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poster of Superman III
Rating: 5.5/10 by 1675 users

Superman III (1983)

Aiming to defeat the Man of Steel, wealthy executive Ross Webster hires bumbling but brilliant Gus Gorman to develop synthetic kryptonite, which yields some unexpected psychological effects in the third installment of the 1980s Superman franchise. Between rekindling romance with his high school sweetheart and saving himself, Superman must contend with a powerful supercomputer.

Directing:
  • Richard Lester
Writing:
  • Leslie Newman
  • David Newman
  • Jerry Siegel
  • Joe Shuster
Stars:
Release Date: Fri, Jun 17, 1983

Rating: 5.5/10 by 1675 users

Alternative Title:
Superman 3 - US
Superman 3 - DE
Superman Classic III - US
Superman 3 - Superman vs Superman - AU
スーパーマンIII/電子の要塞 - JP
Superman 3 - FR
Superman 3 - BR
슈퍼맨 III - KR
超人三 - CN
Super-Homem III - PT
Superman III - ES
Super-Homem 3 - BR

Country:
Netherlands
United Kingdom
United States of America
Language:
Español
English
Italiano
Runtime: 02 hour 05 minutes
Budget: $39,000,000
Revenue: $80,200,000

Plot Keyword: saving the world, superhero, super computer, identity crisis, loss of powers, based on comic, sequel, hacking, super power, bowling alley, superhuman strength
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Christopher Reeve
Clark Kent / Superman
Richard Pryor
August 'Gus' Gorman
Jackie Cooper
Perry White
Marc McClure
Jimmy Olsen
Robert Vaughn
Ross Webster
Nancy Roberts
Unemployment Clerk
Henry Woolf
Penguin Man
Peter Wear
Bank Robber
Bob Todd
Dignified Gent
Terry Camilleri
Delivery Man
Stefan Kalipha
Data School Instructor
Helen Horton
Miss Henderson
Shane Rimmer
State Policeman
Al Matthews
Fire Chief
Barry Dennen
Dr. McClean
Enid Saunders
Minnie Bannister
R.J. Bell
Mr. Stokis
Peter Whitman
Man At Cash Point
Pat Starr
White-Coated Scientist
John Bluthal
Pisa Vendor
George Chisholm
Street Sweeper
David Fielder
Olympic Runner
Robert Beatty
Tanker Captain
Larry Lamb
2nd Miner
Geoffrey Steele
Man in Elevator
Jill Goldston
Woman in Crowd (uncredited)
Barrie Holland
Man at Bowling Alley (uncredited)

Charles Dance

**Great sequel!** A funny, exciting Superman movie that includes the greatest scene in the franchise - the junkyard fight between Evil Supes and his nerdy counterpart, Clark Kent. Richard Pryor is hilarious as the hapless Gus Gorman - the computer programming genius with a heart. Robert Vaughn makes for a great villain and the special effects are top notch. So much more entertaining than the tedious bile that would come in later years - Superman Returns and the Henry Cavill rubbish. I remember sitting in the packed theater in 1983 and the whole audience thoroughly enjoying this - laughing and cheering in all the right places. And for those who claim the film is too silly - do they not remember Ned Beatty as the cretin Otis in Superman and Superman II - surely the stupidest character to grace the series. - Charles Dance

John Chard

Never underestimate the power of computers. After being caught for a money making computer scam, Gus Gorman (Richard Pryor - wonderful) is recruited by unscrupulous multimillionaire Ross Webster (Robert Vaughn). With Gorman's computer expertise, Webster plans to take complete economic control. But first there is the considerable issue of eradicating Superman first... Richard Lester, as everyone now knows, inherited Superman 2 from the jettisoned Richard Donner. Here we have a complete Richard Lester Superman film, and from the extended slapstick opening we are aware that this is far lighter in tone than the previous two films. Lester's credits are steeped in comedy traditions, so it's no real surprise that Superman 3 is more airy comic book than troubled caped crusader. This is something that many franchise fans are completely unforgiving about. Which is a shame, because viewed as a comic book bit of nonsense it's a rather enjoyable film, certainly it's the one with the most fun approach. The action is very well put together, with a franchise highlight as Clark Kent (Christopher Reeve) gets to fight a clearly off kilter Superman (erm, Reeve again), and the comedy, if accepted on its own terms, is very rewarding. Annette O'Toole (adorable) takes the lead love interest role for this one, with Margo Kidder only along for cameo duties. Pamela Stephenson is on hand for some sex bomb side-kick to Vaughn work, and Annie Ross gest the bitch sibling role and gets her teeth and "wires" into it. All told, it's not a ground shaking superhero film, but it does work as entertainment if one can cast off the mythology of Superman and his fantastical complexities. To do so is not a crime against ones superhero beliefs, it's just an acceptance that this is a different approach, and that Superman 3's only real crime is not being as good as the two film's that preceded it. Hey, just think, "Quest For Peace" was around the corner... 6/10

Wuchak

_**More than it first appears**_ "Superman III" (1983) gets a lot of flack because of the inclusion of slapstick, a parody tone and Richard Pryor, but it is entertaining once you get used to the tone and the presence of Pryor. Christopher Reeve as Superman is good, of course, but you also have Robert Vaughn as the Luthor-like villain and Pamela Stephenson as his attractive female assistant a la Miss Teschmacher. The cast really excels with the inclusion of the beautiful Annette O'Toole as Lana Lang, a sort of replacement for Lois Lane, who barely appears. Annette is a pleasure to behold throughout. Once you get used to the too-goofy approach the film really takes off in the second half with Superman fighting his dark side, an obvious type of the inner conflict of flesh & spirit within us all. Even more, there's the satisfying redemption of a certain character that illustrates how a person can make a huge mistake and still be applicable for redemption, as long as he or she is willing. The film just leaves you with a good feeling. BOTTOM LINE: It's not great like the first two, but "Superman III" delivers if you overlook all the bashing and give it a chance. Richard Pryor is goofy, but likable while Annette O'Toole shines. Most of all, the movie is deeper than what meets the eye and effectively conveys powerful truths about the human condition and potential. The film runs 2 hours, 4 minutes. GRADE: B-/B


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