Christopher Reeve's kids wanted to be 'honest, raw and vulnerable' in
new documentary 'Super/Man'
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[October 12, 2024]
By BROOKE LEFFERTS
NEW YORK (AP) — Christopher Reeve’s children say they made a point to
include all the complexities of their father’s life — his strengths and
weaknesses — in the new documentary “Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve
Story” — because that’s what he would have wanted.
The film includes family home videos, mixed with interviews and movie
clips of Reeve, who famously played Superman in four films, in addition
to other acting and directing roles later in his career. Reeve’s three
children, Matthew, Alexandra and Will Reeve, say there were no
restrictions on topics or video used in their father’s story.
“He wouldn’t have wanted to be viewed through rose-colored glasses. He
would want art and cinema and factual, comprehensive storytelling and
that’s what he got,” Reeve’s youngest son, Will told The Associated
Press. “It’s important to us to be honest and raw and vulnerable and
give a 360-degree view of a very human life, of a very human family.”
Known as the Man of Steel, Reeve — an avid athlete, sailor, skier and
horseman — was nearly killed in a 1995 horse-riding accident that left
him paralyzed for the rest of his life. He used his platform to become
an advocate for people with disabilities, starting a foundation in his
name.
Directors Ian Bonhôte and Peter Ettedgui were able to access some
never-before-seen home movies of the Reeve family before and after the
accident. “When we started to make the film, one of the things they were
adamant (about) is that they will share everything. They will share the
archive, but they will share their emotional states … everything,”
Bonhôte said. “That was the first time they were going to do it, and
they were going to go all out.”
Reeve had recorded audio of his memoir before he died in 2005, so his
narration is used in parts, adding to the film's intimacy. The actor
became a father to Matthew and Alexandra with his first partner, Gae
Exton, and the family was living in the U.K. before Reeve decided he
needed a break and moved back to the U.S. alone. Exton, who is
interviewed in the film, shares compelling memories of that time, and
Matthew and Alexandra admit their father was not around regularly during
their childhood.
Other interviews include Susan Sarandon and Glenn Close, who befriended
Reeve after he graduated from the Julliard School and started taking on
acting roles in New York. Close suggests in the film that Reeve and
Robin Williams — Julliard classmates and close friends — had a deep
connection and that if Reeve were still alive, Williams likely would be
too.
Reeve’s kids say the process of going through their archives and being
interviewed for the film gave them a new perspective and appreciation of
their dad. Will Reeve was only 12 when his father died. His mother,
Dana, was diagnosed with cancer and died less than 18 months later. Now
an ABC News correspondent, Reeve says he was fortunate to have had
family and close friends help raise him and considers himself “pretty
well-adjusted.”
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Matthew Reeve, from left, Alexandra Reeve Givens, and Will
Reeve, children of the late actor Christopher Reeve, appear at the
premiere of "Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story" at the Museum
of Modern Art in New York on Sept. 18, 2024. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP,
File)
“There’s a scenario in which things
could have turned out differently,” Will Reeve said. “But because of
the values instilled in us by our parents, because of the way that
they let us into their lives, the good and the bad, the joyous and
the tragic … that prepared us for life’s difficulties and life’s
joys.”
One thing that impressed the directors most in their research was
Reeve’s commitment to help others even after he was physically
limited in his own life. After becoming a quadriplegic, Reeve and
his family were shocked at the lack of resources for people with
disabilities and started the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation
to help improve quality of life and fund research for a cure for
people with spinal cord injuries.
“He allowed him(self) to have 10 or 15 minutes of self-pity, and
then he was on a mission to change the world. And I think that’s
very, very inspiring because … the family as a whole, Dana and the
kids, they faced a huge amount of difficulties, you know, 24-hour
care, the cost,” Bonhôte said. “So he would fight for those that are
less privileged than him.”
Alexandra Reeve Givens has kept up the advocacy in the family,
working on the foundation and as a Washington attorney and CEO of
the Center for Democracy and Technology. She said reflecting on her
father’s life was powerful.
“To see those elements of his character that stayed constant
throughout his life: the commitment, the intensity, the passion, the
strength,“ she said. “Those things changed after the accident and
manifested in new ways. That strength suddenly meant something
totally different. It was a strength to get up every day.”
The film is being widely released Friday to coincide with the 20th
anniversary of Reeve’s death this month.
Matthew Reeve— a writer, producer and director —says the film
reemphasized lessons the family learned from their parents,
including the fragility of life.
“I think what it also instilled in us very early on was this deep
sense of gratitude of everything, from being thankful that he
survived the accident to an enduring gratitude that tomorrow is not
promised and that you have to really value the present,” he said.
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