From the Tuesday, August 11, 2009 edition of The Hollywood Reporter:
Universal Studios has ticket to ride on “My Little Pony”
“GI Joe” director Sommers to direct 2011 tentpole based on childhood toy with no noticeable storyline
by Andrew Foley
“2011 is going to be a great year for fans of gritty, action-packed films based on childrens toys from the ‘90s!” So declared Universal Pictures representative Myron Dickens this morning at the news conference to announce his studio’s acquisition of Hasbro’s “My Little Pony”.
Said Dickens, “Any toy property people have fond memories, hell, any memories of at all, they’re like gold-wrapped cocaine right now, everyone wants some. Toss in a few explosions, a little grit and you could do a 50 mill opening weekend with a ‘Slinky’.” He continued, “Hey, who owns the rights to Slinky…?”
Though Universal, Paramount, and Sony bid approximately the same amount for “My Little Pony”, only Universal was willing to commit to a three-picture deal with “Pony” licenseholder Hasbro Toys. “My Little Pony: Dark Horse Rising” is tentatively scheduled for release in July 2011.
While Hasbro-based films have been on a hot streak recently with the success of the “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” and “GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra”, “My Little Pony”, a girls toy with no obvious narrative hook, may seem an unlikely prospect to receive tentpole movie treatment. And, admitted Dickens, that was exactly how Hollywood saw the property last Wednesday. But the success of “Joe” this weekend changed things, setting off a heated bidding war for what many see as the absolute last available ‘90s toy property with any exploitable name recognition.
The critically reviled “Rise of Cobra” grossed more than $55m in North America, and more than $40m internationally in its debut weekend, so Universal’s announcement that “Joe” helmer Stephen Sommers was on-board for a “noirish, Dark Knight-esque take” on “My Little Pony” might also be considered a coup by anyone who hasn’t actually seen “GI Joe” or “Van Helsing”.
Also present at this morning’s press conference was Sommers’ agent, Len Devlin. Devlin said he’d personally delivered word of both “GI Joe: The Rise of Cobra”’s success and the “Pony” job to the director, currently at a private health facility recuperating from an accidental overdose of approximately 200 pills from 17 different prescriptions consumed Thursday night. Cautiously optimistic about his future in the film industry for the first time since “Joe” was screen-tested, Devlin quoted Sommers as saying, “ Seriously, Len, you better not be joking. If I find out Ashton Kutcher’s got anything to do with this, I swear I will kill your family in front of you with my bare hands.” Asked how Sommers could sign on to a film without being aware of it, Devlin explained that his client was technically dead for seven minutes when he first arrived at the emergency room Thursday, during which time he had power of attorney for his client.
36-year old virgin men and six year old girls alike will be chomping at the bit to see “My Little Pony: Dark Horse Rising” for a while yet. But plenty of other plotless, toy-inspired SFXtravaganzas should keep them entertained in the coming months. In addition to the early 2010 releases of Universal’s own “Stretch Armstrong” feature and “Rom: Spaceknight” at Sony, Disney has reportedly fast-tracked the Jim Henson Studios-developed “Cabbage Patch Kids”, aiming for a late 2010 release date. And visionary “Watchmen” director Zak Snyder is rumoured to be close to reaching an agreement with Dreamworks to tackle yet another beloved toy franchise, according to Dreamworks co-founder Steven Spielberg, who went on to say, “Visual effects technology has reached the point where we believe we can finally do the Care Bears justice.”
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About the author: In addition to a sporadically updated blog with a readership well into the mid-teens, Andrew Foley wrote the comic books Parting Ways, Done to Death, and The Holiday Men. He also has a co-writing credit on the Cowboys & Aliens comic, but we don’t talk about that. He’ll be posting on Mightygodking.com until either he or Christopher Bird realize they’ve made a terrible, terrible mistake.
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I can’t wait until Hollywood goes back to that beloved nostalgic toy and announces Golliwog the movie.
THIS IS ALL RICHARDS FAULT! RICHARDS!!!
It’s a little cruel of you to mention ROM at the end there. Not because it’s compared to Pony and GI Joe, but because I really do want it to happen.
Alas, such rights are tied up in quantum knots.
My Little Pony totally had a narrative! Well, at least it had a TV show. I can’t remember anything beyond that.
Oh, come on. There are plenty of toy brands remaining to be exploited.
I can already see the trailer for Fast and Furious: Micro Machines.
I wonder why we haven’t seen He-Man or Thundercats yet. I mean, fuck, shit like Lord of the Rings and 300 did all the fucking work for you.
With Where the Wild Things Are and Cloudy witha Chance of Meatballs on the way, we’re clearly entering a kidlit cycle.
I can’t wait for the adaptations of Goodnight Moon and Everybody Poops, myself. Both to be narrated by Morgan Freeman. “Like a Twinkie, like a Twinkie.”
There was a He-Man movie in the 90s… I think it had Dolph in the leading role.
I’m still waiting for the Monchichi (Oh so soft and cuddly!) movie to be announced.
*sings* Way up in the trees
Are the Monchichis
Shit, they’re past
The per-i-me-ter!
I can’t wait for David Lynch’s Koosh Ball.
it’s a horrifying truth, but they already had a feature: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dRm0HW9Q_XY
I remember being subjected to it in third grade under the guide of a La Petite “field trip”. Why couldn’t I have just been a latchkey kid?
Smurfs: Army of the Damned
I’m with Blake (and, I presume, Chris Sims). We need a ROM movie ASAP.
Kathryn Bigelow’s Happy Fun Ball: The Taunting
Does Michael Bay have a low-cost Canadian version who could make Go-Bots: The Incredible Explosions as one of those SyFy knock-offs?
What Funkula said, but with “,Funkula” added in after Blake.
I loved the shit out of the My Little Ponies movie when I was a kid. No narrative hook my ass. Ponies, goddammit.
See, this post just illustrates an interesting point about our culture. Male nostalgia is considered a beloved reexamination of our pop-culture past, a potential treasure trove of prime demographics eager to relive their childhoods at nine bucks a ticket. Female nostalgia is considered stupid girl stuff nobody cares about.
To put it another way, your childhood only gets raped if it’s NOT wearing pink. If it is, it just gets ignored.
Put me in the ‘me too’ club.
I would kill a man, with my bare hands, right now, if it meant I got a ROM the Space Knight movie.
I only really know Rom from the ISB write ups, but I would also probably go see a ROM movie.
Im also dissapointed they didnt rename the GI Joe movie “Action man: Rise of Snake Eyes and that other villain, Dr something, we dont have a lot of villains in this line I guess” for the British and Australian market, wheres the toy continuity hollywood?
All I’m saying is a My Little Pony would benefit, just as GI JOE did, from having a Wayans brother in it. Doesn’t matter which one, just get a Wayans to voice one of those little horses, and you’ll have cinema gold.
For all the fans of ROM, it can happen. I for one never thought the Miracleman rights issue would never be cleared up, and it finally did happen. Of course this was only after spending waaayyyy too much money to obtain them.
If your childhood was wearing pink… she was asking for it.
…
Too much?