To me, Spielberg does not seem like the kind of director to adapt a children's book to begin with. If it isn't a more artistic historical film or a action/thriller blockbuster (which he hasn't done much of this century), it doesn't say "directed by Steven Spielberg" to me. The recent Tintin movie does play against that, sort of.
Also, obligatory DooM reference: So since this flopped, are they going to do a gritty reboot. BFG, now armed with the
other BFG, must take on the giant demon hordes to rescue the girl. (Hey, today's Hollywood writers couldn't come up with a better plot.)
Buizel91 said:
Tbf, any kids film that comes out against Finding Dory is going to flop.
Yes. This was either a scheduling oversight or the marketing department (poorly) thought Speilberg's and the original work's names could draw in adults who either would see for themselves or bring their kids.
Daymo said:
Reading these comments makes it super clear we are on a gaming website. I watched the BFG animated movie as a child and wasn't a fan so never even considered going to watch this one. I'm kind of surprised no one has mentioned The Fantastic Mr Fox when talking about Roald Dahl adaptations, even though it was a Wes Anderson movie, it was very well received (nominated for the Golden globes and Oscars) with an all-star cast. But yeah an adaptation of an old British kids book vs Find Dory was always going to end one way.
An interesting thing I noticed about The Fantastic Mr. Fox while working at my local theater was the average age of audience members was well above 50 years old, even during early morning and afternoon. Extremely Rarely did I see children watching it. (Of course from my first hand observations, nearly every movie with George Clooney made in the past 15 years has drawn in noticeably older crowds, at least in my area.)
Maybe Dahl's books, with exception to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, just aren't well known to today's youth in the US. I never new there was a book titled "BFG" until I came across it on TV Tropes (the Doom page, probably). People aren't kidding when they say the US school system is failing.