Actor Christopher Reeve rises to stardom when he lands the role of Superman in the 1970s. When a horse-riding accident leaves him paralyzed in 1995, Reeve spends the rest of his life searching for a cure for spinal cord injuries. Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story (2024)
Super/Man: The
Christopher Reeve Story is a 2024 documentary film about the life of American actor
Christopher Reeve after a horse riding accident left him paralyzed, and his subsequent work as an activist for disability rights. The documentary was directed by Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui, who co-wrote the script with Otto Burnham; its title is a reference to
Reeve's role as Superman in the 1978–1987 Superman films.
Reeve's children Alexandra
Reeve Givens, Matthew
Reeve, and Will
Reeve are featured in the film.
A British-American venture, the film is a co-production by Words + Pictures, Passion Pictures, and Misfits Entertainment in association with Jenco Films, and was acquired for distribution by Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Studios, HBO Documentary Films, CNN Films, and the streaming service Max. Super/Man: The
Christopher Reeve Story premiered on January 19, 2024, at the Sundance Film Festival, and received a limited theatrical release in collaboration with Fathom Events in the United States on September 21 and 25, 2024. The film was wide released in North America on October 11.
Summary
Super/Man: The
Christopher Reeve Story is presented in a non-linear fashion, alternating between before and after
Reeve's horse-riding accident.
Reeve has a difficult childhood, with his parents divorcing at a young age and his family tree being complicated due to his parents' several remarriages, and he has a particularly strained relationship with his poet father Franklin.
Reeve is studying at Julliard and becomes close friends with his classmate Robin Williams.
Superman begins casting for its titular hero, and despite offers from several celebrities interested in the film, director Richard Donner wants an unknown actor to play him.
Reeve auditions and wins the role despite disapproval from his father and peers. During filming, he meets British modeling agent Gae Exton, with whom he begins a whirlwind romance. Superman is released in 1978 and is a massive success, with
Reeve unanimously praised, solidifying him into a movie star. The success continues with Superman II (1980).
However, the recognition that
Reeve receives for playing Superman hinders his career outside the franchise. He deliberately chooses against-type roles, but the audiences have a hard time accepting him as anything other than Superman.
Reeve lives in London with Exton, who gives birth to his children Matthew and Alexandra. He is unsatisfied with his career, only agreeing to star in Superman III (1983) and Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987) out of obligation, and struggles with the "hero" label imposed on him. Matthew admits that his father was frequently absent and wouldn't commit due to his upbringing.
Reeve separates from Exton in 1987; the children live with their mother during the school year and spend the holidays with their father.
Five months after his breakup with Exton,
Reeve meets singer and actress Dana Morosini. The two begin dating and eventually
Reeve overcomes his hesitance about marriages and decides to propose to Dana.
Reeve and Dana marry in April 1992 and their son Will is born in June that same year. Dana is a caring mother figure to both Matthew and Alexandra during their visits. On May 27, 1995,
Reeve falls from his horse, suffering a spinal cord injury which paralyzes him from the neck down. He muses that he has ruined his family's life, but Dana reassures him, "You're still you, and I love you." He receives support from friends and family, especially Williams, who helps him laugh for the first time since the accident.
Reeve stays at the Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation where he befriends other disabled people. He eventually moves back to his family home, where he is cared for around-the-clock by Dana and a team of nurses. With the help of a large van purchased by Williams and his then-wife Marsha,
Reeve travels to Los Angeles and makes an appearance at the 68th Academy Awards, where he receives a standing ovation.
Having been an activist for social causes for most of his life,
Reeve begins using his platform to advocate for the disabled people and the spinal cord injury research, speaking in several major events such as the Democratic National Convention. He starts the
Christopher Reeve Foundation that would open centers, lobby for several bills, and advocate for stem cell research.
Reeve regains the ability to make small bodily movements, but he can't wean off the ventilator completely. The Williamses hold annual family parties at
Reeve's house on the anniversary of his accident to celebrate life.
Reeve makes his directorial debut with In the Gloaming (1997), and also directs The Brooke Ellison
Story (2004) about fellow quadriplegic Brooke Ellison.
Reeve and his family reflect on how close and fulfilling their relationship has become after his accident. On October 9, 2004, mere hours after a hockey game of Will's,
Reeve falls into a coma and is hospitalized, ultimately dying at the age of 52. Alexandra and WIll tearfully recount witnessing their father's death, while Matthew is in a taxi on the way to the hospital when he hears of his father's passing.
Reeve is mourned around the world by fans and those he had helped through his activism. Dana succeeds her late husband as chairman of the foundation, and continues pursuing her passions in singing, but is later diagnosed with lung cancer. Dana dies on March 6, 2006, at the age of 44, leaving Will an orphan at 13 years old.
Matthew, Alexandra, and Will join the foundation shortly afterward as board members, intending to carry on
Reeve and Dana's legacy. The foundation is renamed the
Christopher and Dana
Reeve Foundation, and several modern-day breakthroughs, and milestones involving paralysis research are attributed to
Reeve and Dana's activism. The film closes with
Reeve saying that "A hero is an ordinary individual who finds the strength to persevere and endure in spite of overwhelming obstacles."
Cast
In addition to featuring footage of
Christopher Reeve and Dana
Reeve, the film also features
Reeve's children Alexandra
Reeve Givens, Matthew
Reeve, and Will
Reeve. Other interviewees included
Reeve's brother Kevin Johnson,
Reeve's former partner and Matthew and Alexandra's mother Gae Exton, actors Jeff Daniels, Susan Sarandon, Glenn Close, and Whoopi Goldberg, politician John Kerry, activist Brooke Ellison, Superman producer Pierre Spengler, former
Christopher and Dana
Reeve Foundation Senior Vice President of Government Relations Michael Manganiello, Kessler Institute chief medical officer Dr. Steven Kirshblum, and
Reeve's assistant Laurie Hawkins. Archive interview footage of Superman director Richard Donner and
Reeve's close friend and comedian Robin Williams are included.
Release
Super/Man: The
Christopher Reeve Story had its world premiere at the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center in Salt Lake City, Utah for the Sundance Film Festival on January 19, 2024, followed by a post-screening Q&A session with the film's directors, Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui, and with
Reeve's children. The following month, DC Comics owner Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) acquired the worldwide theatrical and home media release rights to the documentary for $15 million, and worked with DC Studios co-CEOs James Gunn and Peter Safran and its corporate siblings Warner Bros. Pictures, HBO Documentary Films, CNN Films, and the streaming service Max to do so. The sale was represented by film financing company Cinetic Media.
At the April 2024 CinemaCon, Safran announced that the documentary would be theatrically released in September 2024, under the Warner Bros. Pictures, DC Studios, HBO, and CNN labels. The following month, it was announced that the documentary would have a limited theatrical release on September 21 and 25, 2024, in collaboration with Fathom Events, although, there was a potential for a wide release. September 25, 2024, the day the film received a second theatrical release, was chosen as the date for an encore presentation because it would have been
Reeve's 72nd birthday. The film received a wide release in North America on October 11, 2024, followed by international releases in late 2024, including in the United Kingdom on November 1.
Reception
= Critical response
=
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 98% of 64 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.5/10. The website's consensus reads: "An affectionate retrospective on
Christopher Reeve's bravery and heroism in his own personal life, Super/Man takes to the skies in inspirational uplift." On Metacritic, the film holds a weighted average score of 77 out of 100 from 17 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film a rare average grade of "A+" on an A+ to F scale.
Screen Daily film critic Amber Wilkinson wrote, "The life and work of Superman star
Christopher Reeve is framed and largely recounted by his family and friends in Ian Bonhote and Peter Ettedgui's increasingly moving documentary." Monica Castillo of RogerEbert.com described it as "Easily my big festival cry, something that moves you so deeply that the combination of sleep deprivation, altitude, and the movie's subject makes it almost impossible not to get emotional."
= Accolades
=
Notes
References
External links
Official website at WarnerBros.com
Super/Man: The
Christopher Reeve Story at DC.com
Super/Man: The
Christopher Reeve Story at the
Christopher & Dana
Reeve Foundation website
Super/Man: The
Christopher Reeve Story at Fathom Events
Super/Man: The
Christopher Reeve Story at IMDb
Super/Man: The
Christopher Reeve Story at AllMovie