Christopher Reeve Documentary ‘Super/Man’ Sells to Warner Bros. Discovery for Roughly $15 Million After Sundance Premiere
UPDATED: “Super/Man,” a documentary about the life of Christopher Reeve, has finalized a deal to sell to Warner Bros. Discovery following its buzzy Sundance Film Festival premiere. It’s an interesting home for the documentary, because Reeve experienced his greatest commercial success playing the Man of Steel in the first four Superman movies, which Warner Bros. produced. James Gunn, the co-head of Warner-owned DC Studios, is currently reviving the character in the upcoming “Superman: Legacy,” which he wrote and will direct.
WBD’s DC Studios. Warner Bros. Motion Pictures, HBO, CNN Films and Max will collaborate on the film’s global release across theatrical and home viewing release windows.
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“Everyone at Warner Bros. Discovery is incredibly proud to come together as one company to partner with Christopher Reeve’s family and the filmmakers behind ‘Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story’ and bring his personal journey to audiences the world over. WBD’s DC Studios, Warner Bros. Motion Pictures, HBO, CNN Films and Max are grateful for the opportunity to honor one of our company’s most cherished creative partners and to celebrate Christopher’s rich life and career,” said WBD in a statement.
Heading into the festival, “Super/Man” was expected to be one of the biggest sales of the event’s 40th edition. Before the movie was screened in Park City for audiences and buyers, several studios and streamers were already planning to bid aggressively to land rights. The pact is for global rights and is in the $14 million to $15 million range.
Tom Quinn’s specialty studio Neon was another enthusiastic bidder, while Netflix also looked at the film, according to two individuals with knowledge of the sale. Cinetic is handling the sale of the film.
Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui directed “Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story,” which documents Reeve’s rise to superstardom as Superman, as well as his fight to find a cure for spinal cord injuries after he became a quadriplegic following a horse riding accident. The actor’s family participated in the making of the doc, which also uses personal archive material to tell the tragic and inspirational story.
Reeve’s children admitted the tragedy that plagued their father — he used a wheelchair and ventilator for the rest of his life — made him a better man.
“I think he was very conscious of that irony and the legacy of ‘Superman’ when people viewed his story and thought about him after the accident,” his daughter, Alexandra, told Variety prior to the film’s premiere. “He talked about redefining what it is to be a hero… it’s an everyday person who survives despite overwhelming obstacles.”
Bonhote and Ettedgui, who collaborated on the 2018 doc “McQueen,” expressed the desire to make a film about the challenges that face people — those from all walks of life — with disabilities.
“Christopher said the one minority anyone can become part of in an instant is disability,” Bonhote said. “We’re not trying to re-write Superman, but telling a story on how to approach an issue that society has turned its back on.”
“Super/Man” was backed by Words + Pictures (a North Road company), Passion Pictures and Misfits Entertainment, a Mediawan company. Deadline first reported that Warner Bros. Discovery was in final negotiations.
The film’s producers include Bonhote, Robert Ford, and Lizzie Gillett, with Daniel Kilroy, Libby Geist, Kristen Lappas, Marie Margolius, Mark Meatto, David Moulton, Andee Ryder and Connor Schell executive producing. Cinetic Media represented the project’s sale.
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