like the energies we now casually wield in our modern world, radio, television, lasers, nuclear power; powers our ancestors never imagined except as stories of myth and legend. There will come a day when, if our
Superman finds himself under the influence of an alien plant, the Black Mercy, which causes the Man of Steel to hallucinate, giving him the illusion of what his heart truly desires most: a normal life on Krypton. His deepest desire is not to be a savior, but to live ...
Instead of reaching for something in his utility belt, Bruce dips into his knowledge of Klurkor–a martial art taught on Krypton.It proves highly effective, even against Supergirl’s incredible abilities. In this case, it doesn’t buy Batman enough time to win the overall battle, but it’s...
Well by man-made kryptonite which substituted tar with an unknown substance of 0.57% after Gus Gorman choose the substance after seeing it as an ingredient on the side of a cigarette package. It’s like the film is saying smoking turned Superman evil (then again, didn’t your last movie ...
be torn apart by war and then destroyed completely. Then again, Krypton itself seems to have had a pretty harsh environment — its natives only gain actual superpowers once they leave, and there's kryptonite all over the place threatening to weaken and even kill anyone who stumbles across it...
Zod was correct to stand up to the authoritarian dystopia that was Krypton, and on Earth, he is the libertarian hero we need. I for one welcome our new Kryptonian overlords (#ZodWasRight). It is also worth noting that in the TV cut ofSuperman II, during the invasion of The White ...