United States, one that works in tandem with the studios, has the movie listed is as…
Same goes for Wikipedia, which literally refers to "The Movie" moniker as "marketed as"…
Never mind, once more, that all OFFICIAL CREDITS (which are bound by contracts) on the "Superman" posters, DVDs, Blu-Rays, and UHDs have it listed as "Superman" sans "The Movie."
Again, when the movie is presented for rent/purchase online, via Apple, Amazon, Google, the official Warner Bros website, etc, yes, it's given the added "The Movie" moniker, so as to distinguish it from the many other Superman titles. But that's a MARKETING strategy.
Wheres, LEGALLY, in terms of credits, contracts, and the United States government, the title - OFFICIALLY - is simply "Superman."
Wendell Pierce, perhaps best known for his work on #Suits and #TheWire, has been cast as the iconic editor-in-chief of the Daily Planet in James Gunn’s #Superman: https://t.co/i2rxChfejQ pic.twitter.com/YZNhqCkb2C
— The Hollywood Reporter (@THR) March 1, 2024
James Gunn destroys an AI image of David Corenswet as Superman that was circulating yesterday pic.twitter.com/LBEd47Bkk6
— ScreenTime (@screentime) March 1, 2024
Another Doug said:StinkyPinky said:Brian Earl Spilner said:
It is Superman: The Movie.
This. It very much was known and talked about as "Superman the Movie".
Gen Xer here, we did not say "the movie" when talking about it.
StinkyPinky said:Another Doug said:StinkyPinky said:Brian Earl Spilner said:
It is Superman: The Movie.
This. It very much was known and talked about as "Superman the Movie".
Gen Xer here, we did not say "the movie" when talking about it.
Haha, I pause to reply because haven't returned to this thread in a bit and true to this forum this has spiraled out of control quibbling over irrelevant semantics. But it does make for good entertainment.
Not even going near what is 'legal' as far as titles. Not sure what the relevance there is, don't care. Also a GenX'er here (I973) and the movie was heavily marketed as SuperMan The Movie. Not saying that is what is the official title, who cares, just that was heavily referenced in publications. No, we didn't go around referencing it necessarily as "Super Man The Movie", like we didn't sat "Hey we're going to go watch Star Wars The Last Hope". At the end of the again pretty semantical. But that's entertainment…..
TCTTS said:StinkyPinky said:Another Doug said:StinkyPinky said:Brian Earl Spilner said:
It is Superman: The Movie.
This. It very much was known and talked about as "Superman the Movie".
Gen Xer here, we did not say "the movie" when talking about it.
Haha, I pause to reply because haven't returned to this thread in a bit and true to this forum this has spiraled out of control quibbling over irrelevant semantics. But it does make for good entertainment.
Not even going near what is 'legal' as far as titles. Not sure what the relevance there is, don't care. Also a GenX'er here (I973) and the movie was heavily marketed as SuperMan The Movie. Not saying that is what is the official title, who cares, just that was heavily referenced in publications. No, we didn't go around referencing it necessarily as "Super Man The Movie", like we didn't sat "Hey we're going to go watch Star Wars The Last Hope". At the end of the again pretty semantical. But that's entertainment…..
It's Superman.
MooreTrucker said:
STOP IT!!!
New ‘SUPERMAN’ art by @felipe_illaart pic.twitter.com/7kqFE2wjZs
— DCU Updates (@DCU_Updates) March 2, 2024
I always love when actors say they've read the source material, in this case the comics, because genuine character moments can be derived from that. The fact that Nicholas Hoult is reading All-Star Superman means a lot, and I cannot wait for his portrayal as Lex Luthor. https://t.co/HPqpyg30Ot
— Dan Marcus (@Danimalish) March 5, 2024
NICHOLAS HOULT talking about ‘SUPERMAN’ on the Inside Of You podcast 🧵
— DCU Updates (@DCU_Updates) March 5, 2024
“The first ever Lex Luthor I saw was you” pic.twitter.com/g9OE6mN5Bc