The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

How ‘Diary of a Wimpy Kid’ rebooted franchise

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For the new release in the series, the film’s team chose to change the entire cast, including the parents.

The problem with wimpy kids is that they don’t stay wimpy kids.

More than seven years ago, the filmmakers behind the first “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” movie chose young Zachary Gordon to be their Greg Heffley — the titular, relatable boy of Jeff Kinney’s half-billion-dollar “Wimpy Kid” publishing empire.

Today, taller and more chiseled at nearly 20, Gordon looks more like a young teacher at a middle school rather than a beleaguere­d student at one. Likewise, such memorable “Wimpy Kid” actors as Devon Bostick (who played elder brother Rodrick) and Robert Capron (best friend Rowley) have aged out of the roles that they inhabited in the first three “Wimpy Kid” films.

So for the new release in the series, which marks a return for the franchise after five years away, Kinney and his team chose to change the entire cast, including the parents. “Making a fourth Wimpy Kid film with the original cast wouldn’t have been possible,” Kinney says of “Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul,” which opened Friday. “The kids grew up and grew out of their roles, and we knew we’d hit the end of the road with them.”

“The team that worked on the first three films was eager to get back into the Wimpy world,” says Kinney of the franchise, which has grossed about $175 million domestical­ly.

For the title role, the filmmakers made a smooth transition, casting 11-year-old Jason Drucker, who is similar enough to Greg Heffley 1.0 that the effect isn’t overly jarring.

“Casting is the most essential, and most difficult, part of making these movies,” Kinney tells The Washington Post’s Comic Riffs. “You really can’t go forward until you have the right Greg, and once you’ve

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 ??  ?? Jason Drucker inherits the role of Greg Heffley
Jason Drucker inherits the role of Greg Heffley

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