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All 32 episodes of Gerry Anderson's cult Supermarionation series
chronicling Captain Scarlet's battle to save Earth from a Mysteron
invasion. The episodes are: 'The Mysterons', 'Winged Assassin',
'Big Ben Strikes Again', 'Manhunt', 'Avalanche', 'White As Snow',
'The Trap', 'Operation Time', 'Spectrum Strikes Again', 'Special
Assignment', 'The Heart of New York', 'Lunarville 7', 'Point 783',
'Model Spy', 'Seek and Destroy', 'Renegade Rocket', 'Crater 101',
'Shadow of Fear', 'Dangerous Rendezvous', 'Fire at Rig 15', 'Treble
Cross', 'Flight 104', 'Place of Angels', 'Noose of Ice', 'Expo
2068', 'The Launching', 'Codename Europa', 'Inferno', 'Traitor',
'Flight to Atlantica', 'Attack On Cloudbase' and 'The Inquisition'.
Superman - The Movie (1978)
Sent by his parents from the planet Krypton just before its destruction, Superman (Christopher Reeve) fights on his adopted planet Earth for truth and justice. With special powers such as flight, super-strength, and X-ray vision, he must thwart the villainous Lex Luthor all while maintaining his alter ego Clark Kent, a bumbling reporter at The Daily Planet.
Superman 2 (1980)
Superman (Christopher Reeve) foils the plot of terrorists by hurtling their nuclear device into outer space, but the bomb's shock waves free the Kryptonian villain General Zod (Terence Stamp) and his henchmen Ursa (Sarah Douglas) and Non (Jack O'Halloran) from their imprisonment. Traveling to Earth, they threaten the planet with destruction at the same time that Superman decides to renounce his superpowers in order to live a normal life as Clark Kent with his new love, Lois Lane (Margot Kidder).
Superman 3 (1983)
Computer programmer Gus Gorman (Richard Pryor) is hired by financial tycoon Ross Webster (Robert Vaughn) to seize control of a weather satellite and annihilate Colombia's coffee crop. When Superman (Christopher Reeve) manages to thwart the plan, Webster commands Gorman to use the satellite to locate kryptonite, the Man of Steel's mortal weakness. But a missing unknown element in the kryptonite -- replaced by Gorman with tar -- causes an unintended side effect when presented to Superman.
Superman 4: The Quest for Peace (1987)
Seeing the United States and the Soviet Union engaged in a nuclear arms race that could lead to Earth's destruction, Superman (Christopher Reeve) decides that he must take action. He collects all the nuclear warheads from the world and throws them into space. Meanwhile, Superman's nemesis, Lex Luthor (Gene Hackman), has broken out of prison with a new scheme. He clones Superman with radioactive material to create Nuclear Man (Mark Pillow), a being just as powerful as the man of steel.
Superman Returns (2006)
Adventure sequel set after the events of 'Superman II'. After eliminating General Zod and the other Kryptonian arch-villains, Ursa and Non, Superman (Brandon Routh) leaves Earth to search for his former home planet, Krypton. When he arrives he finds nothing but remnants and returns to Earth. Upon his return, he finds a Metropolis that doesn't need him anymore. Lois Lane (Kate Bosworth) is engaged to a relative of his boss (James Marsden), and to make matters worse, his arch-nemesis Lex Luthor (Kevin Spacey) has contrived a plot to build a continent using the crystals of Krypton that will wipe out most of North America. Superman must again race against time to stop the psychopathic Luthor before it's too late.
"I'm Brogan...Lieutenant Brogan. For fifteen years I worked for the
NYPD...Now I'm a Space Cop." After 15 years as a New York street
cop, Lt. Chuck Brogan is appointed commanding officer of Space
Police Precinct 44, an intergalactic police corps fighting
organised crime on alien worlds. But in the famous "Mr Big's Secret
Hideout" nightclub, V. Lann and E. Vile are plotting the demise of
the President. Brogan and his team only have a limited time to foil
the terrorists' plot and save the President's life. In the
mid-1980's Gerry Anderson - the man behind cult classics like
Fireball XL5, Thunderbirds, Space:1999 - came up with a concept for
an exciting new television series. Together with long-time
collaborator Tony Barwick, Gerry wrote and shot the pilot story for
Space Police. Once the pilot was complete it would take nearly 10
years to secure the funding to make the series which was eventually
renamed Space Precinct. Now, for the first time, the original
screenplay of this untransmitted pilot film is available for Gerry
Anderson fans worldwide to enjoy
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