How Lord and Miller helped pave the way for Barbie

With The Lego Movie and Spider-Verse, Phil Lord and Christopher Miller created an approach that clearly inspired filmmakers like Greta Gerwig

Film Features Barbie
How Lord and Miller helped pave the way for Barbie
Clockwise from upper left: Clone High (Touchstone Television), Phil Lord and Chris Miller at the 91st Annual Academy Awards Governors Ball (Robyn Beck/Getty Images), Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs (Sony), Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse (Sony), The Lego Movie (Warner Bros.) Graphic: The A.V. Club

With more than $1 billion in worldwide box office revenue so far, Greta Gerwig’s Barbie movie is being hailed for, among other things, its highly original approach. But a closer look reveals some surprisingly familiar elements to this summer’s biggest hit. For one thing, the film hinges on the differing perceptions that parents and children have for a given toy. Then there’s the adult who forgets the joys of play. And the way in which one property can symbolize many things to many people. There’s also an insanely poppy soundtrack, and Will Ferrell as a corporate executive desperate to maintain the status quo. In other words, it’s The Lego Movie, but with dolls.

And that isn’t a bad thing. Rather, it feels like a fitting homage to Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, the filmmakers behind The Lego Movie and hits such as Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse and 21 Jump Street. As producers, directors, and writers, Lord and Miller have seemingly perfected the art of franchise deconstruction. In turn, their template has inspired other hit films, from Barbie to Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem. While it would be a stretch to say that Lord and Miller are saving Hollywood, it’s not much of a leap to see that they’re having an outsized impact on recent blockbusters. Here’s a look at four key elements Lord and Miller incorporate for crafting films that are unique, singularly funny, hugely popular, and clearly influential.

1. Love the thing you parody

21 JUMP STREET [2012] – Red Band Trailer

What makes both Barbie and The Lego Movie work is that they’re not just about the toys they’re depicting—they’re about the filmmakers’ personal connection and response to those toys, and the way those relationships change over time. It’s a tricky thing to pull off, and it has to be done with genuine love—the Lego movie franchise sputtered when it spawned The Lego Ninjago Movie, which was based on a newer property that Lord and Miller didn’t have a lifelong connection with.

Lord and Miller’s narrative investigations can’t just be parody; they have to evince genuine love for the thing being parodied and deconstructed. That’s the difference between, say, their 21 Jump Street and the superficially similar Baywatch movie. Lord and Miller clearly think 21 Jump Street, the series, was a little silly, but they enjoy the silliness, whereas Seth Gordon and Dwayne Johnson appeared to think Baywatch was stupid, and they talked down to the material.

2. Respect the source material

SPIDER-MAN: ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE – Official Trailer #2 (HD)

In the Lord and Miller-produced Spider-Verse films, even the most ridiculous forms of Spider-Man get respect as equal parts of the canon. Spidey can simultaneously be a Looney Tunes-style pig, a Sam Spade-talking Nicolas Cage, an anime girl in a robot, a flabby middle-aged divorcee, an Afro-Latino high schooler, or a tyrannosaurus rex. Being silly while still maintaining an affection for the silliness, and taking those elements to their logical conclusions, requires a special kind of skill that Lord and Miller clearly have.

And it’s a skill that doesn’t work for everything. Live-action Star Wars canon, stung by fan reactions to the likes of Jar Jar Binks, isn’t ready for self-mockery and deconstruction. Lord and Miller, who were fired halfway through the Han Solo movie, were never going to be a great fit. The fact that the characters in Solo: A Star Wars Story seem a little more self-aware than usual is probably a holdover from when the two were in charge, though the film’s ’70s drag race vibe is very much Ron Howard channeling his pal George Lucas and American Graffiti.

3. No project is too ridiculous if done right

Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs – Official Trailer #1

Lord and Miller’s first animated series, Clone High, which reimagined major historical figures as hormonal teenagers, didn’t make many waves at the time of its release. But it has since grown a cult following, leading to a modern reboot. From there came Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs, the first of several Lord-Miller projects that didn’t sound like particularly good ideas for movies but worked anyway, because the duo’s genuine affection for the characters grounded the surrounding weirdness.

In a 2014 interview promoting 22 Jump Street, Miller declared, “Everything we’ve ever done has been riding on low expectations. Cloudy with A Chance Of Meatballs? What a terrible idea. Doing 21 Jump Street as a movie is a terrible idea. The Lego Movie sounds like a terrible idea. If people think this [sequel] is a good idea, we’re screwed.”

Come to think of it, a Barbie movie didn’t sound like a particularly good idea either, in theory. Yet the doll’s most obvious male counterpart in the marketplace, G.I. Joe, has had three live-action movies, none of which was made with the care and affection that Gerwig shows for Barbie.

Even when it comes to original projects, Lord and Miller’s approach to licensed fare can sneak in, like the Furby villains in The Mitchells Vs. The Machines, which earned the duo an Oscar nomination for Best Animated Feature. There’s always an awareness that franchise filmmaking can have a darker side too—witness Spider-Man 2099’s fundamental insistence on sticking to canon, or the plethora of ever-more-ridiculous fake Jump Street sequels advertised at the end of the second film. The balance the duo hit between affection, fear, and dissection can’t easily be duplicated by plugging in just any journeyman director—it’s the sort of approach that only a discerning fan of the material can bring.

4. Show the seams

The LEGO® Movie – Official Main Trailer [HD]

CG animation is so slick in its natural state that it can feel cold and mechanical, even though it’s become a default that we’re used to. There’s no real equivalent there to seeing an animator’s thumbprint in the Plasticine of a Wallace And Gromit film. Lord and Miller’s solution? Add it. Their Lego Movie didn’t use slick CG models of the bricks, but instead relied on realistic simulations of the kind that had actually been played with. “Our intention was to do it exactly like a stop-motion film, so much so that you wouldn’t know what was CG and what was real,” Miller once told the Baltimore Sun, “down to having scratches and dust and thumbprints and dandruff. We had meetings about how much dandruff to put on the set … ‘Some’ is the correct answer.”

The continuation of this idea is evident in the guide lines and ink jet bubbles left on the Spider-Verse artwork to make it look like a hand-drawn, printing-press inked comic, and in the new TMNT movie aesthetic, which director Jeff Rowe described as inspired by sketches he made on the margins of his school notebooks.

Maybe when it comes to long-in-limbo properties like He-Man or ThunderCats, or even arguably stalled franchises like Transformers, the answer is not to go big and bombastic like DC or Marvel, but to lean into an approach that favors films that are visibly homemade with love. When it comes down to it, the lesson of Lord and Miller, which is now being learned by others across the multiplex, is that being true to yourself, your passion, and your style might just connect with far more viewers than something that feels made by committee for easy consumption.

14 Comments

  • dremiliolizardo-av says:

    Seth Gordon and Dwayne Johnson appeared to think Baywatch was stupidWas there anybody, ever who didn’t think Baywatch was stupid? It was Jiggle TV when people didn’t have internet in their pockets to find porn on whenever they felt the urge. Nobody ever watched it for the deep plots or life changing message. Depicting it as stupid IS respecting the source material.

    • bcfred2-av says:

      Yeah but the movie was also absurdly self-serious at times. The tone was just all over the place. They needed to pick a lane and go with it, as long as that lane was not attempting being a serious action movie.

    • xpdnc-av says:

      Yes, the TV Baywatch was shallow, but so was 21 Jump St. L&M managed to make a film that both honored and laughed at the TV version, and managed to elevate the work in the process. The same could have been done with Baywatch, but it requires both a director and lead actors that are willing to be self-deprecating, and Dwayne lost that capability long ago. As a result, the file neither elevated nor lampooned the TV show, winding up being little more than an extension of the treacle that was the original property.

      • retort-av says:

        Dwayne never lost that ability. He does it in his jumanji movies. I think he just wants to be more like Arnold in that he doesn’t want to keep doing it as his thing. Same with Bautista and Cena who have done the self deprecating thing but want to move on from it. However Cena and Bautista are still more comfortable doing it. I do think The rock is the best actor out of those trio wrestlers. I just don’t see Cena and Bautista doing what the rock did in Pain and Gain and play pathetic so well like the Rock did. 

        • xpdnc-av says:

          Jumanji was an exception, in that Johnson was playing a nebbish who was inhabiting the body of the Rock. That allows him to have some fun with the Rock persona without tarnishing that persona. But now that he reportedly puts things into his contracts that say how many times his character can be punched, I think it’s clear that he isn’t willing to take a tongue-in-cheek approach to parts where is playing a version of the Rock.

    • nilus-av says:

      Exactly, if they wanted serious Baywatch they should have adapted Baywatch Nights. One time the Hoff had to fight a vampire on that show!

      • freshfromrikers-av says:

        I always wondered what Hoff’s character did in the time between getting off his Baywatch shift and before going into detective mode for ‘Nights. They should make a show about that.

  • mike-mckinnon-av says:

    Firing them from Solo was the clearest indication Disney/Lucasfilm had zero intention of doing anything daring or original and would die on Status Quo Hill.

  • diedofennui-av says:

    I think these are more why audiences connect with a well-made IP movie.
    Gerwig did actually give a list of movies that inspired her:
    https://letterboxd.com/journal/the-official-barbie-watchlist-greta-gerwig/

  • raw-feed-av says:

    Not to be rude, but this article feels like you’re proposing that the movie about the effects of the patriarchy to women and the world…should thank the works of men to allow them to do that.

    Was that your intention?

  • graymangames-av says:

    I’m a huge Clone High fan, and I was very impressed by the revival season that aired this year.

    The first episode in particular acknowledges how much comedy and culture have changed since the original version, when Abe Lincoln casually uses “gay” as an insult (among other things I won’t repeat here) and his classmates freak out. I found it refreshing; acknowledge how times have changed, put yourself on blast a bit for laughs, but not to the point where you veer into self-flagellation.

  • frasier-crane-av says:

    Mr. Thompson is to be saluted for providing the always-necessary reminder that behind every female-directed-and-produced-and-spearheaded blockbuster effort, lies the unheralded efforts of graciously modest men who, dammit, just hate the spotlight.(i.e. “Success has many fathers, but… seriously, no mothers. Are you nuts?”)

  • wdya-av says:

    A weirdly reverential article for a couple of producers who are under fire lately for creating hostile work environments and forcing drastic levels of crunch onto their employees in order to extract the quality you’re praising. 🤔

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