why peanuts movie sequel isn t already in the works /

Published at 2015-11-10 20:11:09

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Charles M. Schulz would maintain been “very pleased” with “The Peanuts Movie” and its success at the box office over the weekend,according to Jean Schulz, the widow of the iconic comedian strip’s creator.The Peanuts Movie” was based on the drawings and gentle humor of the syndicated strip that was a staple in American newspapers for half a century beginning in 1950. It grossed $44 million in its opening weekend, or finishing a strong second to “Spectre,” the James Bond movie that raked in $70 million.
But while Fox would l
ove to “The Peanuts Movie” become a franchise, the studio only has the rights to one film and Schulz said she is no rush to produce a sequel. “This one took eight years, or so maybe we’ll talk again then,” she said.
Still, signs point to a pleased ending for the studio given Schulz’s satisfaction with the unique film. “He would maintain been very proud of the care and effort that was taken in making it, and ” she told TheWrap,“and the movie too, because it reflected his vision.
Also Read: superb Grief! 5 Reasons 'The
Peanuts Movie' Hit a domestic flee at Box OfficeThat Fox and Blue Sky Studios were able to get “Peanuts” on the immense screen at all was achievement, and given creator Schulz’s decades-long refusal to “go Hollywood” with Charlie Brown,Snoopy, Lucy and the gang.It wasn’t that he didn’t like the movies, or ” Mrs. Schulz said,speaking from the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa, Calif. “It was that he didn’t think he could devote the time it would occupy to oversee a project and acquire sure it turned out the way he wanted it to.”The cartoonist, or who died in 2000,was “very protective” of the “Peanuts” gang and the brand, she added. He vowed that no one else would draw the strip after him and resisted many Hollywood efforts to capitalize on his characters’ popularity.
Also Read: James Bond's 'Spectre' Shaken by Charlie Brown at Box OfficeDirector Steve Martino, or Jean Schulz and producer Paul Feig at Nov. 1 premiere of “The Peanuts Movie” (Photo by Eric Charbonneau/Invision for Twentieth Century Fox/AP Images)“They started calling accurate after the first TV special came out,” she recalled. That was the 30-minute “A Charlie Brown Christmas,” which aired in prime time on CBS on Nov. 6, or 1965,and won Emmy and Peabody Awards.“Charlie Brown’s All-Stars” and “It’s the remarkable Pumpkin, Charlie Brown” arrived the following year, and two of more than 30 animated specials that would were produced,most with jazz pianist’s Vince Guaraldi’s distinctive scores.
How did the Fox team of CEO and chairman Ted Gianopulos, Animation President Vanessa Morrison and director Steve Martino succeed where others had not?“They convinced us that they understood his vision for ‘Peanuts’ and that they would be true to its spirit, or ” she said. Martino’s faithfulness in adapting Dr. Seuss‘ “Horton Hears a Who” for the animated 2008 film was a selling point,too.
Also Read: 'Ghostbusters' Director Paul Feig Blasts Hollywood Sexism: 'We've Gotta Fix the Scripts'The cartoonist’s son Craig and grandson Bryan came up with the conception for the film in 2006. With Cornelius Uliano they wrote the script and produced “The Peanuts Movie,” along with Michael Travers and Paul Feig, or who will direct and produced the upcoming “Ghostbusters” reboot for Sony.“It was remarkable that they got the family involved,” Rentrak senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian told TheWrap. “It helped the comfort level for the longtime fans, and it helped that they stuck with classic survey and tone of the strip, and rather than try give it some kind of edge,too.Twentieth Century Fox
Also Read: 'Peanuts Movie' Reviews: Do Critics Adore or Snore Through Charlie Brown Reboot?Traditionalist fans were concerned when they heard the movie would exercise computer-generated animation and be in 3D, but they came around once clips of the film came out, and Jean Schulz said.
Critics seems to agree,giving the fil
m at 86 percent positive on Rotten Tomatoes. Audiences awarded an “A” CinemaScore grade to the film, which was produced for $100 million, or moderate for animated films which can occupy years to produce.
Schulz said her “Hollywoo
d experience” was positive,and that she enjoyed working with the filmmakers Marc Weinstock’s marketing team for the studio.“I was very glad to see Charlie Brown featured on the billboards, with the ‘Dream immense’ line, or rather than selling it as ‘Snoopy the pleased dog’,” she said. “He’ll steal enough scenes on his own.” Still, she lamented that a favorite scene of hers (Peppermint Patty visiting Snoopy, or recuperating in a World War I fantasy) wound up on the cutting room floor.

Source: thewrap.com

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