Worf has discovered an interesting chunk of Wing Commander history in a new book called Generation XBox: How Video Games Invaded Hollywood. The book doesn't discuss FMV games at all, but instead talks about how Hollywood's process for adapting video games into films has changed in the past two decades. It includes several pages on the history of the Wing Commander movie's production deal and apparently interviewed both Chris Roberts and Todd Moyer. Here is the Wing Commander section: -- Original update published on July 15, 2012
Very interesting read there. I like the amount of detail the writer dug up about the series and the movie. And I had no idea that Fox so royally screwed the distribution of the film, and that was one of the reasons it did so poorly at the box office.
Again, there is something strange and illogical about the story that leads me to believe it's either a lie, or a half-truth, very incomplete and one-sided. Think about it. If Wing Commander was to serve as a vehicle to get people to come and see the Star Wars trailer, was it in Fox's interest to release the movie with no lead-up, no advertising, no nothing? Where's the sense in that? If you want to turn a movie into a giant piece of advertising, the first thing you'll do is make sure people actually see this movie. Otherwise, you're wasting your time. The alternative, of course, is that everyone wanted to see the Star Wars trailer, and were willing to go to any movie with that trailer attached. This, incidentally, seems more likely to me - I mean, I don't think there were very many people in 1999 who found out about The Phantom Menace after seeing the trailer by pure chance. Quite the opposite, Star Wars fans went out of the way to buy tickets for movies they had no intention of watching, just to see the trailer and leave the cinema. If we accept this alternative as a possibility, it's more than reasonable for Fox to rush the movie to ship it with a trailer... but this leads to the conclusion that the trailer boosted the numbers for Wing Commander, not the opposite. It's definitely a fascinating "what if", though. What if the WC movie had been delayed until the summer, then released with new-and-bearable Kilrathi to an audience freshly disappointed with Star Wars? Would it have done better... or worse, because at the end of the day - it was still a mediocre movie at best?
It's certainly wrong about at least one thing: Wing Commander DID have a TV campaign. They ran commercials for two weeks leading up to the movie, including a somewhat odd one that changed each day to count down how many days were left until the movie came out (which was even odd at the time, because who other than us were counting the days until Wing Commander came out?) With all due respect to the version of history presented in the excerpt... Star Wars was NOT an unstoppable juggernaut preventing anyone else from seeing any other genre movies that summer. How do we know? Because The Matrix made $170 million two weeks after Wing Commander.
One-sided or not, this showed a side of the development of the movie that I don't recall reading about before. Particularly the quotes from Moyer. Thanks for sharing this with us. Even if it didn't end up 'saving' the movie and is just another in a long series of 'what-ifs', it would have been nice to know how it might have turned out if the team had that extra time to work on it. I suppose we'll never know.