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Snake Eyes:G.I. Joe Origins |
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![]() Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Robert Schwentke |
Screenplay by |
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Story by | Evan Spiliotopoulos |
Based on | G.I. Joe by Hasbro |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Bojan Bazelli |
Edited by | Stuart Levy |
Music by | Martin Todsharow |
Production
companies |
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Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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121 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $88–110 million[1][2] |
Box office | $40.1 million[3][4] |
Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins (or simply Snake Eyes) is a 2021 American superhero film based on the G.I. Joe toy line character Snake Eyes.[5][6] It is the third installment in the G.I. Joe film series. The film is directed by Robert Schwentke from a screenplay by Evan Spiliotopoulos, Joe Shrapnel, and Anna Waterhouse. It serves as an origin story for the title character, while also being a reboot of the film series. The film stars Henry Golding as Snake Eyes, with Andrew Koji, Úrsula Corberó, Samara Weaving, and Iko Uwais in supporting roles.
The project was first announced in May 2018, with Golding being cast in the titular role in August 2019 and the rest of the cast joining in subsequent months. After initial filming took place in Vancouver and Japan from October 2019 to February 2020, reshoots took place in March 2021.
Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins was released in the United States on July 23, 2021, by Paramount Pictures. The film received generally negative reviews from critics,[7] who criticized the writing, editing, and direction of the action scenes, but praised the performances and production values. The film was considered a box-office bomb, grossing over $40 million worldwide against an $88–110 million budget and a $160–175 million break-even point, losing Paramount up to $88 million.
Plot[edit]
Living on the run, a young boy and his father are found by their sinister pursuers. Forced to roll dice to determine his fate, the father is murdered after rolling double ones, but his son escapes.
Twenty years later, the boy has adopted the name “Snake Eyes” and is discovered by Yakuza boss Kenta Takamura, competing in an underground fighting circuit. With the promise of help finding his father’s killer, he agrees to join Kenta’s criminal organization, and is asked to execute a man who infiltrated the gang, but helps him escape instead.
The man is Kenta’s cousin Tommy, who reveals that they were both in line to lead the Arashikage clan, an ancient ninja society. Banished after trying to have Tommy killed, Kenta still seeks control of the clan. Grateful to Snake Eyes, Tommy brings him to his family’s dōjō in Tokyo to be initiated. Tommy’s grandmother Sen, the clan’s current leader, agrees to let Snake Eyes undergo three trials to prove his worth.
In his first test, Snake Eyes is unable to seize a bowl of water from the clan’s Hard Master; realizing this is a test of humility, he succeeds by respectfully asking instead. Unbeknownst to the clan, Snake Eyes has been tasked by Kenta with betraying Tommy; their escape was staged to allow Snake Eyes to win Tommy’s trust, and to steal the clan’s sacred “Jewel of the Sun”.
The clan’s head of security, Akiko, distrusts Snake Eyes, but he accompanies her and Tommy on a raid of Kenta’s gang. They learn through an ally, Major Scarlett O’Hara, that Kenta is allied with the terrorist organization Cobra. Snake Eyes confronts Kenta and his Cobra liaison, the Baroness, who warns that stealing the jewel is the only way they will lead him to his father’s killer.
The clan’s Blind Master administers Snake Eyes’ second test, a vision of his father, and he bonds with Akiko after telling her about his father’s death. For his final trial, he faces the clan’s gigantic, sacred anacondas. Sensing he is not truly pure of heart, the snakes attack, but he is saved by Akiko. Snake Eyes conceals his deception, but is expelled from the clan. He bids farewell to Tommy as blood brothers, but breaks into the clan’s temple that night, subduing Akiko and stealing the jewel.
He delivers it to Kenta, who agrees to give it to Cobra once he has used it to take over the Arashikage. Snake Eyes receives his reward — his father’s killer, a former Cobra agent — and forces him to roll his own dice, but spares his life and returns to warn the Arashikage. Tommy puts aside his anger when Snake Eyes comes to his aid, as Kenta uses the jewel’s fiery magical powers to lay waste to the dōjō. Scarlett arrives to fight off Kenta’s men, but she and Sen are captured.
A power-hungry Kenta refuses to hand over the jewel, prompting the Baroness to agree to a temporary alliance with Scarlett and the clan. With his men defeated, Kenta loses the jewel to Tommy, who tries to use its power to kill him. Kenta escapes, but Snake Eyes traps them both in the anaconda pit, where Kenta is devoured. The snakes now judge Snake Eyes as pure of heart, worthy of joining the clan.
Sen strips Tommy of his birthright for breaking the family’s vow never to use the jewel. Forsaking the clan and blaming Snake Eyes, Tommy vows to kill him should they ever meet again. As Snake Eyes sets out to find him, Akiko gives him a black outfit and helmet, and Scarlett informs Snake Eyes that his father was a member of international peacekeeping organization, G.I. Joe, and invites him to become a fellow Joe. The Baroness invites Tommy to join Cobra, and he declares a new name for himself: “Storm Shadow“.
Cast[edit]
- Henry Golding as Snake Eyes:
A lone fighter with a mysterious past, known only as “Snake Eyes”, who is recruited into the secretive Clan Arashikage.[8] The events of the film portray the character prior to becoming the heroic masked agent of the G.I. Joe organization. The character was drastically changed to accommodate a new background, motivation and ethnicity. Max Archibald plays the young Snake Eyes. - Andrew Koji as Tomisaburo “Tommy” Arashikage / Storm Shadow:
A skilled member and the heir of the Arashikage clan, and Snake Eyes’ friend and brother-in-arms; who will eventually become his archenemy.[8] - Haruka Abe as Akiko:
The Arashikage clan’s head of security; who forges a deep tie to Snake Eyes.[8] - Úrsula Corberó as Ana DeCobray / Baroness:
An elite operative at Cobra, a terrorist organization, who is second only to Cobra Commander.[8] - Samara Weaving as Major O’Hara / Scarlett: An elite agent and Army major in G.I. Joe and ally of the Arashikage clan.[8]
- Takehiro Hira as Kenta Takamura:
Tommy’s cousin, a member of Cobra; who seeks control of the Arashikage clan.[8] - Iko Uwais as Hard Master:
A formidable mentor of the Arashikage clan and the uncle of Tommy.[8] - Peter Mensah as Blind Master:
A blind mentor of the Arashikage clan.[8] - Eri Ishida as Sen:[9]
The leader of Clan Arashikage, and grandmother of Tommy. - Steven Allerick as Snake Eyes’ father
- Samuel Finzi as Mr. Augustine
- James Hiroyuki Liao as Yasuzo
- Mojo Rawley as Bruiser Streetfighter
Production[edit]
In May 2018, it was announced the next installment of the G.I. Joe franchise would be a spin-off film chronicling the origins of the character Snake Eyes.[10] In December, producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura stated that Ray Park, who had played the character in the previous films, would not reprise his role for the spin-off.[11] Robert Schwentke was set as director the same month.[12]
In August 2019, Henry Golding was cast to star in the title role.[13] Andrew Koji was then cast as Storm Shadow, taking over the role from Lee Byung-hun, who played the character in the previous films.[14] In September, Iko Uwais entered negotiations to join the film as Hard Master, and Úrsula Corberó was cast as Baroness.[15][16] Uwais was confirmed in October, with Haruka Abe, Samara Weaving and Takehiro Hira added to the cast.[17][18] Steven Allerick was announced as part of the cast in December.[19] Golding’s Instagram revealed that Peter Mensah would play Blind Master, taking over the role from RZA in the previous films.[20][21]
Originally, Koji was not interested in a role in a G.I. Joe movie but ultimately couldn’t pass the opportunity saying, “I thought about playing that character because I didn’t like the first two films. I can say that. I’m allowed to not like a film. So, I was hesitant, at first, to even accept that. That’s a big studio film and my first role in a big studio film, so I was very hesitant because I didn’t have that trust in Hollywood to do that. What Warrior taught me and the voice that it gave me helped my work on Storm Shadow. I don’t wanna play a character with a six-pack. I wanted him to be human and flawed. He’s going through stuff. For me, when I saw the first G.I. Joe films, I was like, ‘I don’t wanna do that. That’s not the kind of thing I wanna do.'”[22]
With Golding replacing Ray Park from the original G.I. Joe movies, writer Larry Hama said “Some people are saying that casting Golding ‘fixes’ the character of Snake-Eyes, but I disagree. I had wanted to keep him ambiguous until Hasbro introduced Storm Shadow as the only Asian character and made him a bad guy. I decided to ‘fix’ that by delving into his background and gradually turning him into a good guy. This is why Snake-Eyes is a White guy.”[22]
Filming began on October 15, 2019, in Vancouver and was expected to continue until December 9.[23] Filming moved to Japan on January 10, 2020,[24][25] and wrapped on February 26, 2020.[26] Golding announced in March 2021 that reshoots for the film had occurred.[27]
Filming locations in Japan included Kishiwada Castle and Engyō-ji.[28][29]
Release[edit]
Snake Eyes was released on July 23, 2021, in Dolby Cinema and IMAX.[30] It was originally scheduled for release on March 27, 2020,[31] before being delayed to October 16,[32] and then a week later to October 23.[33] The film was then removed from the release schedule on July 27, due to nationwide theater closures in the United States in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.[34] Paramount later rescheduled the film for October 22, 2021, before it was moved up to July 23.[35][36][37]
Home media[edit]
The film received a digital release on August 17, 2021, and was released on Ultra HD Blu-ray, Blu-ray and DVD on October 19 by Paramount Home Entertainment.
Reception[edit]
Box office[edit]
Snake Eyes grossed $28.3 million in the United States and Canada, and $11.8 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $40.1 million.[3] With a production budget of at least $88 million, the film will need to gross $160–175 million in order to break-even.[38]
In the United States and Canada, Snake Eyes was released alongside Old and Joe Bell, and was projected to gross around $15 million from 3,521 theaters in its opening weekend.[1][39] The film made $5.5 million on its first day, including $1.4 million from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to $13.4 million, finishing second at the box office, behind Old.[2] The opening weekend, while in-line with projections, was deemed disappointing given the film’s expensive production and promotional costs, and blamed on the ongoing pandemic, lukewarm critical reviews, and audiences being more selective of what films they were seeing in theaters than in a normal marketplace.[38] The film fell 70% to $4 million in its sophomore weekend, finishing seventh, then made $1.6 million in its third weekend, dropping to eighth.[40][41]
Critical response[edit]
On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 37% based on 134 reviews, with an average rating of 5/10. The site’s critics consensus reads, “Far from silent and not particularly deadly, Snake Eyes serves as a step up for the G.I. Joe franchise, thanks in no small part to Henry Golding’s work in the title role.”[7] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 43 out of 100 based on 32 critics, indicating “mixed or average reviews”.[42] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of “B−” on an A+ to F scale, while PostTrak reported 69% of audience members gave it a positive score, with 46% saying they would definitely recommend it.[2]
Jesse Hassenger of The A.V. Club wrote, “Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins doesn’t reach the giddy, earnest heights of something like Aquaman or a Wachowski project. It methodically sets up sequels—to be recast and released around 2030, judging by the Joes‘s cinematic track record so far. But the dubiousness of its present-day achievement, the sheer ludicrousness of making the best G.I. Joe movie in 2021, is part of the dumbfounding fun.”[43] Variety‘s Owen Gleiberman said the film “looks almost nothing like a G.I. Joe movie,” and wrote, “Snake Eyes, as directed by Robert Schwentke… has style and verve, with a diabolical family plot that creates a reasonable quota of actual drama. The movie is also a synthetic but infectiously skillful big-studio hodgepodge of ninja films, wuxia films, yakuza films, and international revenge films.”[44] Writing for /Film, Hoai-Tran Bui said that “[the] fight scenes are almost exclusively shot in close-up and shaky cam, and when they’re not, they’re edited so much that Snake Eyes might as well have shredded the frames with his sword.”[45] Bilge Ebiri of Vulture gave the film a negative review, criticizing the action sequences, story, and dialogue, but praised the film for its visuals and production values, writing “The action in Snake Eyes is instantly forgettable, even if the locations and costumes are sometimes fun. You can occasionally sense director Robert Schwentke … trying to assert some visual imagination. There’s one rain-soaked, neon-drenched street fight featuring long takes and swooping camera moves that gave me some early cause for hope, and Alec Hammond’s production design, particularly at the Arashikage Clan’s compound, occasionally enchants.”[46]
Glen Kenny of The New York Times gave the film a negative review, and criticized the story. He wrote “The plot points above are real; however, [it] bears only coincidental resemblance to an art film. But such are the longueurs of this would-be slam-bang blockbuster directed by Robert Schwentke, that it sure does inspire woolgathering … For an ostensible action hero, Henry Golding in the title role does an awful lot of standing around and looking tense. The mayhem is frantic yet forgettable, and the possibly inadvertent goofiness extends from dialogue humdingers like ‘For 600 years, our ninjas have brought peace and stability to Japan’ to a central-casting villainess who looks like she has a side gig as a dominatrix.”[47] Johnny Oleksinki of New York Post rated the film 2 out of 4 stars, and wrote “All of this is building toward Snake Eyes becoming a Joe, but the martial arts film’s connection to the main story feels frail, as if Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon ended with Michelle Yeoh becoming an Avenger. The fights, taken on their own, are occasionally OK, but not enough to lift this joke- and fun-free slog.”[48] Soren Andersen of The Seattle Times rated the film 1.5 out of 4 stars, and wrote ” The fight scenes, full of swordplay and gunfire, are choppily edited and somehow lackadaisical. It’s as though Schwentke was operating from a checklist of expected action-movie clichés and hurries through them all.” He also went on to criticize Henry Golding’s performance, writing “That guy [Snake Eyes] is supposed to be a super ninja. Lithe and limber. Tough and toned. An enigma. A loner. A total badass. Golding is none of those. Crazy Rich Asians revealed his forte as being a sexy smoothie. Easy on the eyes. Effortlessly engaging. Not the skill set for Mr. Snake Eyes” and said he lacked “presence”.[49]
Future[edit]
In May 2020, a follow-up film was announced to be in development, with a script co-written by Shrapnel and Waterhouse. di Bonaventura will return as producer, while the project will be a joint-venture production between Paramount Pictures, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Entertainment One and di Bonaventura Pictures.[50] With the financial failure of the film, the status of the follow-up is now unknown.

Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins

Henry Golding

Andrew Koji

Haruka Abe

Úrsula Corberó

Samara Weaving

Takehiro Hira

Eri Ishida

Iko Uwais

Peter Mensah

Steven Allerick

Simon Chin

Samuel Finzi
No Image Available
Shota Kakibata
No Image Available
Nicholas Dohy

Dean Muhtadi

James Hiroyuki Liao
No Image Available
Kenji Tanigaki

Kento Matsunami
No Image Available
Sean O. Roberts

Jason William Day
No Image Available
Kojun Notsu
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Max Archibald

Jason Day

Gui DaSilva-Greene
No Image Available
Martin Todsharow

Lorenzo Di Bonaventura

Bojan Bazelli
No Image Available
Alec Hammond
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Louise Mingenbach
No Image Available
Chantal Feghali
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Michael Diner
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Brian Goldner
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Sandy Walker
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Stuart Levy
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Dana Goldberg

Jeff G. Waxman

Don Granger

Robert Schwentke

David Ellison

Krista Bell
No Image Available
Greg Mooradian

Evan Spiliotopoulos

Evan Spiliotopoulos

Kimani Ray Smith
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Anna Waterhouse
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Erik Howsam
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Mark Noda
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Andrew Li
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Dan O'Connell
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Christopher Sposa
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Michael Minkler

Anna Behlmer
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Stephen P. Robinson
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James Madigan

Megan Hui
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Joe Shrapnel
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Grettel Batoon

Angela Uyeda
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Michael Miller
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Eliot Connors
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Crystal Hooks
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Mariel Lohninger
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Robert Eber
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Megan Harkness
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Sofia Phillips

Jacqueline Lee Geurts
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Bob Lacivita
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Dorothee Deichmann
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Jack Cucci

Saori Izawa
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Daemon Cadman
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Sarah Keen
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Toshiyuki Furutani
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Christian Storms
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Rachelle Bartamian
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Pratik Chaudhari
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Josh Clark
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Pratik Redkar
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Sierra Hoyle
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