Men in Black 3
Men in Black 3 | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Barry Sonnenfeld |
Produced by | |
Written by | Etan Cohen |
Based on | |
Starring | |
Music by | Danny Elfman |
Cinematography | Bill Pope |
Edited by | Don Zimmerman |
Production company |
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Distributed by | Sony Pictures Releasing |
Release date |
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Running time | 106 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $215–225 million[2][3] |
Box office | $624 million[3] |
Men in Black 3 (alternatively Men in Black III, and stylized as MIB³) is a 2012 American science fiction action comedy film directed by Barry Sonnenfeld and starring Will Smith, Tommy Lee Jones and Josh Brolin. It is the third installment in the Men in Black film series which in turn is loosely based on the comic book series The Men in Black by Lowell Cunningham. It was released fifteen years after the original Men in Black (1997) and ten years after the first sequel, Men in Black II (2002).[4] Sonnenfeld and Steven Spielberg returned as director and executive producer, respectively. In the film, Boris the Animal, an old enemy of Agent K, escapes from prison and travels back in time to kill the younger K in order to allow his species, a ruthless alien race known as Boglodites, to attack Earth. This forces Agent J to go back in time and team up with K's younger self to save his partner and the world.
Men in Black 3 was released on May 25, 2012 by Columbia Pictures and grossed over $624 million worldwide, making it the 10th highest-grossing film of 2012.[3][5] Unadjusted for inflation, it is the highest-grossing film in the series.[6][7] The film also received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised it as an improvement over its predecessor. A spin-off film in the series, Men in Black: International, was released on June 14, 2019.
Plot[edit]
In 2012, an alien criminal named Boris the Animal, a Boglodite, escapes from a maximum-security prison on the Moon to take revenge on Agent K, who shot off his left arm and captured him in 1969. He confronts K and his partner Agent J, and tells him he is "already dead". Back at MiB Headquarters, J peruses MiB's files and discovers K was responsible not only for capturing Boris, but for deploying the "ArcNet", a shield that prevented the Boglodites from conquering Earth, causing their extinction.
Using an illegal time-jump device, Boris travels back in time to July 16, 1969, to kill the young Agent K. With history altered so that K is now long-dead, only J's own memory is somehow completely unaffected, and no one else from the Agency understands his obsession with K until Agent O, the new Chief of MIB following Zed's death, deduces there has been a fracture in the space-time continuum. With K gone, the ArcNet was never deployed, leaving nothing to protect the present-day Earth from a Boglodite invasion.
Knowing from the Agency's records Boris will commit a murder there in 1969, J uses the same device to travel back in time to July 15, 1969, and goes to Coney Island to kill Boris and save K and the world. However, he ends up arrested by young K, who takes him to MiB Headquarters and prepares to neuralyze him, but decides at the last minute to investigate J's claims that he traveled from the future to protect him. K and J follow clues, leading them to a bowling alley, then The Factory, where they run into Andy Warhol, who turns out to be MiB Agent W in disguise. They then encounter an alien named Griffin, who is in possession of the ArcNet. Griffin, who can see all possible future timelines and outcomes, senses Boris is coming and flees, but tells J and K where to meet him so he can give them the ArcNet. There, Boris captures Griffin. J and K pursue and rescue Griffin, acquiring the ArcNet. Young Boris escapes and Old Boris arrives on the early morning of July 16 and they team up.
Upon learning that they must go to Cape Canaveral so they can attach the ArcNet to the Apollo 11 rocket to deploy it in space, J reveals that Boris will kill K, who initially takes the news badly. J, K, and Griffin fly there using jetpacks, but they are stopped and arrested by the military. After J and K fail to convince a colonel, Griffin shows him the future, revealing to him the importance of their mission, and he assists them in getting to the launch site. As the agents climb up the rocket's launch tower, they are attacked by both young and old Boris. Unable to stop old Boris, J uses his time-travel device to evade his attacks so he can knock him off of one of the launch tower bridges. K shoots off young Boris's left arm, knocking him off of the tower while also restoring the timeline. K attaches the ArcNet to the rocket and it is deployed successfully when the rocket launches, with old Boris incinerated by the rocket exhaust.
Young Boris attacks K on a beach, but the colonel saves K by sacrificing himself. Boris, knowing he is going to be arrested from his older self, goads K to do just so, but this provokes K into killing him, thus preventing the cycle from repeating. The colonel's young son James arrives and when he inquires about his father, K neuralyzes him and tells him only that his father is a hero. Observing from afar, J realizes that the young boy is himself, the colonel was his father, K has been watching over him his whole life and that he was there when the timeline changed, thus explaining why he was the only one who remembered K in the alternate 2012.
With his mission complete, J returns to 2012, where he reconciles with K, who tells him the Boglodites have been extinct for forty years while J implies his new knowledge of the secret K has been hiding to protect him. Griffin observes this, and says it is his new favorite moment in human history.
Cast[edit]
- Will Smith as Agent J
- Cayen Martin as Young Agent J
- Tommy Lee Jones as Agent K
- Josh Brolin as Young Agent K
- Jemaine Clement as Boris the Animal
- Emma Thompson as Agent O
- Alice Eve as Young Agent O
- Michael Stuhlbarg as Griffin
- Mike Colter as Colonel James Darrell Edwards Jr.
- Michael Chernus as Jeffrey Price
- Nicole Scherzinger as Lily
- David Rasche as Agent X
- Keone Young as Mr. Wu
- Bill Hader as Agent W
- Will Arnett as Agent AA
- Lanny Flaherty as Obadiah Price
Justin Bieber, Lady Gaga, Yao Ming and Tim Burton make uncredited cameo appearances as aliens on the TV monitors. Rick Baker appears in a cameo as the Brain Alien. Tony Shalhoub has an uncredited cameo as a 1960s Newsdealer.
Production[edit]
The film's premise was first proposed to director Barry Sonnenfeld by Will Smith during the filming of Men in Black II in 2002, with Smith suggesting that his character, Agent J, travel back in time to save his partner, Agent K, while at the same time exploring Agent K's backstory. Sonnenfeld said the idea "turned out to be a very long process of development, mainly because of the knotting [sic] issues of time travel."[8] It was reported that Smith and executives were leery about bringing back Sonnenfeld because of conflicts on the set of Men in Black II.[9] In a lawsuit filed against his former agents over commissions, Sonnenfeld alleged that Sony considered other directors for Men in Black 3.[9][10] Sonnenfeld ultimately convinced all involved that he had a strong vision for the film.[9]
The film was first announced on April 1, 2009, by Sony Pictures Entertainment president Rory Bruer during a Sony ShoWest presentation.[11] By October 2009, Etan Cohen had been hired to write the screenplay.[12] Sonnenfeld read the script and started working on it in January 2010.[13] As of March 2010, Will Smith remained undecided whether to join the film or another, The City That Sailed.[14] Sonnenfeld in May 2010 confirmed the return of Tommy Lee Jones and Smith.[15] Both had expressed interest in 2008 in reprising their roles.[16][17] The filmmakers also included Walter F. Parkes and Laurie MacDonald as producers, with Steven Spielberg as executive producer; all were producers of the two previous films.[18]
In June 2010, writer David Koepp was hired to rewrite the Cohen script.[19] A third writer, Jeff Nathanson, was hired in November 2010 to rewrite the segment of the script that takes place in 1969.[20] Nathanson and Koepp, along with producer Spielberg, had previously worked together on the 2008 film Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, which Spielberg directed.
Special effects artist Rick Baker created the practical aliens and prosthetic makeup for the film, reprising his role from the previous two Men in Black films. In designing the look for the alien creatures, Baker used the time travel plot device as a reason to design "retro" looking aliens reminiscent of science fiction B movies of the era, saying, "In 2012 the aliens should look like Men in Black aliens and in 1969 they should be retro aliens. Fishbowl space helmets, guys with space suits with ribbed things on it, exposed brains, [and] bug eyes."[21]
Principal photography began on November 16, 2010,[22] even though, "We knew starting the movie that we didn't have a finished second or third act," director Sonnenfeld said in 2012. "Was it responsible? The answer is, if this movie does as well as I think it will, it was genius. If it's a total failure, then it was a really stupid idea."[23] Filming was originally slated to commence on October 18, 2010, and continue until May 2011, in New York City,[24] with shooting starting in 2010 partly in order to take advantage of a New York tax break in which the state rebates 30 percent of production costs incurred there.[25] Filming was ultimately split into two parts, the first taking place from November until about Christmas 2010; the filmmakers announced shooting would begin again in mid-February, but it was delayed until April.[25] Sonnenfeld initially stated he would be shooting in 3D, but later decided to film in 2D and convert to 3D during post-production.[26][27][28][29]
Set photos for the film appeared online on November 17, 2010, showing Smith, Jones, Emma Thompson, and Nicole Scherzinger.[30][31] Filming was done in April 2011 in the Morris Park section of The Bronx.[32] Parts of Coney Island, in Brooklyn, had parking and filming permits posted for April 24 and May 2–4, 2011, production dates for what the permits titled MIB3.[33] Shooting also took place in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood, and was scheduled to wrap in June.[34]
For the film, the Ford Taurus SHO was selected as the MIB's official car, replacing the Ford LTD Crown Victoria and Mercedes-Benz E-Class from the first two films.[35] For the 1969 scenes, a 1964 Ford Galaxie was used as the MIB's official car.
This is the first time Frank the Pug was absent in a Men in Black movie, as well as Chief Zed, Jack Jeebs, and actor David Cross. Instead Zed is written in the story as having died and been immortalized at MIB Headquarters, and a portrait of Frank can be seen in J's apartment. An advertisement for 'The Incredible Speaking Pug' can be seen as Agent J enters Coney Island during his time in 1969.
Release[edit]
Activision released MIB: Alien Crisis on May 22, 2012, for Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and Nintendo Wii, featuring a never-before-seen MIB agent rather than Agent J or Agent K.[36][37] Gameloft also developed a mobile phone video game based on the film, released on May 17, 2012, for iOS and Android.[38]
Under distribution by Sony's Columbia Pictures division, the film was theatrically released on May 25, 2012.[39] The film was released on DVD, Blu-ray, and Blu-ray 3D on November 30, 2012, and additionally as part of a Men in Black trilogy box set on Blu-ray.[40][41] The trilogy was released on 4K UHD Blu-Ray on December 5, 2017.[42]
Music[edit]
Men in Black 3 | |
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Soundtrack album by | |
Released | May 29, 2012 |
Genre | Film score |
Length | 53:38 |
Label | Sony Classical |
The soundtrack for the film was composed by Danny Elfman and was released on May 29, 2012, four days after the film.
The song "Back in Time" by rapper Pitbull, which was not included on the film's soundtrack album but accompanies the end credits of the film, was released as a single on March 26, 2012.[43] It is the first lead single released to accompany a Men in Black film not to be performed by Will Smith.
There were also many songs from the 1960s that feature, including; "2000 Light Years From Home" by The Rolling Stones; "I'm Waiting For The Man" by The Velvet Underground; "Strange Brew" by Cream; and "Pictures of Matchstick Men" by Status Quo
Reception[edit]
Box office[edit]
MIB 3 grossed $179 million in the US and Canada, and $445 million in other countries, for a worldwide total of $624 million.[44] It had a worldwide opening weekend of $189.9 million,[45] and had the biggest worldwide IMAX Memorial-Day weekend ($12.7 million from 474 theaters), surpassing the previous year's record of Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides.[46]
In North America, MIB 3 earned $1.55 million during its midnight run from 2,233 locations.[47] On its opening day, the film debuted at the top of the box office, grossing $17.7 million (including midnight grosses). This was slightly lower than the opening days of its predecessors.[48] During its three-day opening weekend, it topped the box office with $54.6 million, which was higher than the opening weekends of the two previous films.[49] The movie then earned an additional $14.7 million on Memorial Day,[50] bringing its four-day weekend total to $69.3 million.[51] The opening weekend audience was 54 percent male and 56 percent over the age of 25. The film received a B+ at CinemaScore.[49] It remained in first place at the North American box office for one week.[50]
Outside North America, MIB 3 is the highest-grossing film of the Men In Black franchise[52] and the tenth highest-grossing 2012 film.[53] It made $135.3 million on its opening weekend from 85 territories. Its highest-grossing openings were recorded in China ($21.7 million), and Russia and the CIS ($16.9 million).[54][55] It was in first place at the box office outside North America for two consecutive weekends.[56]
Critical response[edit]
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 68% based on 246 reviews, with an average rating of 6.06/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "It isn't exactly a persuasive argument for the continuation of the franchise–but Men in Black III is better than its predecessor and manages to exceed expectations."[5] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 58 out of 100, based on 38 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews."[57] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale, the same score earned by the first two films.[58]
Roger Ebert gave the film 3 out of 4 stars, in particular praising Brolin's role as the young Agent K, which he cited as an excellent example of good casting. Ebert also praised the "ingenious plot, bizarre monsters, audacious cliff-hanging" and the "virtuoso final sequence."[59] Richard Roeper gave the film 3.5 out of 5 stars while saying, "It's that rare threequel that doesn't suck. Great special effects, surprising amount of heart."[60] A. O. Scott of The New York Times also gave it 3.5 out of 5 stars and commented, "Men in Black 3 arrives in the multiplexes of the world with no particular agenda. Which may be part of the reason that it turns out to be so much fun."[61] Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly noted, "Sonnenfeld and Cohen move their baby along with an integrity and gait that ought to serve as a blueprint for other filmmakers faced with the particular challenges of reviving big-ticket and time-dated hunks of pop culture."[62] Rafer Guzman of Newsday wrote, "the franchise is no longer the zenith of blockbusterism, and the gooey effects from Hollywood veteran Rick Baker look overly familiar, but Men in Black 3 remains an amiable comedy with some fondly familiar faces."[63]
Director Paul Thomas Anderson praised the film, saying, "It was [expletive] great. [sic] ... The time-travel stuff [made me] cry my eyes out. I'm a sucker for that stuff."[64]
Rene Rodriguez of The Miami Herald gave the film 1 out of 4 stars and stated, "Men in Black 3 is so dull and empty, it's the first movie that has ever made me think 'Thank God this is in 3D.'"[65]
Possible sequel and spin-off[edit]
Before its production with different leads, both Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones said that they would "consider" appearing in a fourth film.[66] Jones said it would be "easy to pick up where we left off. We know what we are doing, we know how to do it. It's just a hell of a lot of fun."[67]
In July 2012, Columbia chief executive Doug Belgrad said:
We're very pleased with the financial performance of Men in Black 3, and we believe it is an ongoing franchise. We're going to do [another one], but we don't have clarity yet on how it should be done.[68]
In early 2013, Oren Uziel was writing a Men in Black 4 screenplay for Sony Pictures.[69]
In September 2015, series producers Walter Parkes and Laurie MacDonald stated the series would be rebooted as a trilogy, most likely without the involvement of Will Smith.[70]
In December 2014, it was revealed that Sony was planning a crossover between Men in Black and Jump Street. The news was leaked after Sony's system was hacked[71] and then confirmed by the directors of the Jump Street films, Chris Miller and Phil Lord, during an interview.[72][73] James Bobin was announced as director in 2016.[74] On April 13, 2016, the movie was officially announced and revealed to be titled MIB 23.[75] However, development has since appeared to cease.[76]
A spin-off titled Men in Black: International was released in June 2019, starring Chris Hemsworth and Tessa Thompson, with Emma Thompson reprising her role.[77][78]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
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- ^ Grover, Ronald; Richwine, Lisa (May 28, 2012). ""Men in Black" sequel powers past "Avengers"". Reuters. Retrieved June 13, 2012.
Sony said it spent an estimated $215 million to make the new "Men in Black" movie.
- ^ a b c "MIB 3 (2012)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
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- ^ a b "Men in Black III" Rotten Tomatoes
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- ^ "Will Smith Originated Men in Black 3". Contactmusic.com, quoting Empire magazine article not online as of March 25, 2012. February 26, 2012. Archived from the original on May 14, 2012. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
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- ^ Wood, Mark Dundas (September 23, 2010). "New York Production Listings". Backstage. Retrieved October 8, 2010.
- ^ a b Weinstein, Joshua L.; Lang, Brent (June 22, 2011). "'Men in Black III': Delays, Script Problems and Will Smith's Really Big Trailer". TheWrap.com. p. 2. Archived from the original on July 3, 2011.
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- ^ "Is it real or is it fake 3D". realorfake3d.com. Retrieved June 7, 2012.
- ^ "To 3D Or Not To 3D: Buy The Right Men In Black 3 Ticket". CinemaBlend.com. Retrieved June 7, 2012.
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- ^ Men in Black Trilogy 4K Blu-ray, retrieved May 19, 2018
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- ^ MIB 3 (2012) - International Box Office Results
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- ^ FRITZ, BEN (December 10, 2014). "Sony Plans 'Men in Black' – 'Jump Street' Crossover". wsj.com. Retrieved December 11, 2014.
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- ^ Alexander, Julia (March 4, 2016). "Report: 23 Jump Street will be a crossover with Men in Black". Polygon.
- ^ That 21 Jump Street-Men In Black Crossover Is Actually Happening
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- ^ Chitwood, Adam (December 5, 2018). "The 'Men in Black' Reboot Is Titled 'Men in Black International'". Collider. Retrieved December 5, 2018.
External links[edit]
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