“Look, up in the sky! It’s another comic book show.”
That was the first line of the Hollywood Reporter’s article covering the news that the SyFy Network is currently in talks with Man of Steel screenwriter and Constantine co-creator David S. Goyer on a Superman origin series set on Krypton and focusing on Superman’s grandpa. It’s hard not to be snarky about these kinds of things anymore. There are just so many freakin’ comic book shows either currently on the air, set to premiere sometime relatively soon, or thought to be in development with good chances of making it to air. However, not all comic book shows are built the same. The Walking Dead is clearly very different than Arrow which is itself also very different than Agents of SHIELD which is itself a totally different beast than Gotham, and so on and so on. So, the potential emergence of yet another comic book show is not necessarily cause for immediate disdain. However, the idea of doing an origin series about the planet Krypton? The AV Club put it best in their headline: “Syfy’s Krypton will finally reveal what happened to Superman’s home planet.”
Exactly. Why the heck do an origin series about a planet and people whose fate is already pre-determined? The answer is mostly because a lot of people really, really loved watching Russell Crowe ride on the back of a freakin’ glorified dragon as Superman’s dad Jor-El in the extra long prologue on Krypton at the beginning of Man of Steel. As a result, while promoting Man of Steel Crowe was frequently asked if he’d be interested to maybe come back for a prequel focusing on Jor-El and Krypton, and he always came off as being especially enthusiastic about the idea, instructing fans on Twitter to contact Warner Bros. to let them know how much they wanted to see a Jor-El prequel. As recently as last November, Zack Snyder was quoted as saying that Crowe was ready to a prequel right away.
Maybe he’ll still get his wish someday because this potential TV show doesn’t take that idea off the table; it just rolls it back even further to focus on Jor-El’s own father, a character whose comic book history is apparently exclusive to a very brief run in the 1980s, created at the time by John Byrne and Mike Mignola. They named him Seyg-El, an homage to Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel, but since none of it is considered canon anymore SyFy is free to do whatever the heck it wants with the character. I imagine Krypton will probably give him a new name, with Deadline stating the series will focus on Superman’s grandfather as he “brings hope and equality” to his planet. In addition to Goyer, Once Upon a Time’s Ian Goldberg is attached as co-creator.
In a post-Guardians of the Galaxy world, it’s perhaps easier to understand why so many people were enamored with this part of Man of Steel: It was something new. It wasn’t the same old version of the origin we’d seen, and it had outerspace, sci-fi craziness up the whazoo in a market which is short on that kind of thing. It’s an undeniably crucial sequence to the film, plot-wise, with important characters and concepts introduced. Plus, later in the film Kal-El is forced to choose between his adopted brethren (humans) or those of his race by birth (Kryptonians), and it helps at that point to have seen a little bit of Krypton. Emphasis on the little bit, though, as for me this sequence seriously overstays it welcome.
So, obviously, I am not particularly crazy about the idea for an entire TV show about Krypton. However, this is what you end up doing when you are trying to exploit every possible angle on a well-known property. You know how the longer the slasher film franchises (Friday the 13th, Halloween, Nightmare on Elm Street) of the 1980s went on the more likely it became that eventually they’d have to do one movie which tried to explain why the killer get coming back, Jason Voorhees’ power deriving from his demon heart, Michael Myers driven by a druid clan, etc.?
It could be a while before we find out anything else about Krypton, though. We first heard about the Teen Titans TV show set up at TNT last September, and there had been no news since then until yesterday when DC’s Geoff Johns revealed they will shoot a pilot sometime next year. The majority of shows which go into development never even make it to the pilot stage, and an even luckier few make it on the air. So, as usual with these kinds of stories everything I just said about Krypton may have been all for naught as this may never leave the planning stages. I wouldn’t be crushed if it never does.
What about you? Am I wrong, so wrong about all of this? Was the Krypton prologue the highlight of Man of Steel for you? Or do not care about any of this, and simply wish David S. Goyer would focus a little harder right now on trying to save Constantine? Let me know in the comments.
Source: AVClub