We Can Be Heroes
Mục Lục
We Can Be Heroes
Directed by
Robert Rodriguez
Produced by
Robert Rodriguez
Racer Rodriguez
Ben Ormand (Executive Producer)
Ben Ormand (Executive Producer)
Written by
Robert Rodriguez
Starring
Priyanka Chopra
Christian Slater
YaYa Gosselin
Akira Akbar
Pedro Pascal
Sung Kang
Boyd Holbrook
Haley Reinhart
Music by
Rebel Rodriguez
Studio(s)
Double R Productions
Distributor
Netflix
Released
December 25, 2020
Running time
100 minutes
Language
English
Followed by
Untitled Heroics Sequel[1]
We Can Be Heroes is an American superhero film written, directed and produced by Robert Rodriguez. Though it features the characters SharkBoy and LavaGirl, it is not a sequel to The Adventures of SharkBoy and LavaGirl, and is set in a separate universe.[2][3]
It was released on Christmas Day, 2020 on Netflix. On January 4, 2021, Netflix announced that over 44 million families had watched We Can Be Heroes in its first four weeks. They officially ordered a sequel, with Rodriguez to write and direct.[1]
Synopsis
When alien invaders kidnap Earth’s superheroes, their kids are whisked away to a government safe house. But whip-smart tween Missy Moreno will stop at nothing to rescue her superhero dad, Marcus Moreno. Missy teams up with the rest of the super kids to escape their mysterious government babysitter, Ms. Granada. If they’re going to save their parents, they’ll have to work together by using their individual powers – from elasticity to time control to predicting the future – and form an out-of-this-world team.
Netflix summary
summary
When alien invaders capture Earth’s superheroes, their kids must learn to work together to save their parents — and the planet.
Second Netflix summary
Super strength. Elasticity. Turning back time. Alone, their powers are special. Together, they may be unstoppable.
Plot
Missy Moreno is at home with her dad, Marcus, when they receive word to come to the rescue of heroes where Missy has to go with her father and be with other Heroics’ children.
Missy meets the other children there: Wheels, who possesses super-intelligence; Noodles, who can stretch his body; Ojo, who is mute and communicates through art; A-Capella, who can move objects by singing; Slo-Mo, who is always in slow motion; Face Maker, who can make any face; Rewind and Fast Forward, twins that can alter time; Wild Card, who has immense power but no control over it; and Guppy, who has “shark strength” and can shape water into anything.
The kids watch the battle between the aliens and Heroics on television, ending with the Heroics’ capture. Missy realizes that Ojo’s drawings tell the future. When a drawing shows aliens breaking into the vault, the kids hatch a plan to escape.
Face Maker tricks the guards into coming into the vault where Guppy subdues them, but not before one of the guards triggers an emergency lockdown. Rewind sends them back in time, Wheels stops the guard from pushing the button, and Noodles steals their security badges. Mrs. Granada spots Missy in the hallway and seals the doors, but A-Capella makes a staircase to the roof, allowing them to escape. Noodles secures a vehicle, and the kids escape.
They land at the home of Missy’s grandmother, Anita Moreno, who is the Heroics’ trainer and helps the kids master their powers and work as a team. The aliens arrive and Grandma sends the kids through a tunnel that leads to an empty field before she is captured. The kids spot an empty alien craft and use it to reach the Mother ship. Locating a room with a purple pyramid, they see the president and Ms. Granada speaking. They are alien spies, sent to prepare Earth for a “takeover”. The kids are placed in a cell. Guppy makes a replica of the key from the children’s tears and opens the door. A fight between the kids and the aliens ensues, and Wild Card is caught and taken for questioning while the others seek the pyramid.
Wheels hacks into the motherboard, but Ojo reveals that she can speak and is Supreme Commander of the aliens. Missy communicates with Wild Card in the control room; Face Maker has switched places with him. Granada goes after Wild Card, but not before the protective shield around the motherboard is deactivated. With the kids holding off the aliens, Wheels and Noodles remove the motherboard and swap it with a new one deactivating the alien’s rocket and foiling the takeover. To the kids’ surprise, their parents emerge from the rocket. Ojo reveals that she and Ms. Granada faked the “takeover” to train the kids to be the new Heroics. The kids reunite with their parents and are soon ready to save the world.
Cast
Production
Development
Netflix approached Robert Rodriguez saying his films always did well on their service and that no one else makes the kind of live action family friendly films he makes.[2] Robert Rodriguez wrote, directed, and produced the film through his Double R Productions for Netflix.[9][10][11][12]
Casting
Priyanka Chopra was announced to star in the film[10], along with Christian Slater and Pedro Pascal.[13][14][15]
Filming
Principal photography began in August 2019, shooting in Texas.[13] Visual effects were provided by Weta Digital.[2][16]
Critical response
Audience viewership
Upon its release the film was the most-watched title in its opening weekend, then finished third the following weekend before returning to first in its third weekend.[17][18] It finished second behind new Netflix release Outside the Wire in its fourth weekend.[19] It was revealed that the film have been seen by 53 million of households during the first four weeks.[20]
Critical response
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 74% based on 46 reviews, with an average rating of 6.00/10, while audiences scored at 41% based on over 500 ratings, with an average rating of 2.8/5. The site’s consensus reads, “Although it may be too zany for adults, We Can Be Heroes balances its sophisticated themes with heart and zealous originality.”[21] According to Metacritic, which compiled eight reviews and calculated an average score of 53 out of 100, the film received “mixed or average reviews”.[22]
David Ehrlich of IndieWire called it a “zany, imaginative, and extremely kid-oriented Avengers riff that combines major stars with Snapchat-level special effects in order to lend a live-action Saturday morning cartoon vibe to a story about seizing your own destiny, We Can Be Heroes is the ultimate Troublemaker movie.”[23]
Sequel
In January 2021, Netflix announced they are planning to develop a sequel.[1]
By August of the same year, Rodriguez confirmed that he would return in his role as director, while announcing that principal photography would take place in 2022.[24]
Trivia
- At first, We Can Be Heroes wasn’t planned to be linked to The Adventures of SharkBoy and LavaGirl. Robert Rodriguez added “In the original script, they weren’t in there because I wanted to deliver an original story and then once that was done, I said ‘I would love to try and borrow from the other studio, the characters of SharkBoy and LavaGirl’ and so I put them on the adult team [thinking] that will help legitimize the adult team.“[25]
- He also confirmed that The Adventures of SharkBoy and LavaGirl and We Can Be Heroes are alternate universes, saying “It was more like we borrowed them. It’s not set in that universe.”.[3]
- Rodriguez even toyed with the idea of putting his characters Carmen and Juni Cortez from his Spy Kids franchise in We Can Be Heroes, but thought that “really would be trying to force another set of parents in there“, and eventually narrowed down to SharkBoy and LavaGirl because they were his original superheroes.[26]
- Rodriguez wanted to bring back SharkBoy and LavaGirl for years, and looked to the Marvel Cinematic Universe, particularly their version of Spider-Man, for inspiration.[27][28]
- The reason why Rodriguez didn’t bring Lautner back was because he told him and Dooley it would be a small role and they wouldn’t talk much. Rodriguez said “It was never meant as a sequel to that movie. This was always an original film for Netflix. So I asked Taylor Dooley if she could be a lead. It wasn’t about them, so there wasn’t a lot of dialogue. There’s a little bit with her and her connection with the daughter, and she was up for coming back, coloring her hair. But I did call Taylor [Lautner] to let him know, ‘There’s no dialogue. It’s not about the parents. It’s not really a sequel — you’d have your face covered the whole time.’ I wanted him to kind of look like Batman. There wasn’t a big enough role for him to do. It wasn’t about those characters. It was fine if he couldn’t be in it, because it would draw more attention to it. He became such a big star after Twilight that he would have an expectation. Could you imagine if he was in it, and then they see it and they’re like, ‘Wait! His face is covered the whole time! Hey, he didn’t have any dialogue!’ It’d certainly look like a demerit against him, and I wouldn’t want that. It wasn’t about him, it was just to use the characters more than the actors. Maybe if this is really successful and there’s a bigger play later, it’d be more worth his time. But the way it was, it was not a big role at all.“[7]
- While writing the script for We Can Be Heroes, Rodriguez found himself revisiting the notes and journals he kept while doing Spy Kids and The Adventures of SharkBoy and LavaGirl, as tapping back into some of those sources of inspiration was crucial for creating “something that just feels like those films, but it’s still new and fresh for today”.[29]
- The tentacles of the Aliens needed to be gross and slimy, but not to the point where it’s scary to young children.[16]
- Spy Kids and The Adventures of SharkBoy and LavaGirl were based on Rodriguez’s experience growing up in a family of 10 children, while We Can Be Heroes was more based on his experience as a father raising his children.[29]
- Many of the characteristics seen in the film’s female characters are inspired by Rodriguez’s daughter, Rihannon Rodriguez: Ojo’s love of drawing on an iPad (all of the pictures we see on Ojo’s iPad were drawn by Rhiannon on set as the scenes were being shot); A Capella’s incredible singing ability; Missy Moreno’s tough-guy handshake. In fact, the character of Missy Moreno was inspired by Rhiannon altogether: “Missy” has been Rhiannon’s nickname since she was two-years-old. Even her initials, “MM,” were meant to mirror Rhiannon’s.[4] Rodriguez said “It really was a way to capture their childhood, the fun we had and the parenting and the sort of mentorship and partnering with your children that takes place — and how they become better than us. That’s really the story of the movie. I love showing mentorship in the film because as a mentor, you always end up learning more from the people you’re trying to mentor than they learn from you, so it goes both ways.“[29]
- The film’s original script had more than 11 superhero kids. Some of the powers ended up getting consolidated while others were cut. Among the powers that don’t appear in the film: toxic farts; a huge, Hulk-like arm (that isn’t as strong as the other regular-sized arm!); and the ability to know it all.[4]
- All the child actors had to learn to do their own stunts, as there is no such thing as a “stunt kid” in Hollywood.
- Lotus Blossom took singing lessons in preparation for her role and became a talented singer in her own right. But the higher notes were blended with Haley Reinhart’s (who plays A Capella’s mother, Ms. Vox) to give her voice an extra-otherworldly effect.[4]
- In addition to Lotus Blossom, Andrew Diaz, who plays Facemaker, also had martial arts training; Isaiah Russell-Bailey, who plays Rewind, is great at parkour; and Vivien Blair was shockingly good at throwing people 3x her size. All of their natural abilities were woven into the film.[4]
- Vivien Blair watched The Adventures of SharkBoy and LavaGirl three times in preparation for the role. She went to a Tae Kwon Do school, and was training since she was five.[30]
- Rodriguez hopes to explore more of We Can Be Heroes after its success. He stated “I came up with a bunch of ideas for future movies, but we have to see how this one does, obviously. I would love to (make more), because we’ve already got a template for more. I think it’ll do well, but until it happens, you really can’t say, and then no one can invest money in something until they know they know it’s working. So we’ll see. Hopefully everybody sees it and we can make more. I’d love to make more. They’re so fun.[31]
- Missy Moreno’s lack of a superpower was intentional from the start. “I wanted to make the main character who makes the biggest difference the one who didn’t have powers. Having her be able to inspire greatness out of others and have them use their talents better was a message I wanted to send about the importance of everybody. No matter where you’re from, you can make a difference,” says Rodriguez.[4]
- As the youngest kid on set, Vivien Blair — who plays Sharkboy and Lavagirl’s daughter, Guppy — didn’t have a smartphone to play videogames with the other kids while she wasn’t shooting. To keep her entertained, Robert Rodriguez would play her favorite card games like Go Fish and Avocado Smash! with her. The games ended up playing a huge role in getting the right reactions from Vivien when there wasn’t anything in front of her to react to: “I need you more excited, so imagine it’s Avocado Smash!” Rodriguez would say…and he’d get the reaction he wanted.[4]
- Pedro Pascal’s black t-shirt and jeans is a nod to Robert Rodriguez’s signature look. So are his character Marcus Moreno’s absentminded egg cracking skills in an early scene in the film.[4]
- Robert and Rhiannon Rodriguez drew the squiggle monsters that Ojo brings to life during the film’s final scene. “The idea was that a child created these monsters and they don’t just show up out of nowhere, but that they came from her pen, and the pen is always mightier than the sword,” he says.[4]
- Vivien Blair was given a pair of sunglasses when she couldn’t help but squint in the sunlight during an outdoor scene. The look was so cool they became Guppy’s trademark anytime she went into a shark frenzy.[4]
- Max is absent from the movie, even though he created SharkBoy and LavaGirl in The Adventures of SharkBoy and LavaGirl, but like Taylor Lautner, Cayden Boyd wouldn’t have been able to return either.
Gallery
Images
Videos
We Can Be Heroes starring Priyanka Chopra Jonas & Pedro Pascal Official Teaser Netflix
We Can Be Heroes starring Priyanka Chopra & Pedro Pascal Official Trailer Netflix
Watch This Before You See We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
We Can Be Heroes – Meet the Super Kids Scene – Netflix
We Can Be Heroes – The Heroics Get Captured Scene – Netflix
Priyanka Chopra-Jonas Orders Pedro Pascal To Fight Scene – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
The One We Can Be Heroes Scene That Makes Us Love Priyanka Chopra Jonas Even More – Netflix
Small Details You Missed In We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
We lied to you about We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
Robert Rodriguez talks inspiration behind ‘We Can Be Heroes’
Robert Rodriguez Masterclass – Alita, Spy Kids, Sin City, Machete & We Can Be Heroes – Interview
WE CAN BE HEROES – ROBERT RODRIGUEZ INTERVIEW ( 2020)
Robert Rodriguez- Parents Need to Be Better Role Models
‘It Was Really Trippy!’- Robert Rodriguez Clears Up Spy Kids Debate & Talks ‘We Can Be Heroes’
Filmmaker Robert Rodriguez on the Hardest Scenes to Shoot in Movies – BGN Interview
We Can Be Heroes Director Robert Rodriguez on the Secret to Making a Good Kids’ Film
We Can Be Heroes Robert Rodriguez Interview
Robert Rodriguez on his latest Netflix superhero movie We Can Be Heroes
Super Kids And Their Superpowers – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
Robert Rodriguez Breaks Down The Visual Effects In We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
We Can Be Heroes- VFX Breakdown by Netflix
We Can Be Heroes VFX – Weta Digital
What WE CAN BE HEROES Looks Like Without CGI
Exclusive Behind The Scenes Of We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
Meet the Team in We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
Kids Do Their Own Stunts in We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
We Can Be Heroes- Stories from Set – Netflix Futures
Netflix’s We Can Be Heroes Cast Does Impressions — Missy, Wild Card and More
‘We Can Be Heroes’ Netflix Cast Talks Funniest Behind-the-Scenes Moments — Missy, Wild Card & More
Pedro Pascal & Christian Slater Interviewed by Guppy from We Can Be Heroes
Meet Missy Moreno – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
Guppy’s Best Moments – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
Slo-Mo’s Best Moments – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
Ojo’s Best Moments – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
The Best Of We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
Best Battles in We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
Meet the We Can Be Heroes Film Team – Netflix
All the Super Kid’s Superpowers in We Can Be Heroes 🦸♀️🦸♂️ Netflix Futures
A Capella Performs “Heroes” Full Song – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
The Best Of WE CAN BE HEROES In Other Languages – Netflix
Ojo Behind the Scenes – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
Making Of “Meet The Super Kids” Scene – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
The Super Kids Take You Behind The Scenes – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
WE CAN BE HEROES- Meet Missy Moreno & Guppy!
We Can Be Heroes Cast Reveal the Funniest Behind-The-Scenes Moments
A Capella Behind the Scenes – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
How to…
A Day in Brooklyn w- YaYa Gosselin 🍕☕️ We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
Tricking & Parkour Training w- Isaiah Russell-Bailey 💪 We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
Tie-Dye w- Akira Akbar 🌈 We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
Practice Taekwondo w- Vivien Lyra Blair 🥋 We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
Kickboxing w- Lotus Blossom – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
How to Green Screen w- Andy Walken 🟩 We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
Learn How to Play Guitar w- Hala Finley 🎸 We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
How to Care for Your Pet Lizard w- Nathan Blair 🦎 We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
Ride Horses w- Andrew Diaz 🏇 We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
DIY Valentine’s Day Paper Airplanes 💘 We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
How to Draw Dinosaurs w- Lyon Daniels 🦖 We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
How to Solve a Puzzle Cube w- Dylan Henry Lau – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix Futures
We Can Be Filmmakers
We Can Be Heroes Film School With The Real Ojo – Netflix
We Can Be Heroes Film School – Behind The Scenes – Netflix
How Guppy Got Her Shark Strength – We Can Be Heroes – Netflix
We Can Be Heroes Behind the Scenes – Creating the Final Battle – Netflix
References