flying saucer

Ben Magid’s spec screenplay Invasion has sold to Summit Entertainment/Participant for low to mid six figures. The story, which is an alien invasion thriller in the same vein as Cloverfield, is being produced by Eli Roth and Eric Newman (Children of Men, Slither). According to Shock, “the film opens with a wicked subway accident in Los Angeles in which the survivors (the film’s protagonists) climb from the wreckage to find the, now “snowy,” city in ruins.” No further details are available at this time. Magid made a name for himself in 2006, selling a pitch to New Line for his script Pan, a spin on J.M. Barrie’s tale of Peter Pan, where Pan is a villain being hunted by a police captain named Hook. He has since taken a stab at an early draft for the live-action adaptation of Hack/Slash.

With the success of recent films like the Transformers movies and District 9 (and to a lesser extent, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, which is the 26th highest grossing film worldwide), it seems like Hollywood is going alien crazy, giving the green light and putting a lot of alien-based stories in development — more than ever before. In a couple years, will aliens be the new vampires? Here is a round up of the alien-related projects in development right now.

  • Sam Raimi made news earlier in the week by snapping up Uruguayan filmmaker Federico Alvarez after his alien invasion sci-fi short film Panic Attack went viral on the web. The plan is to develop a feature film.
  • James Cameron’s Avatar is set on the alien world of Pandora, with tall blue tiger-striped aliens named the Na’vi. Cameron hopes to shoot two sequels,
  • Jonathan Liebsman’s Black Hawk Down-style alien invasion film Battle: Los Angeles, which is currently shooting for a 2011 release.
  • The alien invasion television series V is currently in primetime.

23 more film projects listed after jump.

  • 20th Century Fox is in preproduction on both a new Predators and new Alien films.
  • Paramount just acquired Area 51, a found footage film about a group of teenagers stumble upon an area in the Nevada desert known for hosting an alien encounter, directed by Oren Peli, the filmmaker behind Paranormal Activity.
  • Cloverfield 2 is always lurking around the rumor mill.
  • The Jon Favreau-directed comic book adaptation Cowboys and Aliens , about  Apache Indians and Western settlers who must lay their differences aside when an alien spaceship crash lands in their city. Robert Downey Jr is in talks to star.
  • Trick r Treat director Michael Dougherty is teaming with Disney Robert Zemeckis’ ImageMovers on Calling All Robots, an animated sci-fi adventure the screenwriter plans to direct using the same type of performance capture technology used in A Christmas Carol. The project is said to be a throwback to Godzilla films.
  • Wolfgang Petersen is developing an alien invasion film called Uprising about a group of people organize a resistance movement after Earth is taken over by aliens.
  • Also written by Fringe co-producer/writer Brad Caleb Kane is a Dreamworks movie produced by Orci/Kurtzman based on the stereoscopic Viewmaster toy, rumored to involve aliens.
  • Andrew Stanton’s adaptation of John Carter of Mars follows a Civil War vet  who is transplanted to Mars and encounters the inhabitants of the planet.
  • Bryan Singer’s big screen version of Battlestar Galactica.
  • Peter Berg’s Battleship, which involves aliens attacking Earth. Production begins Spring 2010.
  • Gattaca and Lord of War director Andrew Niccol is adapting Stephanie Meyer’s novel The Host, a love story set in the near future on Earth, which has been assimilated by an alien species of benevolent parasites that call themselves “Souls.
  • Disturbia and Eagle Eye director D.J. Caruso is attached to direct a big screen adaptation of EA’s popular video game Dead Space, about an 26th century engineer who responds to a distress signal from a mining ship finds the vessel infested with monstrous alien creatures called Necromorphs.
  • Michael Bay’s producing I Am Number Four, an adaptation of a planned six-volume series purportedly co-written by “A Million Little Pieces” author James Frey, about nine alien teens assimilating to high school on Earth after their planet is destroyed by an enemy species.
  • Dark Castle Entertainment is developing an adaptation of Devil’s Due graphic novel The Nye Incidents, about a medical examiner on the hunt of a killer of alien abductees.
  • Aliens vs. Ninjas
  • Final Destination 2 and Snakes on a Plane director David R. Ellis is directing a high concept 3-D horror film called Humpy Dumpty, about a an alien mother is “abused” by two rednecks in the deep south, she gives birth to a a half-human, half-alien creature that eventually goes on a murderous rampage.
  • Superbad/Adventureland director Greg Mottola’s sci-fi comedy Paul starring Simon Pegg and Nick Frost as two British comic-book geeks traveling across the U.S. encounter an alien outside Area 51.
  • The rumored Independence Day sequels.
  • Transformers 3
  • Ice Age’s Chris Wedge is developing a big screen adaptation of Will Wright’s video game Spore.
  • Sony is still developing a Spider-Man spin-off film for Venom.
  • Guy Ritchie is signed on to direct a big screen adaptation of DC Comics series Lobo, about an alien who works as an interstellar mercenary and bounty hunter.
  • Neil Blomkamp is still planning a District 9 sequel.

So what do you think: Will Aliens be the New Vampires?

Invasion news via: trackingb

  • Rob
    I don't see any 40 year old mothers squealing to get into the theater for any of the current movies coming out that revolve around aliens. So thankfully, no Aliens are not the new vampires.
  • Beware though, The Host may become a movie...
  • mbellerbrock
    Why do I only need approval to reply to this comment?
  • I'm sure that some studio executive will hear this idea and think, "BRILLIANT!" And if there's the right amount of melodrama, women won't be far behind.

    So let's not give anyone any ideas. Please.
  • Justin
    I think it's just the cyclical resurgence of science fiction.

    The comic book, superhero, Star Wars, Rings, and Potter boom of the beginning of this century proved the "nerd" audience was a powerful force and there wasn't any other genre left to really tackle except sci-fi (which has had some small representation in things like Lost during the same period of time).
  • That's what I'm thinking. Plus aliens have always been popular (ET, Close Encounters, Alien) so there bound to come back.
  • Let's hope so. I want an X-Files 3.
  • Megajat
    Not!
  • [A]
    "Black Hawk Down-style alien invasion film" -- that sounds terrible :(
  • The Guest
    It would be nice if we saw some good old fashioned, other-planet-exploration type sci fi, with or without aliens. I'm getting sick of the "Aliens Attack Us! Mankind Defends Itself! Yay!" stuff, which is partly why I was underwhelmed by the "Panic Attack!" short. I am liking stuff like "Moon" and "District 9" (which had aliens, but they weren't attacking us... yet) and want to see more stuff along the lines of real people in vaguely plausible situations involving aliens or other planets.
  • mbellerbrock
    I completely agree. And I don't want to toot Avatar's horn too much but it's in the same vein too I think. It's us abusing an alien world, them defending.
  • matthewwells
    I agree with both. There's so many different takes you could do on aliens aside from just attacks. I feel like with aliens, there's so many more possibilities. Some of these I'm really excited for, particularly Paul and John Carter of Mars
  • mbellerbrock
    Good call, I'm excited for Paul and John Carter of Mars too.
  • Rockie
    aliens are great.
  • thepwnyexpress
    I think the term "Alien Crazy" is pretty hilarious.
  • MonsterKilledThePilot
    I think the alien genre has always been in. Since the beginning of cinema, even. Anyone will go see a movie about aliens. But not everyone will see a vampire movie. It may have to do with the fact that vampires are a specific kind of creature. Aliens are broader.
  • mchops
    we can only wish that hollywood rids themselves of vampires. i much prefer aliens.
  • AZAicFan
    Seriously? "Invasion"? Hopefully, they'll change the name, so people won't confuse it with the Kidman & Craig movie that just came out. Then again, I'm sure everyone has already forgotten about it.
  • Suess
    I think a better analogy would be "Will aliens become the new zombies?"

    The whole vampire thing, as far as I can tell, is mostly Twilight, Let the Right One In, and True Blood (not entirely, I haven't forgotten about Vampire's Assistant or *gag* Transylmania). It just happens that they're incredibly popular so they give birth to a lot of media that either sends them up or pays them copious amounts of homage. But that media is mostly on the Internet, not on the big screen.

    But the sheer number and variety of alien films is much more comparable to the recent rise in popularity for zombies. Zombies are the thing that became less of a monster and more of a plot device, a symbol. Like what appears to be going on with aliens, filmmakers both found an interest in remaking classics of the genre and began to play around with unique ways to tell stories about zombies and their respective apocalypses.
  • EvilAnimator
    I thought Blomkamp wasn't planning on doing a District 9 sequel. Definitely a movie that doesn't need one as it stands well on its own.
  • AZAicFan
    In several interviews, I've heard him state that he'd jump on the chance to do District 10. Although, I agree with you. No sequel required.
  • I love the Twilight books, and I am a big fan of the movie(s) too, love the movie cast, etc, but my love for them isn't the Twilight hoopla with Rob Pattinson, etc, but Stephenie Meyer's character development, you feel like you really know them. Even so, I really liked The Host the best. I felt the characters were well thought out and stayed true to themselves throughout the whole novel even while they blossomed with new perspectives as we all do. I really can't wait to see this movie. I love that Stephenie brings the conflicted human heart into her stories and can make even a science fiction fantasy feel like it could happen to you. Can't wait, glad she will be involved!
  • bigmansmallmouth
    Kind of hope so. Why? Because trustworthy producers/directors/writers are behind these alien things. Also, the relationship between aliens and screaming women of all ages for Robert Pattinson seems further apart.
  • adrexander
    You forgot about JJ Abrams' "Star Trek" and its upcoming sequel. Plenty of aliens in those!
  • filmkid
    you did not mention Battle: Los Angeles
  • The Guest
    While we're at it, can we get rid of comic-book-inspired movies too? I'm bloody SICK TO DEATH of those and I think it's a genre fad that is getting near to the end of its course.
  • greggorybasore
    Nice try troll boy. Movies like "A history of Violence", "Road to Perdition", "Persepolis" and "Ghostworld" aren't going away...
  • at least aliens dont rip their shirts off...

    besides, i dont aliens will really appeal to most girls
  • clover
    Rumor has it that Cloverfield 2 script is based in the same idea developed for Aliens and [Rec 2], with multiple points of view from minicams installed in soldiers helmets. J. J. Abrams, if you can hear me... Do it!
  • xctopher27
    You think it's bad now...you know somebody is writing a script for Vampires vs. Aliens! Or better yet, Vampires vs. Aliens vs Zombies.
  • greggorybasore
    Nope. Aliens aint the new vampires. Aliens is aliens and vampires is vampires. Sure Aliens may supplant vampires as the hottest thing on the scene, but vampires and going away nowhere any more'n aliens have gone.
  • Jeff
    I think alien movies have maintained a steady popularity throughout the years. Vampires and other fantasy elements come and go in waves (full moons maybe.) Aliens have always been and will always be relatively popular. So no, they are the new vampires because they are not a phase. There's a big alien movie pretty much every year. You can't say that about vampires.
  • Devin
    Come on, people. The reason for this is obvious. I feel like I'm the only one seeing the parallels between Cold War-era paranoia films of the 50s and post-9/11 paranoia films of today. There's a reason that sci-fi, apocalyptic films and alien flicks are all in the upswing: we're in the same mindset as we were in in the 50s.
  • hallowed
    I hope they make a StarCraft movie. Which they will, given enough time.
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