G.I. Joe (film series)

G.I. Joe
Directed by Stephen Sommers (1)
Jon M. Chu (2)
D.J. Caruso (3)
Produced by Lorenzo di Bonaventura
Brian Goldner
Bob Ducsay (1)
Screenplay by Stuart Beattie (1)
David Elliot(1)
Paul Lovett(1)
Michael B. Gordon(1)
Stephen Sommers(1)
Rhett Reese(2)
Paul Wernick(2)
Jonathan Lemkin(3)
Aaron Berg(3)
Based on G.I. Joe
by Hasbro
Starring Ray Park
Channing Tatum
Byung-hun Lee
Arnold Vosloo
Jonathan Pryce
Marlon Wayans(1)
Dennis Quaid (1)
Rachel Nichols (1)
Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje (1)
Saïd Taghmaoui (1)
Christopher Eccleston (1)
Joseph Gordon-Levitt (1)
Sienna Miller (1)
Dwayne Johnson (2)
Bruce Willis (2)
Adrianne Palicki (2)
D.J. Cotrona (2)
Ray Stevenson (2)
Music by Alan Silvestri (1)
Henry Jackman (2)
Cinematography Mitchell Amundsen (1)
Stephen Windon (2)
Edited by Bob Ducsay (1)
Kelly Matsumoto (1)
Jim May (1-2)
Roger Barton (2)
Production
company
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (2-3)
Release dates
2009 – present
Country United States
Language English
Budget $305 million
Box office $678,209,722

G.I. Joe is a military science fiction action film series, based on Hasbro's G.I. Joe toy, comic and media franchises. Development for the first film began in 2003, but when the United States launched the invasion of Iraq in March 2003, Hasbro suggested adapting the Transformers instead. In 2009, the first film was released under the title, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra. A second film, G.I. Joe: Retaliation was released in 2013. A third film in the series has been confirmed to be in early development,[1] and a possible crossover with the Transformers franchise is being considered.[2][3]

Films

G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (2009)

American soldiers Duke (Channing Tatum) and Ripcord (Marlon Wayans) are ambushed by the Baroness (Sienna Miller), whom Duke recognizes to be his ex-fiancee Ana Lewis. Duke and Ripcord are rescued by Scarlett (Rachel Nichols), Snake Eyes (Ray Park), Breaker (Saïd Taghmaoui) and Heavy Duty (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje). Using a tracking device, James McCullen (Christopher Eccleston) locates the G.I. Joe base and sends Storm Shadow (Byung-Hun Lee) and the Baroness to retrieve the warheads, with assistance from Zartan (Arnold Vosloo). After the attack, Storm Shadow and Zartan retrieve the warheads, while the Joes locate the secret base. After the Joes find out the missiles are aimed for Beijing, Moscow, and Washington, D.C., they stop the missiles from destroying the cities. Duke learns that Rex Lewis, Ana's brother, believed to have been killed by a mistimed airstrike during a mission led by Duke, has become Cobra Commander (Joseph Gordon-Levitt). The Commander and McCullen are captured by G.I. Joe soon after. On the supercarrier USS Flagg, the Baroness is placed in protective custody until they can remove the nanomites from her body. Meanwhile, Zartan, having had his physical appearance altered by nanomites, infiltrates the White House during the missile crisis, and assumes the identity of the President of the United States of America (Jonathan Pryce), thus completing a part of McCullen's plan to rule the world.

G.I. Joe: Retaliation (2013)

Main article: G.I. Joe: Retaliation

Zartan (Arnold Vosloo), who is impersonating the President of the United States (Jonathan Pryce) frames the Joes for stealing nuclear warheads from Pakistan, and orders a military air strike to kill the Joes, with Duke (Channing Tatum) among the casualties. The only survivors are Roadblock (Dwayne Johnson), Flint (D.J. Cotrona) and Lady Jaye (Adrianne Palicki). Roadblock, Flint, and Lady Jaye return to the United States, where they set up a base of operations in a rundown gym. After Zartan announces that Cobra will replace the Joes as America's main protective unit, Lady Jaye deduces that someone is impersonating the President, and Roadblock leads them to General Joseph Colton (Bruce Willis), who provides them with weapons, and helps them infiltrate a fundraising event that the President will be attending. The group learns that the President is actually Zartan in disguise. Zartan destroys central London to prove his superiority, and threatens to destroy other capitals if the countries don't submit to Cobra. Storm-Shadow (Byung-Hun Lee) betrays Cobra Commander (Luke Bracey) and kills Zartan in revenge for the death of the Hard Master, revealing Cobra's deception to the world leaders. While Snake Eyes (Ray Park), Jinx (Élodie Yung), and Flint fight Cobra's soldiers, Cobra Commander activates the remaining six weapons, and instructs Firefly (Ray Stevenson) to protect the launch device. Firefly is killed in combat by Roadblock, who deactivates and destroys the orbital weapons. Meanwhile, Colton and Lady Jaye rescue the President. Cobra Commander escapes during the battle and Storm Shadow disappears after avenging his uncle. The real President addresses the nation at a White House ceremony, where Roadblock, Lady Jaye, Flint, Jinx, and Snake Eyes are commemorated as heroes. Colton salutes each of them, and presents Roadblock with an M1911 pistol that belonged to General George S. Patton, to use when he finally finds Cobra Commander and to avenge Duke. Roadblock proudly raises the weapon and lets out a single shot in honor of his fallen comrades.

Future

Untitled G.I. Joe 3

On April 1, 2013, reports surfaced that there will be a third G.I. Joe film,[4] and it will likely be in 3D.[5][6] The studio announced that Chu will return to direct the third film.[7] While at the 2013 San Diego Comic Con, Chu talked about bringing Scarlett back in the next film.[8] The writers of the second film are also thinking about bringing back the Baroness in the sequel.[9] Johnson is interested in returning as Roadblock for the sequel,[10] and Park has talked about a possible return as Snake Eyes and also including his pet wolf Timber.[11] di Bonaventura told Beijing News that he hoped that Johnson and Willis would return, the script is still in the writing stage, and that they are considering adding a third important role.[12] On September 10, 2013, Chu was confirmed to direct the film, along with writer Evan Daugherty (Snow White and the Huntsman, Divergent, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles) to pen the film's script.[1] On December 5, 2013, Daugherty talked about writing the film's script and his feelings about Duke being killed,[13] but Chu told MTV that Tatum may return as Duke in the sequel.[14] On April 2, 2014, in an interview with Collider, Johnson believes that Chu may not return to direct, due to working on the live action Jem film, but they may find another director for the film.[15] It was revealed that the third film will have a 2016 release date.[16][17] On June 23, 2014, di Bonaventura told Collider in an interview that they're meeting with new directors and filming may start in early 2015.[18] On July 1, 2014, Variety reported that Jonathan Lemkin will write the script for the film and will focus on Roadblock with Johnson returning.[19] In November 2014, the studio was in talks with Martin Campbell,[20] and D. J. Caruso to direct the third film.[21] On February 5, 2015, Film Divider reported that the twins Tomax and Xamot and Matt Trakker from the TV series M.A.S.K. will be appearing.[22] On April 2, 2015, the studio hired Aaron Berg to write the film and Caruso to direct.[23] In September 2016, Byung-Hun Lee told LRM Online that the studio doing the third film is waiting on the actors to return, including Johnson.[24]

Sequels and crossovers

On March 28, 2013, during the release of G.I. Joe: Retaliation, producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura announced that he is open to doing a G.I. Joe/Transformers crossover.[2][3] On July 26, 2013, G.I. Joe: Retaliation director Jon M. Chu stated that he is also interested in directing a crossover film.[25] di Bonaventura stated on June 23, 2014 that a crossover was not likely to happen,[26] however he later stated that a crossover was still a possibility.[27] On October 23, 2015, Jon M. Chu confirmed his intentions to make a crossover film between Transformers, G.I. Joe, and Jem.[28]

On November 22, 2015, Paramount Pictures announced that the G.I. Joe series would feature further instalments in the future with Akiva Goldsman creating a writer's room.[29] On December 15, 2015, The Hollywood Reporter reported that both Hasbro and Paramount are creating a movie universe combining G.I. Joe with Micronauts, Visionaries: Knights of the Magical Light, M.A.S.K. and Rom together.[30] On April 21, 2016, The Hollywood Reporter has reported that Michael Chabon, Brian K. Vaughan, Nicole Perlman, Lindsey Beer, Cheo Coker, John Francis Daley & Jonathan Goldstein, Joe Robert Cole, Jeff Pinkner, Nicole Riegel and Geneva Robertson has joined the writers room.[31]

Cast and characters

G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra
(2009)
G.I. Joe: Retaliation
(2013)
Snake Eyes Ray Park
Conrad Hauser
Duke
Channing Tatum
Rex Lewis
Cobra Commander
Joseph Gordon-Levitt Luke Bracey
Robert Baker
(voice only)
Thomas Arashikage
Storm Shadow
Byung-hun Lee
Zartan Arnold Vosloo
The President of the United States Jonathan Pryce
Wallace Weems
Ripcord
Marlon Wayans
General Clayton M. Abernathy
General Hawk
Dennis Quaid
Shana O’Hara
Scarlett
Rachel Nichols
Hershel Dalton
Heavy Duty
Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje
Abel Shaz
Breaker
Saïd Taghmaoui
Laird James McCullen XXIV
Destro
Christopher Eccleston
Ana Lewis
The Baroness
Sienna Miller
Doctor Mindbender Kevin J. O'Connor
Courtney Krieger
Cover Girl
Karolína Kurková
Geoffrey Stone IV
Sgt. Stone
Brendan Fraser
Marvin Hinton
Roadblock
Dwayne Johnson
General Joseph Colton Bruce Willis
Jaye Burnett
Lady Jaye
Adrianne Palicki
Dashiell Faireborn
Flint
D.J. Cotrona
Kim Arashikage
Jinx
Élodie Yung
Firefly Ray Stevenson
Zandar Matt Gerald

Crew

Film Director Producer Executive
producer
Writer Composer Editor Cinematographer
G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra Stephen Sommers Lorenzo di Bonaventura
Brian Goldner
Bob Ducsay
Stephen Sommers
David Womark
Gary Barber
Roger Birnbaum
Erik Howsam
screenplay:
Stuart Beattie
David Elliot & Paul Lovett
story:
Michael B. Gordon
Stuart Beattie & Stephen Sommers
Alan Silvestri Bob Ducsay
Kelly Matsumoto
Jim May
Mitchell Amundsen
G.I. Joe: Retaliation Jon M. Chu Lorenzo di Bonaventura
Brian Goldner
Stephen Sommers
Herbert W. Gains
Erik Howsam
Gary Barber
Roger Birnbaum
David Ellison
Dana Goldberg
Paul Schwake
Rhett Reese & Paul Wernick Henry Jackman Roger Barton
Jim May
Stephen Windon

Development

For the first film, in 1994, Larry Kasanoff and his production company, Threshold Entertainment, held the rights to do a live-action G.I. Joe film with Warner Bros. as the distributor, but instead chose to concentrate their efforts on their Mortal Kombat films. As late as 1999, there had been rumors that a film from Threshold Entertainment was still a possibility, but that project never panned out. In 2003, Lorenzo di Bonaventura was interested in making a film about advanced military technology; Hasbro's Brian Goldner called him and suggested to base the film on the G.I. Joe toy line.[32] Goldner and Bonaventura worked together before, creating toy lines for films Bonaventura produced as CEO of Warner Bros. Goldner and Bonaventura spent three months working out a story, and chose Michael B. Gordon as screenwriter, because they liked his script for 300.[33] Bonaventura wanted to depict the origin story of certain characters, and introduced the new character of Rex, to allow an exploration of Duke.[34] Rex's name came from Hasbro.[35] Beforehand, Don Murphy was interested in filming the property, but when the Iraq War broke out, he considered the subject matter inappropriate, and chose to develop Transformers (another Hasbro toy line) instead.[36] Bonaventura felt, "What [the Joes] stand for, and what Duke stands for specifically in the movie, is something that I'd like to think a worldwide audience might connect with."[34]

By February 2005, Paul Lovett and David Elliot, who wrote Bonaventura's Four Brothers, were rewriting Gordon's draft.[37] In their script, the Rex character is corrupted and mutated into the Cobra Commander, whom Destro needs to lead an army of supersoldiers.[38] Skip Woods was rewriting the script by March 2007, and he added the Alex Mann character from the British Action Man toy line. Bonaventura explained, "Unfortunately, our president has put us in a position internationally where it would be very difficult to release a movie called G.I. Joe. To add one character to the mix is sort of a fun thing to do."[39] The script was leaked online by El Mayimbe of Latino Review, who revealed Woods had dropped the Cobra Organization in favor of the Naja / Ryan, a crooked CIA agent. In this draft, Scarlett is married to Action Man but still has feelings for Duke, and is killed by the Baroness. Snake Eyes speaks, but his vocal cords are slashed during the story, rendering him mute. Mayimbe suggested Stuart Beattie rewrite the script.[40] Fan response to the film following the script review was negative. Bonaventura promised with subsequent rewrites, "I'm hoping we're going to get it right this time."[41] He admitted he had problems with Cobra, concurring with an interviewer "they were probably the stupidest evil organization out there [as depicted in the cartoon]".[39] Hasbro promised they would write Cobra back into the script.[42]

In August 2007, Paramount Pictures hired Stephen Sommers to direct the film after his presentation to CEO Brad Grey and production prexy Brad Weston was well received.[43] Sommers had been inspired to explore the G.I. Joe universe after visiting Hasbro's headquarters in Rhode Island.[44] The project had found the momentum based on the success of Transformers, which Bonaventura produced with Murphy.[43] Sommers partly signed on to direct because the concept reminded him of James Bond, and he described an underwater battle in the story as a tribute to Thunderball.[45] Stuart Beattie was hired to write a new script for Sommers' film,[46] and G.I. Joe comic and filecard writer Larry Hama was hired as creative consultant. Hama helped them change story elements that fans would have disliked and made it closer to the comics, ultimately deciding fans would enjoy the script.[47] He persuaded them to drop a comic scene at the film's end, where Snake Eyes speaks.[48] To speed up production before the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike, John Lee Hancock, Brian Koppelman and David Levien also assisted in writing various scenes.[49] Goldner said their inspiration was generally Hama's comics and not the cartoon.[50] Sommers said had it not been for the rich backstory in the franchise, the film would have fallen behind schedule because of the strike.[51]

After Variety had reported that G.I. Joe became a Brussels-based outfit that stands for Global Integrated Joint Operating Entity,[52] there were reports of outrages over Paramount's alleged attempt to change the origin of G.I. Joe Team.[53] Hasbro responded in its G.I. Joe site claiming it was not changing what the G.I. Joe brand is about, and the name "G.I. Joe" will always be synonymous with bravery and heroism. Instead, it would be a modern telling of the "G.I. Joe vs. Cobra" storyline, based out of the "Pit" as they were throughout the 1980s comic book series.[54]

For the second film, after the financially successful release of The Rise of Cobra, Rob Moore, the studio vice chairman of Paramount Pictures, stated in 2009 that a sequel would be developed. In January 2011, Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick, the writers of Zombieland, were hired to write the script for the sequel.[55][56] The film was originally thought to be titled G.I. Joe: Cobra Strikes,[57] which was later denied by Reese.[58] Stephen Sommers was originally going to return as director of the sequel, but Paramount Pictures announced in February 2011 that Jon Chu would direct the sequel.[59][60] In July 2011, the sequel's name was revealed to be G.I. Joe: Retaliation.[61][62] Chu would later declare that Paramount wanted a reboot that also served as a sequel to The Rise of Cobra since "a lot of people saw the first movie so we don't want to alienate that and redo the whole thing."[63]

Reception

The first film, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, had received generally mixed to negative reviews. According to review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra has a score of 35%, with an average rating of 4.6/10 based on 159 reviews. The consensus reads: "While fans of the Hasbro toy franchise may revel in a bit of nostalgia, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra is largely a cartoonish, over-the-top action fest propelled by silly writing, inconsistent visual effects, and merely passable performances."[64] Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film has received an average score of 32 out of 100, based on 25 reviews.[65]

The second film, G.I. Joe: Retaliation, has received generally mixed to negative reviews. Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 28% with an average rating of 4.5/10 based on 161 reviews, both scores lower than for the first film. The site's consensus reads: "Though arguably superior to its predecessor, G.I. Joe: Retaliation is overwhelmed by its nonstop action and too nonsensical and vapid to leave a lasting impression."[66] At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film has received an average score of 41%, indicating "mixed or average reviews", based on 31 critics, which was higher than the first film's 32% average score.[67]

Box office performance

Film Release date Box office revenue Box office ranking Budget Reference
United States Foreign Worldwide All time domestic All time worldwide
G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra August 7, 2009 $150,201,498 $152,267,519 $302,543,074 # # $175,000,000
G.I. Joe: Retaliation March 28, 2013 $122,523,060 $253,217,645 $375,740,705 # # $130,000,000
Total $272,724,558 $405,485,154 $678,209,722 N/A # $305,000,000 N/A
List indicator(s)
  • (A) indicates the adjusted totals based on current ticket prices (calculated by Box Office Mojo).

Critical and public response

Film Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic CinemaScore
G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra 35% (159 reviews)[64] 32 (25 reviews)[65] B+[68]
G.I. Joe: Retaliation 28% (161 reviews)[66] 41 (31 reviews)[67] A-[68]

See also

References

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