Status

Released

original language

English

Budget

$ 17000000

Revenue

$ 36700000

Top Billed Cast

Christopher Reeve

Clark Kent / Superman

Margot Kidder

Lois Lane

Gene Hackman

Lex Luthor

Mariel Hemingway

Lacy Warfield

Jackie Cooper

Perry White

Marc McClure

Jimmy Olsen

Jon Cryer

Lenny

Sam Wanamaker

David Warfield

Mark Pillow

Nuclear Man

Damian McLawhorn

Jeremy

William Hootkins

Harry Howler

Jim Broadbent

Jean Pierre Dubois

Stanley Lebor

General Romoff

Don Fellows

Levon Hornsby

Robert Beatty

U.S. President

Bradley Lavelle

Tall Marshall

Mac McDonald

Marshall #2

Steve Plytas

Russian General #2

Czeslaw Grocholski

Russian General 1

John Hollis

Russian General 3 (Kremlin)

Bob Sherman

Senator - Pentagon

Eiji Kusuhara

U.N. Guard - Japanese

Yuri Borienko

Russian General - Red Square

Boris Isarov

Cosmonaut Captain

Dorota Zięciowska

Cosmonaut

Jayne Brook

Teacher - JFK High School

Susannah York

Lara (voice)

Diana Hunter

Museum Tour Guide

Indira Joshi

Secretary General U.N.

Jiří Stanislav

Cosmonaut

Ron Travis

Convict

Matthew Freeman

Submariner

Douglas W. Iles

Chief of Staff

Ted Maynard

Army Chief

Raymond Marlowe

Navy Chief

John Cagon

Technician

Malcolm Bullivant

U.N. Guard - Swedish

Mark Caven

Priest - Boystown

Nicholas Colicos

Paul - Metro Sports Club

David Garth

First Elder

Esmond Knight

Second Elder

Keith Edwards

Technician - Fort Mason

Eugene Lipinski

Cosmonaut - Space Walker

Dennis Creaghan

Bill Compton

Philip Fox

Husband - Great Wall of China

Jimmy Fung

Chinese Official - Great Wall of China

Guinevere John

Tourist - Great Wall of China

Peter Penry-Jones

Tourist - Great Wall of China

Witold Schejbal

Russian Premiere

Rex Robinson

Engineer - Subway

Kerry Shale

MBC Newscaster

Samantha Weysom

Lex Luther Girlfriend

Kenneth Coombs

Reporter

Stephanie English

Woman in Crowd

Jill Goldston

Commuter (uncredited)

Colin Hunt

Sergeant York (uncredited)

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Movie Reviews

A review by IanBeale

Written by IanBeale on 2017-02-22

**Better than the tedious Superman Returns/Man Of Steel** Bad effects aside, this one is definitely more fun than the _tedious and dull_ Superman Returns and Man Of Steel stuff - an overload of special effects does not make an engaging film. The performances here are all top notch as usual and the plot moved swiftly without taking itself too seriously. The franchise has always been silly - stupid even - especially when we remember that _Richard Donner's Superman had Ned Beatty as the moronic Otis._ The silliness has always been integral to the Superman series.

A review by Monoval

Written by Monoval on 2018-03-18

Filled with cheap gags, really horrible visual effects, a lazy story, a very bad musical score by Alexander Courage, a terrible villain (Nuclear Man), and some tiresome performances by the cast (except for Christopher Reeve), Superman IV: The Quest For Peace is one of the worst films ever made, the one of the worst movie sequels of all time, and the worst Superman film of all time. It is the kryptonite nail in the coffin for the Superman films, and none of the films after this even tried to save the Man Of Steel from his own detriment.

A review by Wuchak

Written by Wuchak on 2021-05-11

_**The least of the tetralogy due to a slashed budget and the corresponding cheesy F/X**_ Superman (Christopher Reeve) destroys all nuclear warheads on Earth for the sake of world peace, but Lex Luthor (Gene Hackman) has discovered a way to make a nuclear-powered thrall from Supes’ DNA and the energy of the Sun. Meanwhile a tycoon & his daughter take over The Daily Planet (Sam Wanamaker & and Mariel Hemingway). “Superman IV: The Quest for Peace” (1987) is the weakest of the quadrilogy because the Salkind family sold the franchise to a Grade B production company, Cannon, and so instead of the healthy $39 million budget of “Superman III” (1983) it was slashed to $17 million (although it was originally supposed to be $36 million), which is apparent in the low-rent opening credits and the non-special effects throughout. Other than that glaring flaw, the main cast returns and the story is decent, augmented by the kick-axx Nuclear Man (Mark Pillow) and the continuation of Clark’s relationship with Lois (Margot Kidder). The first two movies are standout sci-fi motion pictures, despite hailing from the late ’70s, and the third one has worthy themes if you can adjust to the parody tone and cartoonish presence of Richard Pryor (at least his character has a worthy story arc). This one, by contrast, is disappointing due to the second rate vibe. While there are some entertaining elements, the drop in quality is just too noticeable. The film runs 1 hour, 30 minutes, and was shot entirely in England with establishing shots of New York City, The Golden Gate Bridge, The Great Wall of China, etc. GRADE: C

A review by r96sk

Written by r96sk on 2025-01-08

<em>'Superman IV: The Quest for Peace'</em> isn't one I'll be filing anywhere near 'good', though it is at least a minimal improvement on III and <em>'Supergirl'</em>. It has a pleasantly short run time of just under 90 minutes and features a plot that I didn't find totally terrible. Christopher Reeve stars as Superman for the final time, to as decent effect as you'd expect. Gene Hackman makes a return as Lex Luthor, to my support - I think he's the one I'll remember most from these films, aside from the main guy obviously. It's not Hackman on top form, but still solid enough. Overall though, I didn't get the required entertainment. I do think it starts better than it finishes, the end noticeably drags. One big reason for that is the Nuclear Man character. Any time he appears, I was uninterested. The 'switching' in front of Lois Lane is also extremely repetitive by this point. A blessing for all involved that this era of Superman concluded here. Now to see what they did for 2006's <em>'Superman Returns'</em>, a movie I'm a little surprised didn't cross my path as a kid to be honest; as the Spiderman flicks from those years did. Maybe I'll find out why!