There are lots of issues that make Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem stand out from the remainder of the Turtles films. The primary characters are voiced by teenagers, for one. The distinctive, purposefully messy animated fashion is one other. And the truth that the Turtles’ commonest villain, Shredder, is nowhere to be seen is a 3rd.
Speaking with io9, Mutant Mayhem director Jeff Rowe defined that wasn’t at all times the case. “The early version of the film [was] very different from what you’re seeing on screen,” Rowe mentioned. “They were just in high school the entire movie. Shredder was the villain. And then part of the process of making this—and that’s one of the amazing things about animation—is because you don’t have to do a live-action shoot on a compressed schedule, you have a lot of time to make decisions and make sure that you’re making the best decision. And we dropped some of that out. Maybe halfway through we’re like, ‘It can’t be Shredder. He’s a human. It’s too much, too soon. He’s too big of a presence.’”
In the movie, the villain is Superfly, a fellow mutant whose origins should not solely tied to the Turtles in some distinctive methods however who shares the human-hating viewpoint of their father, Splinter.
“[We said] for this story about the turtles being accepted and finding a place in the world, it would really make sense, and it would really help the story, if the villain was a mutant like they are with a similar back story,” Rowe mentioned. “And [he] could maybe, like, be able to have a conversation with Splinter about ‘Look, we both hate humans. You go about it this way, I’m just going about it this way. And we’re like, ‘That’s what this movie needs.’ Hence Superfly.”
But might Shredder present up in a sequel, particularly since—in the time between our interview and this text—each a sequel and TV present have been introduced?
“There was a point where we were like, ‘This is coming together pretty good. We’re liking what we’re making. We’re not blowing it. We’re not whiffing it,’” Rowe mentioned. “So likely based on the importance of this IP to Paramount, we will likely be making a sequel or have the opportunity to explore more things later… I think everybody wants to spend more time with these characters and I think there’s a lot of things in the lore that we haven’t been able to address yet.”
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem is in theaters August 2. We’ll have extra from Rowe subsequent week.
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