Superman’s Spectacles Get a Sci-Fi Upgrade in James Gunn Film

Director cites 1970s “super-hypnotism” storyline to justify Clark Kent’s glasses, sparking fan chatter weeks before Superman hits theatres.

Clark Kent

James Gunn has revived an obscure Silver- and Bronze-Age device—the so-called “hypno-glasses”—to explain why no one in Metropolis notices that reporter Clark Kent is Superman, drawing directly from Superman #330 (1978) and earlier Golden-Age tales of “super-hypnotism.” In a recent ComicBook.com interview the Superman writer-director said he once struggled with the glasses’ credibility until comics scribe Tom King reminded him the power is canonical: “It’s kind of been forgotten, but that’s from the comics.”

Fan debate ignited almost immediately. Supporters on X praised the deep cut for honouring comics history, while detractors called the notion “nitpicking fuel” and “a fancy excuse” for a flimsy disguise. Pop-culture site SuperHeroHype noted that Gunn believes David Corenswet “looks the most different as Clark Kent to Superman” of any actor to date, yet still wanted a mechanical rationale beyond posture and hairstyle changes. GamesRadar added that Gunn intends the glasses to project a subtly less heroic visage—slightly broader nose, softer jaw—whenever Kent enters a room, mirroring the 1970s comic depiction.

The concept is hardly unprecedented: DC’s own lore article cites “Secret Identity Vision,” where Kryptonian bio-energy refracts through the lenses to alter observers’ perceptions. A DC Database entry for Earth-One further describes Clark subconsciously shrinking his apparent stature through continuous hypnotic suggestion. ComicBookMovie tracked the power’s first appearance to Action Comics #32 (1940) and its formal codification in the 1978 issue that Gunn references.

Industry commentators say the timing of this reveal is strategic. Universal ticketing site Fandango reports that early interest in Gunn’s Superman—opening 11 July—now outpaces The Flash (2023) at the same point in its campaign, suggesting the director’s lore-heavy approach is resonating with core fans. Conversely, analysts quoted by SuperHeroHype warn that mainstream viewers may still view the explanation as “comic book silliness,” underscoring Gunn’s challenge of balancing authenticity with accessibility.

For now, the debate over Clark’s spectacles functions as viral marketing: hashtags #HypnoGlasses and #SecretIdentityVision have logged more than 42 million views on TikTok since Friday, according to social–analytics firm SocialBlade, keeping the conversation—and the film—squarely in the public eye.

@superman

Seriously though, where’d Clark go?

♬ original sound – Superman

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