THE MUMMY Director Stephen Sommers On Why He Was "Insulted" By 2017 Reboot Starring Tom Cruise

THE MUMMY Director Stephen Sommers On Why He Was "Insulted" By 2017 Reboot Starring Tom Cruise

The Mummy director Stephen Sommers has revealed why he felt "insulted" by Universal's poorly-received 2017 reboot, and reflects on making Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson a movie star in The Scorpion King...

By JoshWilding - May 13, 2024 07:05 AM EST
Filed Under: Movies
Source: The Hollywood Reporter

Released in 1999, The Mummy was a hit with $409 million at the worldwide box office (for context, that would be roughly $767 million today). Two sequels followed, as did a spin-off - 2002's The Scorpion King - which put Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson on the map as an actor. 

Stephen Sommers directed the first two movies, passing the baton to Rob Cohen for The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor. Then, in 2017, The Mummy franchise was rebooted as part of Universal's short-lived "Dark Universe."

Tom Cruise took centre stage in what proved to be a rare flop for the A-Lister, and Sommers recently shared his thoughts on the movie while talking to The Hollywood Reporter

"No," he responded when asked if the studio consulted him. "Actually, I was kind of insulted because the writers and director [Alex Kurtzman] of that Tom Cruise one, no one ever contacted me. I contact people if I was going to take over somebody’s thing. The third one, which Rob [Cohen] directed, it’s kind of my baby."

"I didn’t want to step on his toes, so I helped produce it. But I had nothing to do with the Tom Cruise one," Sommers continued. "They never contacted me or called me. I was doing other things, and it’s not like I sat crying. I just think it’s common courtesy."

As for Brendan Fraser's comments about potentially reprising his role as adventurer Rick O'Connell, the filmmaker admitted he hasn't been involved in any talks about a potential revival. 

"All the people at Universal are new after I left. I don’t really know them, and they haven’t got a hold of me, so I don’t know what’s in their heads," Sommers said. "At the same time, it would have to be something really special. Of course, I would work with all of those actors again."

Finally, he reflected on helping make The Rock a star. "He was great. I had never heard of the guy, but then they sent me some footage of him, and he was just perfect. I had to shoot so fast with him because he flew into Marrakesh on Wednesday, and he had to be in Detroit for a WWE thing on Saturday."

"But boy, was he a trooper. As soon as the studio saw the dailies, the president of Universal was calling me up and saying, “You got to write a movie for him.” Somehow over the next week or so, I came up with this idea that became the Scorpion King movie."

There's currently no word on what Universal has planned for The Mummy franchise. While The Rock is revisiting some of his past ventures such as the Fast & Furious franchise and WWE, we're not banking on ever seeing a Scorpion King sequel...

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Yuhio
Yuhio - 5/17/2024, 1:40 AM
Why would they consult him? It was not even a reboot or a remake, it was a totally different film. No Rick O'Connell, no Imhotep or Scorpion King, different time period, so why calling him?
Besides his version of The Mummy was fun but a disgrace to the original 1932 film with Boris Karloff

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