The latest attempt to bring the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles to the screen has been somewhat more rocky than expected. After an early draft leaked, some controversial comments about the film's direction, and a constantly shifting release date, the Turtles reboot has dealt with a surge of conflicting information and fan rage. Whether it was something as seemingly innocuous as shortening the film's title to Ninja Turtles or the more drastic issue of giving the Turtles extraterrestrial origins, the latest Michael Bay produced, Jonathan Liebesman directed TMNT movie hasn't left us with any shortage of things to talk about.
The Story:
We don't know much about the current story, but an early draft of the screenplay (dated January 30, 2012) by Josh Applebaum and Andre Nemec (the gents who wrote Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol) with the rather secret sounding title of "The Blue Door" leaked and sparked an internet firestorm when details were revealed. Having read this draft, I can tell you that it isn't nearly as bad as folks would have you believe. The controversy stemmed from the revelation that the Turtles' origins were extradimensional in nature (from Dimension X, as a matter of fact), although they BELIEVED that their origins were the familiar "turtles wading in mutagenic ooze" story from the comics, cartoons, and previous films.
"The Blue Door" was certainly no worse than Turtle films like Secret of the Ooze or Turtles in Time. If nothing else, we would have been treated to proper live-action versions of Bebop, Rocksteady, Krang (including his giant robot power suit), and the Technodrome. Unfortunately, the rest of the script is unremarkable in virtually every way other than a really perplexing final act, and some story choices that, even if you aren't a Ninja Turtle purist (we exist!), simply don't sit right.
Among those who voiced their displeasure with "The Blue Door" was TMNT co-creator Peter Laird, who offered his thoughts on the script saying that it "should be tossed out, deliberately forgotten, and...started again." However, Michael Bay was quick to point out that this draft "was written well before I, or anyone else at Platinum Dunes, was involved with the project. That script saw the shredder a long time ago." In a more recent interview, Bay was emphatic on the subject of whether the Turtles are aliens, saying "It's the ooze! It's from the original source material...I do listen to the fans and I do want this to be authentic." Even the Turtles' Raphael (Alan Ritchson) got in on the act when he said, "The assumptions, everything you read online is wrong."
So what, if anything, CAN we learn from "The Blue Door?" I think it's safe to say that the Turtles attitudes and personalities will remain intact...which isn't saying much, because they all behaved exactly as you would expect them to in the first place. It also seems likely, since the Turtles will be motion-capture/CGI creations, that their look (and their individual physical quirks) may survive. Note this description from page 15 of "The Blue Door":
"Three enormous creatures, each standing near six-and-a-half feet. Turtles by the looks of the shells surrounding their cores. With arms and legs distinctly more humanoid. And rippled with muscles...you'll recognize them as our boys. But not in a way you've ever seen them."
There are individual physical and personality traits which distinguish them. Leonardo is described as "muscled like a middle-linebacker, he is the oldest of the turtles." Raphael is "the most yolked of the group. and boy does he need those massive shoulders to carry around that giant chip." Donatello is "the brainiest and most zen." While, unsurprisingly, Michelangelo is "the youngest and most free-wheelin'." Throughout the script, the Turtles use their shells offensively and defensively, even retracting their extremities completely within them in order to barrel through walls or bowl over foes. It wouldn't be surprising (or altogether unwelcome) to see some of this actually make it to the screen.
The Cast:
A look at the cast seems to confirm Bay's statement about The Blue Door having seen "the shredder" (we can only presume the pun was intentional). There is no mention of Bebop, Rocksteady, or Krang...not to mention Casey Jones, who was THE central human character in "The Blue Door" draft. On the other hand, the film has added a number of other characters who might be especially familiar to fans of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon series (if not the comics) K. Todd Freeman plays Baxter Stockman, Whoopi Goldberg is Bernadette Thompson (April's boss), Will Arnett is April's cameraman, Vernon Fenwick, and Minae Noji plays Karai (who first made an appearance in the comics in 1992). None of these characters were present in "The Blue Door" draft, and it all seems to confirm Bay's statement (and Laird's wishes) that a page one re-write was done on the project, almost certainly with the involvement of Evan Daugherty (Snow White and The Huntsman) who isn't credited on "The Blue Door."
As for the Turtles themselves, they'll be voiced by the same actors who wear the motion-capture suits. Alan Ritchson is Raphael, Noel Fisher is Michelangelo, Jeremy Howard is Donatello, and Pete Ploszek is Leonardo. Seinfeldalum, Danny Woodburn is Master Splinter. And, of course, one character who will not require motion capture is Megan Fox as April O'Neil.
William Fichtner (recently seen in villainous roles in The Lone Rangerand Elysium) is Turtle arch-enemy, The Shredder. It's worth noting that in "The Blue Door" draft, Shredder was also not of Japanese origin, and that hasn't changed with this bit of casting. Then again, the actor told Screenrant that "I actually play a guy named Eric Sachs" in the movie, and that does sound like an anglicized version of Shredder's more familiar name, Oroku Saki. Might this be a plot point? If nothing else, it's better than the "Colonel Schrader" name from the first draft!
The Rest:
It was recently announced that Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was getting bumped from its June 6, 2014 release date to August 8, 2014. Paramount apparently didn't want to compete with its other toy-centric franchise film of the summer, Transformers 4. This allows additional time for post-production, since filming on the TMNT movie only wrapped on August 3rd. Given the intricate fight scenes that will likely be involved, combined with the amount of CGI that the main characters will require, we can only assume this is a good thing. We'll keep updating this as more information becomes available. Despite all of the controversy (or perhaps because of it) Paramount has been extraordinarily secretive about this film.
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This movie is going to suck mightily. Songs will be written about how bad it will be. Which sucks in itself, because I love the Turtles and want to see a good, new, live-action movie about them. All the casting aside from the Turtles(we won't know how good/bad they are until we see/hear them) sounds exactly like how SNL would do a parody of a Michael Bay directed or produced Turtle movie.
We should have heeded the Transformers fans warnings. ..