Friday, May 22, 2009

Film franchises turn back time with 'origins' stories


By Scott Bowles, USA TODAY

Hollywood is finding more profit in moving backward in time than forward.
Origins stories are all the rage with studios. X-Men and Star Trek had huge debuts to kick off the summer. And Terminator Salvation, opening nationwide today, brings audiences back — or forward, depending on your perspective — to the "Judgment Day" war that began the series in 1984.

Nervous that moviegoers are weary of sequels, studios are downplaying the continuing stories entirely. For this summer's franchise pictures, numerals have been retired — except for Halloween 2. There's this week'sNight at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (the second installment), Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (also Part 2, June 24) and Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (the third chapter, July 1).

But executives say origins stories offer bonuses no sequel can. They allow filmmakers to recalibrate decades-old series to court younger moviegoers.

"You have to start somewhere," says Lauren Shuler Donner, producer of Wolverine. "An origins story is like getting to know somebody. When you meet someone and like them, you want to know where they came from. It grounds your franchise."

Or helps it take off. Star Trek enjoyed a debut twice as large as any in the 11-movie franchise. X-Men Origins: Wolverine opened with $85 million, the year's largest debut.

Some executives credit Batman with the surge in origins stories.

"Batman Begins really showed how much a back story can free you up creatively," says Chris Aronson of 20th Century Fox, which released Wolverine. "You don't have to confine yourself."

Origins also are a key device in turning old franchises over to new audiences, says Rob Moore, vice chairman of Paramount Pictures.

"It's the perfect way for parents to show their kids the movies they grew up on," says Moore, whose studio released Star Trek. "If you can keep the core idea that worked years ago, suddenly you have two groups that want to see your movie."

Horror, in particular, has been ripe for re-starts. Halloween and Friday the 13th rebooted to big numbers.

"People know a lot about these movies, so you have a built-in curiosity," says Halloween director Rob Zombie, whose sequel is due Aug. 28. "But you talk to these kids, and they haven't seen the original. An origins story will be their original."

2 comments:

DKC said...

The term "origins story" just rubs me the wrong way. It seems like such a stupid Hollywood phrase..."Let's call it an origins story!"

Octopunk said...

The reason it sucks is that it's origin story. OriGIN. Anyone who reads comics knows that. It sounds completely retarded with the s at the end.

Anyone who reads comics can also tell you, origin stories get hyped a lot but usually they suck. That's actually why for a long time comic book movies were considered crap, because they had to have lame origin stories tacked at the front.

Batman Begins is hardly the first one to have an origin story, but it's revelatory because they made the origin story good. Same with Iron Man.

And DUH, they've been leaving the numbers off of sequels for years now.

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