The Incredibles used to be undoubtedly one of the most successful animated films of 2004, grossing an astounding $630 million worldwide and spanning a successful video game and numerous merchandise.
All in all, the movie had received income of more than $800 million, and whilst the flick’s ending made it seem a sequel used to be already on the best way, it would take Disney 14 years earlier than pronouncing the release of a follow-up.
Most fanatics, who fell in love with the movie when it first entered theatres in 2004, were stunned to even pay attention that a 2d installment was on the way in which taking into consideration how long it took to get production shifting, however it seems there was once a reason why at the back of the lengthy gap of both motion pictures.
Following the release of The Incredibles in 2004, Disney obviously spotted how a success the movement picture become inside of days of seeing the numbers it had collected at the box workplace — and it’s no secret that the Hollywood studio isn't shy of short of to expand a franchise if the first film is a success.
Director and writer Brad Bird, who were operating with Disney for several years prior to striking out his largest mission at the time, has since published in an interview with The New Paper that the reason why a sequel didn’t persist with sooner was that he didn’t feel passionate enough to work on a brand new script.
During a press run in 2018, he revealed that working on a follow-up to his film wasn’t his major precedence after seeing how smartly his flick were received with critics and lovers world wide.
Bird used to be additionally scheduled to commence work on 2007’s Ratatouille, so the 63-year-old had more than sufficient work on his plate ahead of he may get back into his inventive mode and work on a fair higher movie for the second one installment of The Incredibles.
But one thing he made absolutely transparent was that he used to be by no means stressed to free up a 2d movie in any way — Disney gave him the reassurance that if he wanted to work on a sequel, it was only up to him on when that was once going to occur.
"There wasn't any gun to my head — 'You must do this now.' They (Pixar) were always like, 'When you're ready.' And I finally went, 'I think I'm ready, maybe.’”
“The thing is, many sequels are cash grabs. There’s a saying in the business that I can’t stand, where they go, ‘If you don’t make another one, you’re leaving money on the table.”
Bird knew that The Incredibles had generated hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue for Disney, and while there was no pressure to work on a second film, he did note that while some people would have hoped for him to develop a script soon after the 2004 release of the first movie, he didn’t feel inspired enough to work on another one.
“It’s like, money on the table is not what makes me get up in the morning; making something that people are gonna enjoy a hundred years from now, that’s what gets me up. So if it were a cash grab, we would not have taken 14 years — it makes no financial sense to wait this long — it’s purely (that) we had a story we wanted to tell.”
The good news about such a long wait from Bird’s offering is that the process of working on The Incredibles 2 had already given him a bunch of ideas which he says he could potentially use for a third installment somewhere down the line.
While talking with Entertainment Weekly, the filmmaker gushed that there was a lot of material that hadn’t been used in the sequel, including several characters that didn’t make the cut — but instead of scrapping the development of those individuals, he’s left the door open to perhaps use them for a follow-up flick.
“We storyboarded, and we designed characters, and they’re really good! Some of them were really funny and cool and explored certain things…” he explained.
“You know, you never say never, because there might be an opportunity to use it. Maybe the idea shows up in a different film. There was an idea I had for an animated version of The Spirit that I ended up using in The Iron Giant.
"You by no means understand how this stuff are going to get repurposed. There had been numerous concepts that we had on this film which may be [used]… whether or not it’s every other Incredibles film, or one thing else.”
The Incredibles 2 made an astounding $1.2 billion international.
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