Over the years, Seth Rogen’s made a identify for himself in adapting (and typically offering his performing skills to) lesser identified comics or properties like Invincible and The Boys. You’d assume by this level, and with these he’d have jumped ship to one thing larger—specifically Marvel or DC, much like what indie administrators have carried out prior to now. But it seems like Rogen’s high-quality the place he’s, and doesn’t plan on altering that up anytime quickly.
Talking to Polygon about Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, the outlet requested Rogen what was stopping him from dealing with a Marvel or DC challenge, and he was candid in admitting to being afraid of that sort of dedication. Specifically, a worry of “The Process” that Marvel makes use of for all its films and exhibits which he admitted to not having any inside information of. He famous that it appears to be understanding “very well” for the studio, however puzzled if that course of is one he and frequent collaborator Evan Goldberg would “ultimately get really frustrated with.”
“Evan and I have a pretty specific way we work; [we’ve] been writers for 20 years at this point. […] What’s nice about Mutant Mayhem is that we’re the producers of this. So we dictated the system, and we dictated the process in a lot of ways.” Calling himself and Goldberg “control freaks,” he acknowledged that that is what he enjoys about establishing The Boys and Invincible for Prime Video: “We’re creating the infrastructure and process for them, not plugging into someone else’s infrastructure and process.”
Rogen additional informed Polygon that his number of what to adapt mirrors how he’d use to enter comedian outlets as a child and determine what to purchase. “There are a lot of comic books I love and things I love, but I’m like, ‘What would I add?’” he stated. (Akira, apparently, is just not one thing he thinks he might add to.) What drew him and Goldberg to Mutant Mayhem was the “unexplored facet” of seeing the Ninja Turtles as teenagers first slightly than turtles who occur to be teenaged. “As people who have written a lot of teenage films and have been cinematically linked to that genre a lot over the years…A lot of it is just thinking, ‘Could we bring this to life well and do it in a way that, as fans of it, we wouldn’t be annoyed with ourselves if we were watching it from the outside?’”
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem hits theaters on August 2. From our assessment and that of different shops, it seems like Rogen, Goldberg, and director Jeff Rowe introduced the Turtles to life fairly nicely—and Paramount thinks the identical, since a sequel and TV present have already been greenlit.
Want extra io9 information? Check out when to anticipate the most recent Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s subsequent for the DC Universe on movie and TV, and all the pieces it’s good to learn about the way forward for Doctor Who.