James Gunn says ‘The Suicide Squad’ was a jokey title. Here’s what he originally called DC’s new movie.
Hollywood has a sequel problem. Not specifically the rash of franchise follow-ups in the pipeline, but rather the less-than-creative titles we must endure. There was 2009’s Fast & Furious after 2001’s The Fast and the Furious. There’s Halloween (2018), Shaft (2019) and the upcoming Scream (2022), which are all sequels — not remakes — with identical monikers as the 1978, 2000, and 1996 versions, respectively.
In August we’ll get writer-director James Gunn’s The Suicide Squad, the DC Comics ensemble that continues the misadventures from 2016’s Suicide Squad. The only difference in titles is that The in front.
We aired our grievances directly with Gunn when we confronted him at the press junket for the film over the weekend.
“I did it as a joke, man,” he told us, laughing. “I didn’t really do it as a joke but I didn’t know what to call the movie.”
“I didn’t want it to be Suicide Squad: Dawn of the Mischief Red, whatever,” he added, mocking the tortured subtitles so often appended to action movie sequels (see: G.I. Joe: Retaliation, Resident Evil: Retribution, Transformers: Dark of the Moon, Terminator: Dark Fate and DC’s own Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, among many others). “I didn’t want it to be something that was this long awkward title.”
I love @JamesGunn but I did have to confront him about my pet peeves re: movie titles that are almost exactly the same (Suicide Squad vs THE Suicide Squad).
He revealed the title was initially “Dogs of War," before WB opted for “The Suicide Squad,” which he'd pitched as a joke. pic.twitter.com/QpijHe2ZaH— Kevin Polowy (@djkevlar) July 26, 2021
Gunn explained that he had a different title in mind at first for the film, which tracks Harley Quinn (Margot Robbie), Bloodsport (Idris Elba), Peacemaker (John Cena) and a gaggle of other Task Force X antiheroes to South America to take down a Nazi-powered lab.
“To be completely honest, it was called Dogs of War for a while,” the music-minded filmmaker revealed, potentially referencing the Pink Floyd song title of the same name (though the term’s origin dates back to a line in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar).
“But for my first draft, when I gave it to the studio I just [thought], ‘Ah screw it,’ I just put The Suicide Squad on there. I thought it was kind of funny. And they were like, ‘Yeah, we love this. This works. Let’s do this.’ ‘OK!’”
THE Suicide Squad opens Aug. 6.
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