Home  »  General  »  G.I. Joe Director: “This Is Not A George Bush Movie — It’s An Obama World”

G.I. Joe Director: “This Is Not A George Bush Movie — It’s An Obama World”



Aug 3, 2009 15 Comments ›› Erik Wong

channing_tatum_in_gi_joe-_rise_of_the_cobra_wallpaper_2_1024

The LA Times:

Nearly 1,000 service members and their families at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland got to see something Friday night that very few people in Hollywood have seen — “G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra,” the last big-budget action movie of the summer.

Paramount Pictures gave the movie its homeland premiere at the base for Air Force One, flying out its stars Channing Tatum, Sienna Miller and Marlon Wayans for a helicopter tour, meetings with the base commander and airmen, and a red carpet replete with paparazzi and billowing American flags.

Launching the film to a military audience is just one part of a highly atypical marketing and publicity campaign for “G.I. Joe,” which opens nationwide and in most foreign markets this Friday. Paramount is sidestepping the traditional Hollywood showcase and courting of the national print media in favor of taking the picture directly to America’s heartland.

“G.I. Joe” is embedded in the Kid Rock and Lynyrd Skynyrd concert tour, advertised at the Country Music Television Awards and excerpted on giant video screens at Minnesota’s Mall of America. It is bombarding Kansas City, Charlotte, Columbus and Grand Rapids on new digital billboards.

The subtext is none too subtle: Critics are likely to roast the film, and fanboys of the original toy line and comic book may be indifferent, but if you’re a flag-waving, Nascar-loving American, it’s practically your patriotic duty to see this movie.

Paramount’s decision to focus so heavily on just one segment of the audience illustrates — in a market increasingly fragmented by demographics and swayed by word of mouth via Twitter, text messages and Facebook updates — the lengths to which studios will go to maximize early exposure among audiences most likely to embrace a film and minimize it for everyone else.

“Our starting point for this movie is not Hollywood and Manhattan but rather mid-America,” Paramount Vice Chairman Rob Moore said. “There are a group of people we think are going to respond to the movie who are normally not the first priority. But we’re making them a priority.”

Yet overseas, where big action films often earn 60% or more of their ticket sales, rah-rah American sentiment doesn’t play well. So those references have vanished from the advertising.

European marketing, rather, focuses on action sequences set in Paris — where the Eiffel Tower collapses — Egypt and Tokyo, and emphasizes that G.I. Joe is an international team of crack operatives and not some Yankee soldier.

When it comes to selling “G.I. Joe” outside the U.S., the message is “this is not a George Bush movie — it’s an Obama world,” director Stephen Sommers said. “Right from the writing stage we said to ourselves, this can’t be about beefy guys on steroids who all met each other in the Vietnam War, but an elite organization that’s made up of the best of the best from around the world.”

Sommers even expects “G.I. Joe” to perform better overseas, particularly in Asia, where costar Byung-hun Lee, a Korean-born martial arts expert, is very popular.

“It was like traveling with Elvis,” said the director, who accompanied the actor to a premiere in Tokyo.

G.I. Joe originated in 1964 as a military action figure that could be equipped with various uniforms and weapons. In the 1980s it was reborn in comic books, a TV cartoon and toys, with the tag line “A Real American Hero,” as a special military unit of the U.S. government that does battle with an evil organization known as Cobra.

The new film, which will be accompanied by a revamped toy line from Hasbro Inc., features many of the characters from the ’80s, but in a futuristic setting.

With a production budget of $175 million and $150 million more in marketing and distribution expenses on the line, “G.I. Joe” needs the biggest possible crowds to turn a profit.

Although “G.I. Joe” has had some of the hallmarks of big-movie event marketing — a costly Super Bowl ad, billboards and banners on the side of buses in Los Angeles and other big cities — a disproportionate amount of resources is being funneled into highly targeted efforts.

Paramount bought ads in newspapers distributed on more than 60 military bases, for instance, and ran a “hometown hero” contest in which entrants wrote essays about a local hero they wanted to celebrate with a screening of the movie. The winner was a 7-year-old from San Diego whose father served with the Navy in Iraq.

One week before its release, virtually no journalists had seen “G.I. Joe” except for Harry Knowles, owner of influential fanboy website Aint-It-Cool-News, who gave the movie an early thumbs up.

Beyond Knowles, however, Paramount has largely avoided what would seem like a natural starting point: loyal fans of the toys, comics and ’80s cartoon. “G.I. Joe” had no presence at the recent Comic-Con International gathering of genre fanatics, even though there were panels to discuss both the toys and comic books.

“You can never win with those guys,” Lorenzo Di Bonaventura, producer of both “Transformers” films and “G.I. Joe,” said of the San Diego convention. “They feel they’re the keepers of the fanboys flag and have a deep childhood association with many of these properties. And we know the hard-core fans are already coming to see the movie.”

That attitude has left some of the most devoted G.I. Joe fans, the type who typically line up for midnight shows, a bit wary of how Paramount has adapted their beloved characters. One decision that has raised eyebrows is that some members of the G.I. Joe team wear high-tech “accelerator suits” that give them super-speed powers.

The one salve for fans, however, was Paramount’s hiring of Larry Hama, who created most of the modern G.I. Joe characters featured in the 1980s comics and cartoon, as a consultant.

Hama said he was pleased with an early cut of the film but noted that he had many disagreements with Di Bonaventura during development over changes to the characters.

“I figured there were fights you can win and ones where you don’t even try,” Hama said. “I just picked the ones that I thought were really important and stuck to my guns on them.”

One he did win that probably will please fans is to ensure that the masked martial arts hero Snake Eyes never speaks.

Based on pre-release audience polling, the PG-13-rated “G.I. Joe” is already exciting male moviegoers. Two executives at rival studios agreed that the film will open to at least $50 million at the box office in the U.S. and Canada and could go higher.

That has been surprising to many in Hollywood, since Paramount’s focus on blue-collar audiences has left “G.I. Joe” with a very low profile in the national media.

“I’ve never had a movie where I have had more responses from competitors scratching their heads and wondering why the tracking is so good,” Paramount’s Moore observed.


  • Dave J (USMC)

    He is the president of the United States, not the world fuck nuts. I guess my decision about whether or not to see this movie has just been made for me.

  • DesignR

    G.I. Joe Director: “This Is Not A George Bush Movie — It’s An Obama World”

    What does that mean?

    All the stress on the International side of things does not bode well. I hope it’s not another bash America, bash Conservatism type film.

    My son and I were looking forward to it. We both love good action films. I hope it’s not another ‘political’ disapointment.

  • ensignricky71

    Corrent me if I’m wrong, but the tagline for GI Joe is and always has been “A Real American Hero”.

    I’d rather have a cheesy movie that’s true to the core of the toy line and cartoon than some PC-laden apologist garbage. The most recent Joe cartoon did pretty well – Cobra Commander killed millions, Snake Eyes was badass, and they even killed off a few name characters.

    • Sponge

      I read somewhere that they changed that montra and GIJoe is no longer a great american hero, but some world crap. Why they made it an international group of elites, and not just americans.

      Yet another franchise ruined by hollywood.

      :gun: :roll:

  • USMCTANKS

    Made by hollywood? Do you mean the usual crowd of ANTI-AMERICAN pro-marxist dirtbags that could careless about my brothers and sisters that are currently at war unless of course they need our money to recoup their investment? You mean the hollywood that “feels” that war is wrong unless you can profit from a big screen hollywood version of war? Do you mean the same actors and actresses that believe that guns should be outlawed because they are to dangerous for us bumpkins to own but make millions portraying people driving thru the streets of our cities at breakneck speeds all the while spraying bullets from full auto weapons at multiple helicopters and vehicles? Is this the hollywood we speak of ?…………….
    My message to hollywood is ” I’m done with you…my family is done with you…my friends are done with you!! Your profits are down for a reason…us right wing extremist’s are gathering steam and your customers are falling in line behind us…Wake up before it’s to late or face a nonfictional version of a war you will not profit from!”

  • copperpeony

    Here’s a real American Hero and this is real life happening now. Our soldiers in Afghanistan, not some hollywood made up stupid fiction:

    http://www.michaelyon-online.com/michael-s-dispatches/

    • copperpeony

      Sorry, my intention was not to insult GI Joe, but as soon as I saw the marketing plans to promote it as “obama’s world” my temperature went up.

      Hollywood is nothing but a haven for libtards.

    • DesignR

      “Hollywood is nothing but a haven for libtards.”

      You got that right! But, I suppose we need to take it over if we want to see any actual changes. Fight fire with fire.

      That is what http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/ is all about. Take the media away from them so we can get films made that promote our way of life and our desires in film. Conservatives and the media. What a concept.

  • westcoastgirl

    Here’s what I’ve read about that:

    The story was going to be set at Brussels-based GIJOE, an acronym for the Global Integrated Joint Operating Entity, and revolve around an international co-ed force of operatives who use high-tech equipment to battle Cobra, an evil org headed by a Scottish arms dealer. This has since changed due to overwhelming negative response from fans and even servicemen.

    GiJoe is once again “A real american hero”, not an international UN type organization according to Hasbro.

    Hasbro released this:
    This movie will be a modern telling of the “G.I. Joe vs. Cobra” storyline and its compelling characters that Hasbro created 25 years ago. The G.I. Joe team will not be based in Brussels. Instead, they will be based out of the “Pit” as they were throughout the 1980s comic book series. And, in keeping with the G.I. Joe vs. Cobra fantasy, the movie will feature characters and locations from around the world. Duke, the lead character and head of the G.I. Joe team, will embody the values of bravery and heroism that the first generation of G.I. Joe figures established.

    So, I really hope that they stay true to it and have removed the UN from the entire film. I’m really looking forward to seeing this.

  • Ty

    I heard it got the lowest ratings ever for the studio in a pre-screening so it was sent back for “makeover.” I hope the change is what westcoastgirl is referencing above.

  • http://www.killingjanefonda.com cllucas

    Who wants pork chop sandwiches?

    –that aside–
    My Navy buddy (Buzz) aka John Covington who transferred from the USN to WOC and became an Apache pilot, once shot down in Iraq, flys for the film and got a speaking part (or so he says)–not much, but enough to gain entry into F.A.G…..i mean the Screen Actors Guild.

    • Ranger

      lol pork chop sandwiches

  • ignifer

    if it aint american, with american flags and american heroes with peach fuzz hair and a friggin kung-fu grip
    IT AINT G.I.JOE…
    BOYCOTT!

  • Xavier

    “Hasbro released this:
    This movie will be a modern telling of the “G.I. Joe vs. Cobra” storyline and its compelling characters that Hasbro created 25 years ago. The G.I. Joe team will not be based in Brussels. Instead, they will be based out of the “Pit” as they were throughout the 1980s comic book series. And, in keeping with the G.I. Joe vs. Cobra fantasy, the movie will feature characters and locations from around the world. Duke, the lead character and head of the G.I. Joe team, will embody the values of bravery and heroism that the first generation of G.I. Joe figures established.”

    They will make the film in two versions the “libtard director” version & the “Hasbro Yo Joe” version.

    IMO based on the previews, this film is crap & we’ve already seen the best parts in the previews.

  • http://www.caramoantravel.com Caramoan17

    When i was a kid, i watched GI Joe animated version on TV all the time. GI Joe Movie is also a very good rendition of the original GI Joe cartoon series.
    `