Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Superman don't need no seat belt.
Superman has always been a battle for hope.
I did 'Batman v Superman' for one or two days.
I don't want to see Superman replaced with Superboy.
I feel that Sarkar is a realistic superman in his life.
Anyone can be a Superman, but nobody can be Jackie Chan.
My dad was Superman to me, and in my mind he always will be.
I was thinking, too, of Superman and his fortress of solitude.
You can score against any 'keeper, no goalkeeper is a superman.
People are acting like Keith Thurman has a cape like Superman and can fly.
What's special about Superman is that he will always make the right choice.
My version of Superman is essentially of a guy who has spent his whole life alone.
If I had to choose a superhero to be, I would pick Superman. He's everything that I'm not.
I love what Max Landis is doing with 'Superman: American Alien.' That's a really good book.
I have a beautiful wooden Superman statue with a removable cape - I really love that piece.
I'm not a prophet or a stone aged man, just a mortal with potential of a superman. I'm living on.
Sure, it is true that none of us is Superman. But when we stand together, we can achieve anything.
I think the very simplest way to show Superman's power is to have him punch someone that's powerful.
I thought I was bulletproof or Superman there for a while. I thought I'd never run out of nerve. Never.
A lot of people ask me when I do a stunt, 'Jackie, are you scared?' Of course I'm scared. I'm not Superman.
Linda's in all the songs. 'Sunshine Superman,' 'Hampstead Incident,' 'Young Girl Blues'... Linda's the muse.
Every son's first superhero is his father, and it was the same for me. For me, he was Superman and Batman combined.
I'm a Batman fan from Day 1. My daughter's favorite is Wonder Woman, and my son loves The Flash, Cyborg, and Superman.
I wasn't a Superman guy - I didn't like the invincible superhero who always wins. Who can get behind someone like that?
There was something special and unique about the love triangle that existed between Clark Kent, Superman and Lois Lane.
On the outskirts of the desert in Yemen, there was a cafe with a jukebox that had 'Sunshine Superman' on it. I loved that.
I heard one time that the Superman glyph is the second or third most recognizable symbol on Earth after the Christian cross.
I always loved Batman, the Michael Keaton 'Batman.' I loved those films, and Superman, but I was never a real comic book geek.
I was really disappointed that Warner Bros. didn't think highly enough of my film or my filmmaking to ask me to make the new Superman.
I don't think I ever thought of myself as Superman. But there were people who thought of me that way, and maybe I believed them a little.
The great thing about Batman and Superman, in truth, is that they are literally transcendent. They are better than most of the stories they are in.
Roman Reigns is this larger-than-life Superman character, but the true Joe, Joe Anoa'I, is a very shy, humble guy, and he's super giving and loving.
'Superman' has always been about Lois Lane, Superman and Clark Kent and this love triangle between these three people who really are only two people.
I think of Superman as the ultimate vanilla hero. He's this perfect refugee, this perfect immigrant from another planet who embodies the American dream.
In South Africa, we've been watching these movies all our lives - 'Batman,' 'Superman,' 'Captain America' - and every time the mask comes off it's a white man.
At home, I'm daddy and a husband. There's no Superman's cape. I'm changing diapers, giving my kids baths, and coloring 'Angry Birds' and playing games with them.
You know how the Marvel Comics superheroes formed themselves into the Justice League of America - Batman, Flash and the rest. Why did Superman join? He never needed any help.
The accident was a horrible thing - but that horrible thing made Chris, at the end of his life, Superman. It's a happy irony if there is such a thing. I'm proud to have known him.
I'm not trying to act like I'm Superman or better than anybody else in the game. I'm just telling my story, showing my strengths and weaknesses - as a human, as a person, as a man.
When I was in middle school, some of my so-called friends found a catalogue ad I did for Superman pajamas. They made as many copies as they could and pasted them up all over school.
I have a statue of Superman. It's actually a big one... It's a collectible statue of Superman, which the DC guys very kindly gave to me. So that's a little prized possession of mine.
Superheroes have always been my thing. I've always loved their great allure, whether it's your traditional superhero like Batman or Superman, or even Greek Mythology, heroes like Zeus.
No one wants to see a person on TV who's super-ultra-cool. That's Superman, that's a thing of the past. Heroes are now flawed, and have terrible tempers, you know? They're real people.
What makes Superman a hero is not that he has power, but that he has the wisdom and the maturity to use the power wisely. From an acting point of view, that's how I approached the part.
I think it's one of those funny things - sometimes you're not really friends with somebody until you've gotten into a good fight, and I think that's the situation with Superman and Batman.
I think that Curt Swan, when he did Superman for the longest time, became the definitive Superman artist, and everybody got it. That made him very, very special in the annals of comic books.
It is a part of my personality, but not the full circle. That character that you see is 'The Situation.' It's not Michael Sorrentino. You're seeing 'The Situation,' almost like Clark Kent and Superman.
My character in 'Batman v Superman' isn't supposed to be Japanese, but director Zack Snyder said he'd seen me in 'Wolverine' and had to get me in the film somehow. Hearing that was like music to my ears.
'Superman' was a total accident. The producers of the animated series were having a hard time finding someone to read the character. I was brought in through a connection and, I think, out of desperation.
Did Superman really want to save the world, or did he just feel like he had to? Would he much rather be a farmer? Maybe. Would he much rather be hanging out with his dad and his mom and his dog? Probably.