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Nicolas Cage’s Superman Cameo in ‘The Flash,’ Explained

Barry Allen’s multiverse travels creates the opportunity for a cameo that closes a 25-year-old Hollywood loop.

Ezra Miller and Sasha Calle appear as The Flash and Supergirl in The Flash but there's another Super cameo towards the...

Ezra Miller and Sasha Calle appear as The Flash and Supergirl in The Flash, but there’s another Super cameo towards the end that closes the loop on an old bit of Hollywood lore.Courtesy of Warner Bros via Everett Collection

Major spoilers for The Flash below.

For a movie about DC’s multiverse, The Flash is pretty conservative in the number of different versions of the signature characters that it trots out—up until the climax, when Barry Allen (Ezra Miller) and his alternate reality counterpart open up a window into the other dimensions and usher in a cavalcade of cameos from DC’s past. Some make sense, but one appearance may leave the average viewer confounded: a de-aged Nicolas Cage as Superman.

This is actually bound to go over in a big way with comic book fanboys and Hollywood historians. Translating Superman to the big screen is a tricky proposition—there have already been three different attempts in the past 20-odd years, with Superman Returns, Man of Steel, and the forthcoming Superman: Legacy. The failed Superman projects are numerous and notable, with prolific auteurs like JJ Abrams even failing to launch their own attempts. None of those projects, however, are as infamous as Superman Lives.

In the wake of Christopher Reeve’s Superman IV: The Quest for Peace bombing in 1987, Warner Bros. wanted to reimagine the Man of Steel for a new era. After letting the character sit dormant for a few years, WB turned to Kevin Smith, hot off Clerks, in 1996 to draft a script. The story goes that WB producer Jon Peters provided Smith with some guardrails for the project: The alien AI supervillain Brainiac would be the villain, Superman would lose his powers for most of the film, and Superman would fight a massive robotic spider in the film’s third act. Smith’s treatment included Superman gaining a robotic suit to protect him from fighting Brainiac, and his preferred casting featured major names like Ben Affleck for Superman, Jack Nicholson for Lex Luthor, Jason Lee as Brainiac, and Jason Mewes as Jimmy Olsen.

WB eventually landed two big names for the project: Nic Cage would play Superman—who, despite being near the peak of his stardom at the time (this was right around his Con Air and Face/Off period), was hardly the average person’s first choice when imagining Clark Kent’s traditional, chiseled-jaw look. And Cage handpicked Tim Burton to direct after he wasn’t happy with the studio’s first choice, Renny Harlin. With Burton re-defining the superhero movie genre with Batman and Batman: Returns, it seemed like a slam dunk. Furthermore, Burton would reunite with Cristopher Walken, who was in talks to play Brainiac. Chris Rock (!) would play Jimmy Olsen. To top it all off, Sandra Bullock, Courteney Cox, and Julianne Moore were shortlisted for Lois Lane.

Superman Lives entered pre-production in the summer of 1997, with Cage going so far as to do a costume test for the armored suit. Burton brought Wesley Strick to rewrite Smith’s script, but the new draft was too expensive, so Dan Gilroy stepped in to work on another draft. (Gilroy later stated in 2014 that Lives would have focused on a Superman having a bit of a midlife crisis, unsure of his place on Earth and how he fits in as an outsider, which would work well with Burton’s oeuvre.)

However, after a string of misfires from WB, Lives ended up getting its production shut down over budget concerns, despite the project being weeks away from starting. Lives stuck around into 2000 when Peters continued to shop the film to directors like Michael Bay and Martin Campbell and actors like Will Smith after Cage eventually dropped out of the role. (Peters later got his giant steampunk spider in the third-act setpiece for a little movie called Wild Wild West.)

Cage’s love for the Man of Steel is notable; he named his son Kal-El, after Supes’ Kryptonian birth name, and, famously, his prized copy of Action Comics #1 was once stolen—only to be recovered by Cage himself (he later sold it at auction for a staggering $2.1 million). Which is to say, Superman Lives has always been The One That Got Away for him. In 2022, he told Rolling Stone, “That’s always been both a positive and a negative to me. It’s a positive in that it left the character, and what Tim and I might have gotten up to, in the realm of imagination — which is always more powerful than that is concrete.” That same year, he teased a more concrete return to GQ directly in his Actually Me video, saying, “Would it matter how much time I appeared as the character? There might still be a chance.”

Now, nearly 30 years later, the dream of Superman Lives lives on in The Flash as we see Cage in a Superman costume battling that spider just like Peters wanted.

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