Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Console to Screen: Metroid

Metroid was released in
1986. Could it make it
to the big screen?
In 1986, Nintendo released Metroid for the NES. The game was an instant hit as Nintendo continued an impressive run of games that couldn't stay on the shelves. It was about a bounty hunter named Samus Aran that fought against the Space Pirates and a cybernetic life form called Mother Brain on the planet Zebes. In the early part of the decade, Nintendo was the first video game company to use story to drive the game. Metroid was another example of it, but there was a twist that shocked gamers in the mid-80's: the hero was a woman. Suddenly most gamers felt like they had to shower and impress their female heroine, but alas that would be the closest some of the gamers got to a woman. Metroid stopped dead in the 90's, but returned in 2002 with a new look and a more in-depth story. Years ago, Metroid was rumored to be attached to John Woo to direct a feature, but since then Metroid has developed three more games with good stories and great action. It was one of the first games that showed the Wii's potential, but what pitfalls would Metroid cross before hitting the big screen?

Story:
Metroid Prime revamped the
dormant series in 2002.
If you use the Metroid Prime story, Samus Aran is called to Tallon IV to stop the Space Pirates from growing an powerful and volatile chemical called Phazon. Through the process, Samus stops a Space Pirate mining operation only to discover that there was a plan to create an ultimate weapon called Metroid Prime. Unlike it's brethren that would attach to a life form and drain it's energy, Metroid Prime was a larger creature that could adapt to different environments and different attack weapons. Samus destroyed the creature, but in a secret ending it's revealed Samus gave life to something much worse. The Metroid Prime trilogy is one of the most successful franchises released by Nintendo and could spawn a series of films.

Metroid: The Other M was the first
Nintendo game that let the lead talk.
However, if Hollywood follows the latest edition -Metroid: The Other M- the series could go in a different direction. In The Other M, Samus details that she used to be a member of the Galactic Federation Army, but left after a dispute with her commanding officer to become a bounty hunter. After defeating Mother Brain and watching the baby metroid that saved her killed, Samus is "cleaned up" by the Federation doctors. After answering a distress call, Samus travels to "the bottle ship" where she finds that the planet Zebes was recreated in this structure. Through her adventure, she re-encounters the rest of her old platoon -including her superior officer Adam Malkovich. Little-by-little, Samus finds out that the Federation "cleaned up" Samus by taking all of the DNA off her suit to make these creatures- including Ridley and Mother Brain. As a result, Samus must defeat her enemies- including the enormous Queen Metroid- while she tries to find out who killed the members of her old platoon. The story was crafted well and Samus was flushed out as a character better in this edition.
Samus is as attractive as she's deadly. Who could play her and do her justice?


Jennifer Lawrence has two
franchises going right now.
She'd be perfect for this one.
Casting:
There's really only one character to cast in this series- Samus Aran. In all editions, Samus looks the same; blonde hair, blue eyes, athletically slender build and perfect looks. She has the look of Kate Upton, but the attitude of Alien's Ellen Ripley. Now, Hollywood would love to get another heroine to the screen as they're hard to come by. In recent years, they got The Hunger Games, Twilight and Prometheus but one more couldn't hurt. As a matter of fact, one of those films has the ideal actress to play Samus Aran: Jennifer Lawrence of X-Men: First Class and The Hunger Games. Lawrence has two aspects that would make her perfect: she looks the part and can act. A former Oscar nominated actress for Winter's Bone, Lawrence has proved herself over-and-over again in various films over the last couple years and proved she could be an action star in the last two years. Give her a good script and Lawrence will deliver.

Mother Brain was a powerful enemy,
but Hollywood would need to expand
her character.
Hurdles:
Metroid never really clarified their story until Metroid Prime, but that's not the major hurdle. In most Nintendo games, their heroes (or heroines) were mute. In Metroid: The Other M, Samus finally spoke. To hard core fans, Samus was too sensitive and too overcome by feelings, but some found the story compelling and moving. The scenes between Adam, Anthony and Samus were good, but the feel for the other members will have to improve. Another problem that arises is Samus' enemies are mute. There's no feel for what the Space Pirates, Dark Samus or Mother Brain's motives are, unlike the atmosphere you get with the Legend of Zelda or Super Mario series. Perhaps that's why The Other M would make a better film, but executives wouldn't like starting a series at what's essentially part 3 of the story. Without a good supporting cast, even with great action, Metroid would be doomed.

What's Already In Place:
A great sci-fi angle and a good main character, but Metroid's action sequences could be impressive. With several different creatures and bad ass bosses like Ridley, film adaptation should be great. The scenery is impressive and gives you a different feel for the areas. The presentation of Metroid through the years makes it interesting how to deliver it. It began as a side scrolling game, then first-person shooter and then a 3D interactive side-scroller. All those presentations will not matter if adapted to the big screen, but it's still important to understand the feel of the series.  However, the music is what separates Metroid. It's style was more like a techo-score and mix that in with flashy action and it'll get your blood pumping. The Metroid Prime series was listed on my Best Music in Video Games.


Who could pull this off:
Renowned action director John Woo would have been a decent choice, but it's not the only option depending on what you want out of this franchise. If you want better story, Ridley (no pun intended)  Scott or James Cameron would be a homerun, but the chances of them taking on a Video Game movie is unlikely. The horror would be that Wanted director Timur Bekmambetov gets the gig, which would make fans clammer for Woo again. Perhaps a studio could discuss Jon Favreau as a possibility after his success with Iron Man and mixed reviews of Cowboys and Aliens.


Will we ever see a Metroid film? Hard to say. Nintendo was burned by their Super Mario Brothers movie and they tend to shy away from the big screen. That said, sooner-or-later, Nintendo is going to give it a shot and it's more likely that Metroid would get it's number called before any of their other franchises. That way, fans of Zelda don't get mad if their movie sucked or another black eye if Super Mario movie failed again. Metroid is just popular enough to take the chance without alienating it's fans if the results are... well... Resident Evil-esc.

3 comments:

  1. Um, yes, I am one of those people who thought that Other M turned Samus into an estrogen-soaked tampon (but the story and art were beautiful. If we hadn't known who Samus was before this, it would have come off great).

    Comic canon doesn't mention the GFA--they have Samus as a "Star Tracker" (this was the 80s), which is a galactic police unit so elite it apparently never feels the need to explain what it does. In fact, they go out of their way to say that when Samus ditches them (also not explained in comic canon, which gave Other M leave to invent the Malkovitch backstory, which I believe was continued from the ending of Super Metroid...right?) to become a bounty hunter, she goes after criminals so dangerous even the Star Trackers won't handle them.

    I agree on Lawrence; I've enjoyed her in other things and I do think she's got the right look. While Mother Brain must be included, I think the studios would do better to go for broke on Ridley--he is Mother Brain's cat's-paw, and he does all the legwork. It wouldn't be too terrible to know what he was thinking, either. When he kidnaps the Baby Metroid in the opener of Super Metroid he comes off as sadistically malicious. Queen Metroid would make for a great final battle, too, since it was incredibly satisfying to kill her in Metroid II (you just let her swallow you, then bombed the hell out of her stomach and digestive tract). But if we have Ridley, can we at least add Kraid for lumbering scare factor?

    Oh, and they need to be smart about the Malkovitch storyline if it's included. Don't turn it into a love story, and keep it subtle, or else it's going to drag down all the action. Ripley killed Captain Dallas at his request, and the camraderie between her and Dwayne Hicks was lovely in its subtlety, and it should stay that way, forever and ever amen.

    What I would look forward to most from a Metroid movie is geek merchandising. Why has no one yet made a plush Metroid that I can hug? They're so friggin' cute...you know, until Metroid II when they start evolving into lightning-fast hellbeasts. I want my plush baby Metroid, dammit!

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    Replies
    1. Ha ha, PLUSH Metroids...hmmm.
      Malkovitch's story would be more father-figure than love story. I think part of the issue was Samus' friendship (possibly love) for Adam's younger brother. You can't go into this with the idea that Samus and action will make it watchable. That type of planning made quality films like Resident Evil and the new Total Recall. Things happen for a reason. I always hear that Ridley killed Samus' parents, but there was nothing covered in the old games and new ones. The Other M uses a quick flashback to Samus as a young girl at the beginning of the Ridley fight. How to flush out the enemies who are mute is a BIG obstacle?
      This film needs a strong supporting cast of characters like Alien or Aliens in order to succeed. Without it, you might as well should just make another Underworld.

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    2. I am telling you, there is a market out there for plush Metroids. Even if the market is just me, dammit, I want one.

      I still think it wouldn't be the worst idea to know what Kraid and Ridley were thinking, give them SOME sort of obvious personality traits. We know they are pirates; we know that Ridley, at least, is capable of premeditation. There has to be a way to translate that to the screen. I agree on supporting cast, too--I'm not saying "Doom" was an Academy-Award winning film (I say that as a person who is watching it right this very minute) but it at least had a few characters you could be induced to care about and a couple you definitely knew you were supposed to hate, and as you pointed out, that's the formila that makes the first two "Alien" films so great.

      But don't forget, we live in a world that's going to pay thirteen dollars to see "Resident Evil Retribution: Because It's Important To Prove We Can Still Suck".

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