The Prince George Citizen

Disney-Fox deal could rock superhero universe

- Citizen news service

Is Disney, that kingdom of magical family fare, about to embrace the R-rated superhero?

In quick-and-efficient votes Friday morning, Disney and 21st Century Fox shareholde­rs approved Disney’s $71.3 billion buyout of some big Fox assets, including Fox’s film and TV production studios, as Variety reports.

The deal is expected to be completed by the middle of next year, with Disney having already received Justice Department approval last month.

That means that Fox – the film studio that launched the second wave of superhero cinema in 2000 – delivers its stable of darker, sometimes ultra-violent comicbook crimefight­ers to Disney, which has kept its Marvel Cinematic Universe squarely in the PG-13 lane.

Fox’s hottest properties include the X-Men and Deadpool, as well as the creatively adrift Fantastic Four franchise. The studio’s X-Men character films, including Deadpool, have grossed $5.7 billion worldwide.

As Marvel and DC have often topped the box office with PG-13 films, Fox in recent years has carved out its own corner with such popular R-rated superhero movies as the Golden Globe-nom- inated Deadpool and the Oscarnomin­ated Logan.

Now, major franchises that helped first make Marvel Comics a publishing powerhouse in the ‘60s and early ‘70s can share the Disney stable – decades after the rights to these different properties were parted out to several studios, as each tried to gain big cash and traction in Hollywood.

Bryan Singer’s X-Men (2000) deserves as much credit as any film for kicking off the current era of massive superhero franchises, eight years before the MCU dawned with Iron Man.

Since the rise of Marvel’s film universe, fans have clamored for studio crossovers to unite Marvel characters on the screen. One step in that direction has paid off handsomely in the past several years, as Sony struck a deal with Marvel for Spider-Man’s solo and team-up movies.

Marvel helped Sony revive its Spidey franchise, and the three films so far that have suited up Tom Holland as Peter Parker have grossed more than $4 billion worldwide combined.

Now, perhaps Disney can work similar magic with the Fantastic Four. The franchise’s first two films did decent box office more than a decade ago, but in 2015, the third film was a creative and commercial dud.

But when it comes to Fox’s successful titles, one question looms significan­t: Will Disney, given its family brand, be willing to release R-rated superhero movies – even under some sort of “new Disney” banner?

If Disney pressures Deadpool to dilute its four-letter language and double-fisted brutality, Ryan Reynolds’s team might balk – and many fans might walk.

Look for Disney, as wise as any studio about turning superheroe­s into profits, to brand and market the migrating Fox properties in a way that retains their sense of being adult fare – even if the films can skirt an “R” rating and squeeze just under a PG-13 rating. Boundaries will be tested, but Deadpool is the only Fox franchise that has been released exclusivel­y with an “R” rating.

Beyond that, the deal should excite Marvel comic-book fans. After all, who doesn’t want to finally see an Avengers and X-Men crossover movie? At last, the franchises are assembled.

 ?? CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE HANDOUT PHOTO ?? Will there be room for this foul-mouthed, ultra-violent superhero at a movie studio now owned by Disney? Ryan Reynolds and Deadpool fans are about to find out.
CITIZEN NEWS SERVICE HANDOUT PHOTO Will there be room for this foul-mouthed, ultra-violent superhero at a movie studio now owned by Disney? Ryan Reynolds and Deadpool fans are about to find out.

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