New movies: Barbie, He-Man, Facebook

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Will this be next year’s bumper crop of Golden Globe winners, or remnants in a Wal-Mart bargain bin of movies nobody saw? It seems like moviemakers are really scraping the bottom of the “let’s base a movie on a pop culture fad of the 80s” barrel – as if “G.I. Joe” wasn’t bad enough, there is now a “He-Man” live action movie in the works. But the raid on your childhood memories doesn’t stop there folks: Barbie is about to get her own live-action movie too. What’s next: “Big Wheels: The Movie?”

Mattel is setting up more playdates for its toy properties.

Universal Pictures has added Barbie to its star stable, while He-Man and the Masters of the Universe has found a new home at Sony.

U has made a deal with Mattel to build a live-action film around its signature Barbie toy line. With studios racing to build films around well-known concepts, Universal brass feels it has landed the queen of globally branded toy figures.

Laurence Mark will produce.

According to Mattel, the 50-year-old Barbie has 99% worldwide brand awareness, and it’s the No. 1 girls property in the toy industry, the top doll property in the U.S., and the No. 1 worldwide property in the traditional toy industry.

“Barbie is the most famous doll in history, a unique cultural icon in the world of brands,” said Universal Pictures chairman Marc Shmuger. “So many representations of Barbie frequent pop culture. We’re grateful to Mattel for entrusting us with this extraordinary opportunity.”

Mark said the next step will be to canvass writers and decide on a creative take for a family-friendly movie. Mark, who just produced “Julie and Julia” and is in production on the untitled James L. Brooks-directed comedy that stars Reese Witherspoon and Jack Nicholson, was one of several A-list producers who met with Mattel and U execs. “Barbie may be the most popular girl in the world, and has always been a wonderfully aspirational figure, so we must do her proud,” Mark said, noting that there’s no shortage of plot possibilities since Barbie has held more than 120 jobs over the years.

The executive producers are Barbie general manager and Mattel senior veep Richard Dickson and Rob Hudnut, who is VP of entertainment for Barbie. The brand managers will clearly be hands-on in determining how Mattel’s star asset translates to the screen.

Asked why there had never before been a live-action feature (there have been 16 direct-to-video animated titles, selling 75 million units worldwide, according to Mattel), Dickson called the U deal the logical next step in expanding the brand’s reach. In the past several years, Barbie has expanded into fashion shows, merchandise and online ventures that include Twitter, Facebook and even Barbie’s own YouTube channel.

“The brand wasn’t ready for a movie,” Dickson said. “In the last 10 years, Barbie has evolved from a toy into an intellectual property. Barbie has a proven track record in home entertainment, there have been live stage shows, live symphonies and other nontraditional forms of entertainment. There is a flagship store in Shanghai.”

While Universal and Mark will want to move ahead aggressively, Dickson said no timetable has been set for Barbie’s bigscreen debut.

He-Man has a plan

As for He-Man, Sony is finalizing a deal to produce a bigscreen adaptation of Mattel’s popular action figure line, with Escape Artists shepherding the project.

The property, which originated in 1983 as an animated series and toy line, had previously been set up at Warner Bros., where Joel Silver had been developing a pic since 2007. Mattel wound up taking back the rights and leaving the lot after Mattel, the studio and Silver couldn’t agree on the creative direction of the film (Daily Variety, Sept. 9).

Sony and Escape Artists’ Todd Black, Jason Blumenthal and Steve Tisch will now start developing the project from scratch for Columbia Pictures, sources close to the negotiations said.

Shingle recently produced Columbia’s remake of “The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3” and “Knowing” at Summit. It previously produced the Will Smith dramas “Seven Pounds” and “The Pursuit of Happyness.”

The fantasy actioner will revolve around a prince who becomes the warrior He-Man and battles the evil Skeletor for control of his magical homeland, Eternia.

John Stevenson (“Kung Fu Panda”) had previously been attached to direct, with Justin Marks and Evan Daugherty having penned versions of the script. Rights to those scripts now belong to WB, meaning a new writer will likely be hired.

The Barbie deal was made by CAA, which previously placed Mattel’s “Major Matt Mason,” a potential star vehicle for Tom Hanks, at Universal and Playtone.

Mattel also has “Hot Wheels” at Warner Bros., with Silver Pictures producing, and “Max Steel” at Paramount; and there’s a live-action musical to be based on a new toy line built around a monster that’s also set up at U with “Hairspray” producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron plus Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, with Shaiman and Wittman to write the original score.

[From Variety]

Well, if they’re gonna make a He-Man movie, might I suggest Christian Bale as Skeletor? He’s been looking quite bony lately. And now for the really important question: who will play Barbie? Reese Witherspoon seems like an obvious choice, since she basically played a version of the pink-loving plastic icon in those “Legally Blonde” movies. But she might be too recognizable to pull it off- you’d want an actress who isn’t already tied to a specific role, I think. Any guesses?

For those of you who would like to leave your childhood toys in the past and not on the big screen, there’s also a movie based on the origins of Facebook in production, and this one has an A-List cast.

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Columbia Pictures and director David Fincher have set its core cast for “The Social Network,” the Aaron Sorkin-scripted drama about the formation of Facebook.

Jesse Eisenberg will play founder Mark Zuckerberg, Justin Timberlake will play Sean Parker, the Napster co-founder who became Facebook’s founding president, and Andrew Garfield will play Eduardo Saverin, the Facebook co-founder who fell out with Zuckerberg as the social network became a financial juggernaut.

Production will begin next month in Boston and then move to Los Angeles.

Scott Rudin, Michael De Luca, Dana Brunetti and Cean Chaffin will produce. Kevin Spacey is executive producer.

The pic focuses on the evolution of Facebook, the social network created in 2004 on the Harvard campus. And how overnight success and wealth changes the lives of the classmates who created it. The trio were the subject of internet rumors as Fincher zeroed in on his leads.

Eisenberg, who went from “The Squid and the Whale” to “Adventureland,” locked the coveted role as Zuckerberg as Columbia prepares to release his latest film, “Zombieland,” on October 2.

Timberlake was most recently seen in “The Open Road,” and Garfield in the Terry Gilliam-directed “The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus.”

[From Variety]

It might be a little too soon to make a movie about Facebook – but I am curious to see if Justin Timberlake can pull off this role. He’s great when he hosts Saturday Night Live, and he was awesome in the otherwise crappy “Southland Tales,” but can he carry a whole movie? I guess we will find out soon enough.

Here are a bunch of pictures from the Barbie national collector’s convention held at the Marriot Wardman Hotel in Washington, DC. Credit: Carrie Devorah / WENN.com

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12 Responses to “New movies: Barbie, He-Man, Facebook”

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  1. ash says:

    Hey now, I liked GI Joe for what it was, a fun action summer movie. Very entertaining. Oscar worthy? Hell no. Just plain fun.

    Ps- Justin looks like uber tool in above photo. The end.

  2. Jazz says:

    Victoria Silvstedt as Barbie. Don’t know if she can act though.
    But when watching Wheel of Fortune here in France, it always looks like it’s Barbie flipping the letters!

    I used to love my Barbies…but the beautiful old ones of the 80’s not the ugly cheap looking ones they have in stores now! With the horrible make-up! And the clothes and shoes are just so ugly and of poor material! What ever happened to “quality” ?

  3. Dan says:

    I saw GI Joe with my girlfriends 9 year old son and watching it thru those eyes it was totally KICK @SS!
    …What is an oscar and who cares, let’s play.

  4. Kitten says:

    is the founding of Facebook THAT RIVETING that it needs a movie made out of it? way to run out of ideas, Hollywood…

  5. Tia C says:

    Great, more movies on which I WON’T be wasting my money.

  6. emma says:

    other movies that are in works? a smurf live action movie and a candyland (yes, the board game) movie.

  7. Rae says:

    Sara Paxton for Barbie.

  8. MizzExpert says:

    Stephen Colbert parodied the making of the movie-from-board-game ‘Battleship’ with Jeff Goldblum. They recommended Keanu Reeves for playing the part of the PEG. 🙂

  9. omondieu says:

    Lego, Battleship, Monopoly (I hear Scarlett Johansson has signed on for it) and a new take on Clue (most likely coinciding with the game’s recent makeover as a murder mystery at a celebrity mansion) are also in the works.

  10. lolo says:

    I’d like to see Isla Fisher as barbie. I think she looks a bit like barbie.

  11. Hieronymus Grex says:

    Didn’t Disney do a live action Barbie movie with LindsLo and Tyra Banks called “Life Size”? It went straight to DVD though.

  12. barbie house says:

    I like barbie movies. Let’s gift your child with barbie doll