Superman - Returns
He has been gone for five years. Astronomers called it a “cosmic curiosity”—a sudden, inexplicable disappearance of the Man of Steel. In truth, he journeyed to the silent, frozen ruins of Krypton, a pilgrimage born of loneliness. He found nothing but space dust and the echo of a world that could never be his home.
He falls back to Earth, comatose, his body a map of bruises and fractures. Lois rushes to his bedside in the hospital, Jason quietly by her side. It is the boy who slips past the security, stares at the pale hero, and silently moves a grand piano with one finger—revealing his true parentage. Superman Returns
When the gleaming, S-shielded spacecraft re-enters Earth’s atmosphere, he returns not to a parade, but to a quiet memorial. The world has moved on. Lois Lane, the woman who once made his heart beat faster than a speeding bullet, has a Pulitzer Prize, a fiancé (the nephew of his old foe Perry White), and a young son named Jason. The “greatest threat” the Daily Planet warned of has faded into myth. He has been gone for five years
As Superman reasserts himself—saving a crashing jumbo jet (catching it gently on a baseball field, the crowd stunned into silence) and restoring Metropolis’s faith—he faces his most human struggle. Lois rejects his love, not out of anger, but out of survival. “The world doesn’t need a savior,” she writes, “and neither do I.” Meanwhile, he watches her family from a lonely rooftop, a god peering through a window at a life he can never have. He found nothing but space dust and the