Did Superman reverse time by spinning the Earth backwards?











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It's an often lampooned scene towards the end of Superman, when the titular Superman discovers Lois has died, he flies around the world very fast in the opposite direction to its spin.



This apparently causes the Earth to slow down and spin backwards which seems to have the effect of "turning the clock back" and time begins to run in reverse. We've all laughed at the notion that spinning the Earth in the opposite direction could somehow cause time to run backwards.



However, it occurred to me that what might actually be happening is that Superman himself is flying backwards through time. We are simply seeing the world from Superman's point of view (or at least it's the movie's way of telling us "We're going back in time"), and of course if Superman is travelling back in time the world would appear to spin in reverse.



Is this what we're supposed to take from this scene? Has it been discussed by the creators of the movie? And if not, is it a commonly held fan theory?










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  • could be related : movies.stackexchange.com/questions/94586/…
    – Vishwa
    14 hours ago










  • @Vishwa different continuity
    – Ankit Sharma
    13 hours ago










  • Duplicate on SciFi: scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/24116/…
    – Chris
    12 hours ago










  • Turning back time, as depicted in the movie, seems to be indeed tied to Earth's rotation because once time has reversed far enough back, Superman stops and then flies in the opposite direction to restore Earth's original spin direction and make time move forward again. - If the time travel was only tied to his speed, then all he had to do was stop and time would automatically move forward again, there would be no need for him to fly in the opposite direction. - Watch the scene on Youtube
    – Oliver_C
    2 hours ago

















up vote
6
down vote

favorite












It's an often lampooned scene towards the end of Superman, when the titular Superman discovers Lois has died, he flies around the world very fast in the opposite direction to its spin.



This apparently causes the Earth to slow down and spin backwards which seems to have the effect of "turning the clock back" and time begins to run in reverse. We've all laughed at the notion that spinning the Earth in the opposite direction could somehow cause time to run backwards.



However, it occurred to me that what might actually be happening is that Superman himself is flying backwards through time. We are simply seeing the world from Superman's point of view (or at least it's the movie's way of telling us "We're going back in time"), and of course if Superman is travelling back in time the world would appear to spin in reverse.



Is this what we're supposed to take from this scene? Has it been discussed by the creators of the movie? And if not, is it a commonly held fan theory?










share|improve this question






















  • could be related : movies.stackexchange.com/questions/94586/…
    – Vishwa
    14 hours ago










  • @Vishwa different continuity
    – Ankit Sharma
    13 hours ago










  • Duplicate on SciFi: scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/24116/…
    – Chris
    12 hours ago










  • Turning back time, as depicted in the movie, seems to be indeed tied to Earth's rotation because once time has reversed far enough back, Superman stops and then flies in the opposite direction to restore Earth's original spin direction and make time move forward again. - If the time travel was only tied to his speed, then all he had to do was stop and time would automatically move forward again, there would be no need for him to fly in the opposite direction. - Watch the scene on Youtube
    – Oliver_C
    2 hours ago















up vote
6
down vote

favorite









up vote
6
down vote

favorite











It's an often lampooned scene towards the end of Superman, when the titular Superman discovers Lois has died, he flies around the world very fast in the opposite direction to its spin.



This apparently causes the Earth to slow down and spin backwards which seems to have the effect of "turning the clock back" and time begins to run in reverse. We've all laughed at the notion that spinning the Earth in the opposite direction could somehow cause time to run backwards.



However, it occurred to me that what might actually be happening is that Superman himself is flying backwards through time. We are simply seeing the world from Superman's point of view (or at least it's the movie's way of telling us "We're going back in time"), and of course if Superman is travelling back in time the world would appear to spin in reverse.



Is this what we're supposed to take from this scene? Has it been discussed by the creators of the movie? And if not, is it a commonly held fan theory?










share|improve this question













It's an often lampooned scene towards the end of Superman, when the titular Superman discovers Lois has died, he flies around the world very fast in the opposite direction to its spin.



This apparently causes the Earth to slow down and spin backwards which seems to have the effect of "turning the clock back" and time begins to run in reverse. We've all laughed at the notion that spinning the Earth in the opposite direction could somehow cause time to run backwards.



However, it occurred to me that what might actually be happening is that Superman himself is flying backwards through time. We are simply seeing the world from Superman's point of view (or at least it's the movie's way of telling us "We're going back in time"), and of course if Superman is travelling back in time the world would appear to spin in reverse.



Is this what we're supposed to take from this scene? Has it been discussed by the creators of the movie? And if not, is it a commonly held fan theory?







plot-explanation superman






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asked 14 hours ago









colmde

692315




692315












  • could be related : movies.stackexchange.com/questions/94586/…
    – Vishwa
    14 hours ago










  • @Vishwa different continuity
    – Ankit Sharma
    13 hours ago










  • Duplicate on SciFi: scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/24116/…
    – Chris
    12 hours ago










  • Turning back time, as depicted in the movie, seems to be indeed tied to Earth's rotation because once time has reversed far enough back, Superman stops and then flies in the opposite direction to restore Earth's original spin direction and make time move forward again. - If the time travel was only tied to his speed, then all he had to do was stop and time would automatically move forward again, there would be no need for him to fly in the opposite direction. - Watch the scene on Youtube
    – Oliver_C
    2 hours ago




















  • could be related : movies.stackexchange.com/questions/94586/…
    – Vishwa
    14 hours ago










  • @Vishwa different continuity
    – Ankit Sharma
    13 hours ago










  • Duplicate on SciFi: scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/24116/…
    – Chris
    12 hours ago










  • Turning back time, as depicted in the movie, seems to be indeed tied to Earth's rotation because once time has reversed far enough back, Superman stops and then flies in the opposite direction to restore Earth's original spin direction and make time move forward again. - If the time travel was only tied to his speed, then all he had to do was stop and time would automatically move forward again, there would be no need for him to fly in the opposite direction. - Watch the scene on Youtube
    – Oliver_C
    2 hours ago


















could be related : movies.stackexchange.com/questions/94586/…
– Vishwa
14 hours ago




could be related : movies.stackexchange.com/questions/94586/…
– Vishwa
14 hours ago












@Vishwa different continuity
– Ankit Sharma
13 hours ago




@Vishwa different continuity
– Ankit Sharma
13 hours ago












Duplicate on SciFi: scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/24116/…
– Chris
12 hours ago




Duplicate on SciFi: scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/24116/…
– Chris
12 hours ago












Turning back time, as depicted in the movie, seems to be indeed tied to Earth's rotation because once time has reversed far enough back, Superman stops and then flies in the opposite direction to restore Earth's original spin direction and make time move forward again. - If the time travel was only tied to his speed, then all he had to do was stop and time would automatically move forward again, there would be no need for him to fly in the opposite direction. - Watch the scene on Youtube
– Oliver_C
2 hours ago






Turning back time, as depicted in the movie, seems to be indeed tied to Earth's rotation because once time has reversed far enough back, Superman stops and then flies in the opposite direction to restore Earth's original spin direction and make time move forward again. - If the time travel was only tied to his speed, then all he had to do was stop and time would automatically move forward again, there would be no need for him to fly in the opposite direction. - Watch the scene on Youtube
– Oliver_C
2 hours ago












1 Answer
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up vote
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Nothing in the movie itself or in any interview it was ever suggested like this. Even speculated same in enter link description here




Superman wasn't exerting a force on the Earth. He was just flying fast enough to go back in time. (Faster than light, I guess? Comic book physics.) The Earth changed direction because we were watching time run backward as he traveled. It didn't actually have anything to do with the direction he was flying.



Now that I see it, it makes a lot more sense. I mean, as much sense as a red-cape-and-outside-underwear time traveler can make.




But it's like giving logic to something which was never suppose to have any logic.



Even covered in similar question in sister site with top answer saying the same words with descriptive explanation with the final words:




No, there's no evidence that this is what Richard Donner or anyone involved with the movie intended us to believe. Moreover, that explanation does no better job than any other of explaining what we see on-screen, as the on-screen events cannot be from Superman's perspective and still fit with actual physics.







share|improve this answer





























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    6
    down vote



    accepted










    Nothing in the movie itself or in any interview it was ever suggested like this. Even speculated same in enter link description here




    Superman wasn't exerting a force on the Earth. He was just flying fast enough to go back in time. (Faster than light, I guess? Comic book physics.) The Earth changed direction because we were watching time run backward as he traveled. It didn't actually have anything to do with the direction he was flying.



    Now that I see it, it makes a lot more sense. I mean, as much sense as a red-cape-and-outside-underwear time traveler can make.




    But it's like giving logic to something which was never suppose to have any logic.



    Even covered in similar question in sister site with top answer saying the same words with descriptive explanation with the final words:




    No, there's no evidence that this is what Richard Donner or anyone involved with the movie intended us to believe. Moreover, that explanation does no better job than any other of explaining what we see on-screen, as the on-screen events cannot be from Superman's perspective and still fit with actual physics.







    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      6
      down vote



      accepted










      Nothing in the movie itself or in any interview it was ever suggested like this. Even speculated same in enter link description here




      Superman wasn't exerting a force on the Earth. He was just flying fast enough to go back in time. (Faster than light, I guess? Comic book physics.) The Earth changed direction because we were watching time run backward as he traveled. It didn't actually have anything to do with the direction he was flying.



      Now that I see it, it makes a lot more sense. I mean, as much sense as a red-cape-and-outside-underwear time traveler can make.




      But it's like giving logic to something which was never suppose to have any logic.



      Even covered in similar question in sister site with top answer saying the same words with descriptive explanation with the final words:




      No, there's no evidence that this is what Richard Donner or anyone involved with the movie intended us to believe. Moreover, that explanation does no better job than any other of explaining what we see on-screen, as the on-screen events cannot be from Superman's perspective and still fit with actual physics.







      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        6
        down vote



        accepted







        up vote
        6
        down vote



        accepted






        Nothing in the movie itself or in any interview it was ever suggested like this. Even speculated same in enter link description here




        Superman wasn't exerting a force on the Earth. He was just flying fast enough to go back in time. (Faster than light, I guess? Comic book physics.) The Earth changed direction because we were watching time run backward as he traveled. It didn't actually have anything to do with the direction he was flying.



        Now that I see it, it makes a lot more sense. I mean, as much sense as a red-cape-and-outside-underwear time traveler can make.




        But it's like giving logic to something which was never suppose to have any logic.



        Even covered in similar question in sister site with top answer saying the same words with descriptive explanation with the final words:




        No, there's no evidence that this is what Richard Donner or anyone involved with the movie intended us to believe. Moreover, that explanation does no better job than any other of explaining what we see on-screen, as the on-screen events cannot be from Superman's perspective and still fit with actual physics.







        share|improve this answer












        Nothing in the movie itself or in any interview it was ever suggested like this. Even speculated same in enter link description here




        Superman wasn't exerting a force on the Earth. He was just flying fast enough to go back in time. (Faster than light, I guess? Comic book physics.) The Earth changed direction because we were watching time run backward as he traveled. It didn't actually have anything to do with the direction he was flying.



        Now that I see it, it makes a lot more sense. I mean, as much sense as a red-cape-and-outside-underwear time traveler can make.




        But it's like giving logic to something which was never suppose to have any logic.



        Even covered in similar question in sister site with top answer saying the same words with descriptive explanation with the final words:




        No, there's no evidence that this is what Richard Donner or anyone involved with the movie intended us to believe. Moreover, that explanation does no better job than any other of explaining what we see on-screen, as the on-screen events cannot be from Superman's perspective and still fit with actual physics.








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 13 hours ago









        Ankit Sharma

        70.8k59372576




        70.8k59372576















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