Superman Review: James Gun brought back fun to DC Hero led by David Koreswate
Superman Movie Review: James Gun’s new ‘Superman’ film revived superhero with a ideal mix of humor and heart, focusing on identity and hope. The characteristic of David Korenswate and Rachel Brosnhan, the film is a vibrant, felt tribute to Man of Steel.

In short
- James Gun’s Superman mixes humor, heart and comic book fun
- Clarke Kent of David Konswetw is honest and fresh human
- The film is a heartbreaking, feel-gud tribute for the iconic superhero
Release date: July 11, 2025
Look, Felus! After years of the Budding Caps and Universe Reset, ‘Superman’ finally gets its attraction again. Thanks to the director James Gun’s humor, heart, and a healthy dose of the comic book, which requires a healthy dose of the film, the film land, where it should be brought to one bar – where it is joyous, light -loving and unfiltated love for source materials. Of course, despite this, the film may not even grow up to the high-day spectacle of the previous superhero giants, but it is always worth watching.
This new ‘Superman’ represents David Korenswetws as a steel man, and is correct from Gate-Go, it is clear that he is not here to wear an angst like a secondary. His depiction of Clarke Kent is honest and fresh human (a scene in the film states that it is also loud, just in the case), often brings more chakli than a punch. Rachel Brosnan’s Lois Lane Razor-Sharp and Hot. The pair’s chemistry shares every scene, which they share, bringing back the news room banquet and the old school attraction, which was lost in the Griter reboot for many fear.
The story keeps the identity of Superman and focusing in his place in the rapidly suspicious world. He is not only struggling with gods or pocket universe – he is struggling with perception, and is played by billionaire Tech Mogul Lex Luther, a clever and unnecessary Nicholas Hult. The version of Luther’s Hult is never a caricature, dramatic, dramatic with happiness.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uhuhuhuht6vasmy
However, despite high stakes, do not make any mistake. This James Gun film is not chasing Gravitas. Instead, it completely turns into their comic book effects, offering a colorful world that embraces the silver corners of the DC universe. Supporting characters like Justice ‘Gang’, a scene stealing Crypto the Superdog (or as is terrible says-Flying Dog), and even some wild meta-motions (Hello, Element Man! And Mr. Terfeic!) This ‘Superman’ feels like a vibrant Saturday morning which has been brought in life.
He said, it does not fly. Many times, the screenplay is very far away, sometimes reduces stress. While comic can appreciate the purist camp and color, those seeking high-octane superhero action may find pacing uneven. Action, although blind polish, is lighter on the edge, offers more hearts than high stakes.
What gun nails, however, is tone. He understands that ‘Superman’ is as much about ideals as it is about flight and fist. This is not a film with a grand political agenda, it is a throw for a time when the superhero smiled us, not under moral ambiguity. Political notes are subtle and very time-sensitive, and through emotional means, especially emphasizes hope and kindness, which eventually tick the film.
Blind, the film is a pleasure. Cinematography, color grading, and a vibrant score of John Murphy mixes the apathy of the old school with a modern spectacle. And yes, Crypto is entitled to his own standalone film – his derogatory heroic acts can make him unexpected MVPs.
While the ‘Superman’ style heavyweight cannot be rivals or they are lacking the ‘serious’ story lacking. It is a good-good blockbuster who knows what it really wants to be-a heartbreaking, comic-precious love letter for the first superhero of the world.
Whether you are a long fan or showing the character to your children, ‘Superman’ reminds you of why Cape, and hope it still matters.