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It was 143 minutes long and was made on a budget of $55 million (equivalent to $257,000,000 in 2023). It is the most successful Superman feature film to date in terms of box office revenue adjusted for inflation. [116] The soundtrack was composed by John Williams and was nominated for an Academy Award.
{{Birth date and age}} – used on most biographical entries {{Birth date and age2}} – calculates age at a specified date {{Birth based on age as of date}} – used when a reference mentions the age of a person as of the date of the reference's publication {{Birth year and age}} {} {{Death date and age}} {{Death year and age}}
This template calculates the birth year and current age based on the age as of several dates. Template parameters [Edit template data] This template prefers inline formatting of parameters. Parameter Description Type Status Age 1 Age of subject at date of reference's publication. Example 55 Number required Year 2 Year of publication of reference. Example 1950 Number required Month 3 Month of ...
In March 1938, they sold all rights to Superman to the comic-book publisher Detective Comics, Inc., another forerunner of DC, for $130 ($2,814 when adjusted for inflation). [12] Siegel and Shuster later regretted their decision to sell Superman after he became an astonishing success. DC Comics now owned the character and reaped the royalties.
The claim was backed in 2009 by comics historian Craig Yoe. This was based on character similarities, and comparison of the artistic style between the illustrations and those of the cast of the Superman comics. [35] [36] [37] Shuster in a DC Comics press photo, 1975
The Adventures of Superman #586 Sentry: 2000 Marvel Paul Jenkins, Jae Lee, Rick Veitch: The Sentry #1 Typeface: 2000 Marvel Paul Jenkins, Mark Buckingham: Peter Parker: Spider-Man v2 #23 Acrata (Andrea Rojas) 2000 (August) DC Oscar Pinto, Giovanni Barberi, F.G. Haghenbeck Superman Annual (vol.2) #12 Speedy (Mia Dearden) 2001 (May) DC Kevin ...
The abbreviated origin of Superman as featured in All-Star Superman #1 (January 2006) by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely.. The origin of Superman and his superhuman powers have been a central narrative for Superman since his inception, with the story of the destruction of his home planet of Krypton, his arrival on Earth and emergence as a superhero evolving from Jerry Siegel's original story ...
A 1942 Superman novel, The Adventures of Superman by George Lowther, [5] gave the names "Eben and Sarah Kent"; Eben and Martha Kent were used in the 1948 Superman film serial; while Eben and Sarah Kent were used in the 1952 première of Adventures of Superman television series, but the first extensive retelling of Superman's origin in Superman ...