Sofia Coppola Explains Why She Passed On Directing "Weird" TWILIGHT Movie & Early THE LITTLE MERMAID Adap

Sofia Coppola Explains Why She Passed On Directing "Weird" TWILIGHT Movie & Early THE LITTLE MERMAID Adap

Sofia Coppola has the opportunity to helm two massive studio tentpole movies earlier in her career, and in a new interview, the Priscilla director explains why she decided to walk away...

By MarkCassidy - Oct 27, 2023 07:10 AM EST
Filed Under: Disney
Source: Via FearHQ

Sofia Coppola, whose latest film, the critically-acclaimed Priscilla, hits theaters in January, has revealed that she was all set to helm two huge projects early on in her career before ultimately deciding to pass up the opportunity: The Little Mermaid - not the recent Disney version - and the final Twilight film, Breaking Dawn - Part 2.

The Twilight movies were never what you'd call critical darlings, but they did (and still do) have legions of loyal fans that propelled the five-film series to massive success at the box office.

Of course, there are just as many people who can't fathom how anyone could sit through more than five minutes of "sparkly vampire" shenanigans, and even casual fans would have to admit that certain aspects of the story - particularly in the final movie - were more than a little... odd.

It seems we can safely add Coppola to the latter category.

During an interview with Rolling Stone, the Lost in Translation director revealed that she met with someone from Warner Bros. about potentially signing on to helm the movie, but declined the opportunity when she realized it was simply a bit "too weird" for her to wrap her head around.

"We had one meeting, and it never went anywhere," Coppola said. "I thought the whole imprinting-werewolf thing was weird. The baby. Too weird! But part of the earlier Twilight could be done in an interesting way. I thought it'd be fun to do a teen-vampire romance, but the last one gets really far out."

Just in case you haven't seen the film or read the book, Coppola is referring to Jacob "imprinting" on Edward and Bella's creepy CGI daughter, Renesmee. Basically, this means that the wolf-boy feels an irresistible emotional pull towards the child because he's found his soulmate. The newborn baby. Is his soulmate.

Breaking Dawn - Part 1 director Bill Condon ultimately stayed on to helm the final instalment.

Coppola was also set to direct an earlier live-action take on The Little Mermaid for Universal Pictures and Working Title back in 2014, but her version would have been a lot more faithful to the much darker Hans Christian Anderson tale.

In the same interview, Coppola explains why she decided to step away from the project.

“Yes, there was [a breaking point]. I was in a boardroom and some development guy said, ‘What’s gonna get the 35-year-old man in the audience?’ And I just didn’t know what to say. I just was not in my element. I feel like I was naive, and then I felt a lot like the character in the story, trying to do something out of my element, and it was a funny parallel of the story for me.”

Coppola has yet to dip her toe in the sci-fi/fantasy/horror genres, but says she would be interested under the right circumstances. “I think it’d be fun to do sci-fi and I think it’d be fun to do, not like gory, but I like gothic horror. I don’t have an idea, though.”

Do you think Coppola would be a good fit for a superhero or comic book-based movie? Drop us a comment down below.

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Alucard28
Alucard28 - 10/27/2023, 7:48 AM
Twilight movies are really really bad. Don't care about the books.
Forthas
Forthas - 10/27/2023, 8:30 AM
I agree the baby stuff was ridiculous BUT the subplot regarding imprinting...what was so weird about that? It is based on an actual real life response from some animals and how they develop relationships.
Origame
Origame - 10/27/2023, 9:21 AM
@Forthas - ...dude, he literally fell in love with a baby. Later on he jokes to Edward about it saying "should I call you dad" when the baby is still at elementary school age.

Also, some animals greet each other by sniffing each other's butts. You really thing he should go up to Edward and just dig his face in his cheeks?
Clintthahamster
Clintthahamster - 10/27/2023, 9:23 AM
@Forthas - "Imprinting" in nature has more to do with mother/child bonding than couple bonding. That said, I think it was mostly the baby thing that folks are taking issue with.
Forthas
Forthas - 10/27/2023, 9:35 AM
@Origame - I AGREE! I started my statement stating that the hyper growing baby was 'ridiculous" and therefore the baby imprinting is a part of that. I was referring to the concept of imprinting. Animals imprint on influential individuals in their lives.
Forthas
Forthas - 10/27/2023, 9:36 AM
@ClintThaHamster - I agree! I had big issues with it also.
Origame
Origame - 10/27/2023, 9:46 AM
@Forthas - ...that's literally the main issue people have with the imprinting. That he's just now suddenly in love with a baby.

Plus, you don't see the issue with consent here? What if a werewolf imprints on someone who doesn't care for them? Are they just doomed to forever be miserable because they can't be with the one they imprinted with? Or should that werewolf still pursue her because of "destiny"? You're starting to see the problem here, right?
Forthas
Forthas - 10/27/2023, 10:28 AM
@Origame - I am not a close follower of the Twilight mythology so forgive me if i do not understand the mythology correctly, but my understanding was that the imprinting "wolf" could choose the person they imprinted on and therefore it would likely be with someone that had a mutual interest. If I recall one of the female wolves imprinted on one of the male ones in Jacob's tribe. The result was not what you describe. It only served to make the imprint(or) in that case miserable, but she did not act on it in any inappropriate way. So while I think imprinting (assuming it is voluntary) on a child it really a bizarre plot point the overall concept of it generally, I have no problem with.

NOTE: While I maintain that imprinting on a child was all kinds of inappropriate, in fairness to the Twilight mythology, Jacob did so to save the baby from the other wolves.
Origame
Origame - 10/27/2023, 10:52 AM
@Forthas - yeah, maybe look into the subject before having an opinion on it.

Imprinting with werewolves is entirely involuntary. It can happen to anyone and the werewolf has no control over it. Only thing is it happens the first time a werewolf sees someone.

In fact Jacob wanted to imprint on Bella (who he actually had feelings for) but it didn't work.

https://twilightsaga.fandom.com/wiki/Imprinting
Repian
Repian - 10/27/2023, 9:07 AM
A Two Face movie for Sofia Coppola, please.
UncleHarm1
UncleHarm1 - 10/27/2023, 10:13 AM
Sofia Coppola is vastly overrated, Lost in Translation is her only decent movie. She claims to be a writer but in this interview she said she felt out of her element in the Little Mermaid meeting, huuuge missed opportunity to say she felt like a fish out of water.
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