Independence Day (franchise)

Summary

Independence Day (also known as ID and ID4) is a franchise of American science fiction action films that started with Independence Day in 1996, which was followed by the sequel, Independence Day: Resurgence in 2016. The franchise revolves around extraterrestrials invading Earth and seeking to eradicate mankind while the remaining human resistance uses everything at their disposal to defeat the invaders and take back the planet. Now considered to be a significant turning point in the history of the Hollywood blockbuster, the original film was released worldwide on July 3, 1996, but began showing on July 2 (the same day the film's story begins) on limited release as a result of a high level of anticipation among moviegoers. The film grossed over $817.4 million worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing film of 1996 and, briefly, the second-highest-grossing film worldwide of all time behind 1993's Jurassic Park. Currently, it ranks 69th on the list of highest-grossing films, and was at the forefront of the large-scale disaster film and sci-fi resurgence of the mid-late 1990s. The film won the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Sound Mixing.

Independence Day
Created by
Original workIndependence Day
Owner20th Century Studios
Print publications
Book(s)List of books (1996 - 2016)
Films and television
Film(s)
Games
Video game(s)
Audio
Radio program(s)Independence Day UK (1996)
Soundtrack(s)

Films edit

Independence Day (1996) edit

The film focuses on disparate groups of people who converge in the Nevada desert in the aftermath of a worldwide attack by an extraterrestrial race of unknown origin. With the other people of the world, they launch a last-ditch counterattack on July 4—Independence Day in the United States.

Independence Day: Resurgence (2016) edit

The film takes place twenty years after the events of the first film, during which the United Nations has collaborated to form Earth Space Defense (ESD), an international military defense and research organization. Through reverse engineering, the world has harnessed the power of alien technology and laid the groundwork to resist a second invasion.

Future edit

In May 2015, Deadline reported that Independence Day 3 and Independence Day 4 were being planned.[1] In June 2016, during an interview with Empire magazine, Emmerich stated that a third film could be made, depending on the success of the second one. He also said that audiences would not have to wait as long as they did for the second in the series.[2] According to Emmerich, the third film will depict an intergalactic journey, possibly set a year or two later since he wants to maintain the same group of people, especially the young characters.[3] In October 2016, Emmerich spoke with Comingsoon.net and mentioned that potential sequels could be produced as TV-films, though they were still uncertain about how they would move forward with the sequels.[4][5]

In March 2018, LRM Online reported that, after having met producer Dean Devlin at WonderCon and asking about the status of Independence Day 3, Devlin told them "I don’t know. I don’t know. Currently, I personally have no plans on doing another one."[6] Following this, Ryan Scott at MovieWeb translated the poor reception of the second film and Devlin's comments as meaning Independence Day 3 will likely not happen, also noting that 20th Century Fox merging with The Walt Disney Company (meaning Disney will be in control of Fox's franchises) would make it even less likely that a third film would be pursued.[7]

Cast and characters edit

Character Films
Independence Day Independence Day:
Resurgence
1996 2016
Captain Steven Hiller Will Smith Will Smith
(photograph)
David Levinson Jeff Goldblum
Jake Morrison   Liam Hemsworth
President Thomas J. Whitmore Bill Pullman
First Lady Marilyn Whitmore Mary McDonnell  
Julius Levinson Judd Hirsch
General William Grey Robert Loggia
Russell Casse Randy Quaid  
Constance Spano Margaret Colin  
Jasmine Dubrow-Hiller Vivica A. Fox
Albert Nimzicki James Rebhorn  
Marty Gilbert Harvey Fierstein  
Major Mitchell Adam Baldwin  
Dr. Brackish Okun Brent Spiner
Miguel Casse James Duval  
Alicia Casse Lisa Jakub  
Troy Casse Giuseppe Andrews  
Lt. Col. Watson Bill Smitrovich  
Marine Captain Jimmy Wilder Harry Connick Jr.  
Patricia Whitmore Mae Whitman Maika Monroe
Dylan Dubrow-Hiller Ross Bagley Jessie Usher
President Elizabeth Lanford   Sela Ward
President/General Joshua T. Adams   William Fichtner
Reese Tanner   Patrick St. Esprit
Dr. Catherine Marceaux   Charlotte Gainsbourg
Dikembe Umbutu   Deobia Oparei
Floyd Rosenberg   Nicolas Wright
Charlie Miller   Travis Tope
Rain Lao   Angelababy
Jiang Lao   Ng Chin Han
Agent Matthew Travis   Gbenga Akinnagbe
Samantha Blackwell   Joey King
Bobby Blackwell   Garrett Wareing
Captain McQuade   Robert Neary

Crew edit

Role Film
Independence Day Independence Day: Resurgence
1996 2016
Director Roland Emmerich
Writer(s) Dean Devlin
Roland Emmerich
Screenplay by
Nicolas Wright
James A. Woods
Dean Devlin
Roland Emmerich
James Vanderbilt
Story by
Dean Devlin
Roland Emmerich
Nicolas Wright
James A. Woods
Producer(s) Dean Devlin Dean Devlin
Harald Kloser
Roland Emmerich
Composer David Arnold Thomas Wander
Harald Kloser
Cinematographer Karl Walter Lindenlaub Markus Förderer
Editor David Brenner Adam Wolfe
Production companies Centropolis Entertainment TSG Entertainment
Centropolis Entertainment
Electric Entertainment
Distributor 20th Century Fox

Reception edit

Box office performance edit

Film Release Date Box Office Gross Budget References
Domestic Foreign Worldwide
Independence Day July 3, 1996 $306,169,268 $511,231,623 $817,400,891 $75 million [8]
Independence Day: Resurgence June 24, 2016 $103,144,286 $286,537,649 $389,681,935 $165 million [9]
Total $409,313,554 $797,769,272 $1,207,082,826 $240 million [10]

Critical response edit

Film Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic CinemaScore[11]
Independence Day 67% (79 reviews)[12] 59 (19 critics)[13] A
Independence Day: Resurgence 29% (232 reviews)[14] 32 (40 critics)[15] B

Publications edit

The franchise has been the inspiration for a series of novels and comic books.

Novels edit

The first three novels were originally published in the 1990s based on the 1996 release of the first film, and were republished in March 2016 as a single-volume edition (The Complete Independence Day Omnibus).[16]

Independence Day (1996) edit

The first book in the series is the novelization of the first film. Author Stephen Molstad wrote the novel to help promote the film shortly before its release. The novel goes into further detail on the characters, situations, and overall concepts not explored in the film. The novel presents the film's finale as originally scripted, with the character played by Randy Quaid stealing a missile and roping it to his cropduster biplane.

Independence Day: Silent Zone (1998) edit

Following the film's success, a prequel novel entitled Independence Day: Silent Zone was written by Molstad in February 1998.[17] The novel is set in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and details the early career of Dr. Brackish Okun.[18]

Independence Day: War in the Desert (1999) edit

Molstad wrote a third novel, Independence Day: War in the Desert in July 1999. Set in Saudi Arabia on July 3, it centers around Captain Cummins and Colonel Thompson (ranks corrected to Squadron Leader and Group Captain respectively in the Omnibus reissue[16]), the two Royal Air Force officers seen receiving the Morse code message in the film.

Independence Day: Crucible (2016) edit

Independence Day: Crucible is the fourth book in the series, published in May 2016 bridging the events of Independence Day and its sequel.[19]

The novel focuses on the back story to Resurgence over a period of 20 years after the "War of 1996" and introduces new characters such as orphan Jake Morrison and tribe leader Dikembe Umbutu, whose ground battle in Africa reveals that aliens managed to land the only surviving city destroyer somewhere in the Congo during the initial attack. It also explains the after-effects of humans whose minds were hijacked by the aliens during the invasion, including Umbutu and President Whitmore. It also follows David Levinson's ascent to the head of the Earth Space Defense (ESD), Steve Hiller's son Dylan and his friendship with Jake and Patricia Whitmore, and Steve's untimely death caused by an accident while testing aircraft with alien technology designed by the ESD.

Independence Day: Resurgence (2016) edit

Independence Day: Resurgence is the novelization of the film of the same name written by Alex Irvine, and the fifth book in the series. It was published on June 21, 2016, three days before the release of the second film on June 24, 2016.[20]

The novelization includes many scenes from the original screenplay that were removed from the final theatrical release, including an alternate opening scene which features the wormhole causing the destruction of a moon base on Rhea, and some other scenes presented in a different order.

Comics edit

Independence Day (Marvel Comics) (1996) edit

A comic book series by Marvel Comics (issue #0, issue #0 variant, issue #1, issue #2, and issue #1 trade paperback) was also produced and based on the first two novelizations.

Independence Day: Dark Fathom (2016) edit

A comic book series by Titan Comics titled Independence Day: Dark Fathom was produced to promote and lead up to the events of the second film. It was sold with the option to print custom comic stores on the cover being blown up by the alien spaceships.[21][22]

Other edit

Independence Day: The Official Collector's Magazine (1996) edit

Independence Day: The Official Collector's Magazine is a 68-page magazine by MVP Licensing, Inc. The magazine contains exclusive interviews, production information, and behind-the-scenes features, complete with color photos. The magazine is divided into 5 main sections, focusing on different aspects of the film production.

The Art and Making of Independence Day: Resurgence (2016) edit

The Art and Making of Independence Day: Resurgence is an art book based on the making of the titular film.

Plays edit

Independence Day UK (1996) edit

On August 4, 1996, BBC Radio 1 broadcast the one-hour play Independence Day UK, written, produced, and directed by Dirk Maggs, a spin-off depicting the alien invasion from a British perspective.[23] None of the original cast was present. Dean Devlin gave Maggs permission to produce an original version, on the condition that he did not reveal certain details of the movie's plot, and that the British were not depicted as saving the day.[23] Independence Day UK was set up to be similar to the 1938 radio broadcast of The War of the Worldsthe first 20 minutes were presented as if live.[23]

Video games edit

Various video games based upon the franchise have been produced all the way back from 1996 and up until 2016.

ID4.COM Shockwave Mini Games (1996) edit

On the original www.id4.com 1996 website, 20th Century Fox produced & Media Revolution (defunct) developed, 4 mini games playable in either the web browser with Shockwave Plugin or as downloadable executables. Progress in these games were linked to an unlockable online comic with the final game being also linked to a contest. The games were, 1. Flight Sim: piloting an F/A-18 in a simulated canyon trench dodging obstacles, 2. Canyon Run: flying an F/A-18 through a canyon while being chased by an Alien Attacker, 3. Virus Upload: hack through the alien firewalls to implant a computer virus & 4. Game 4 Contest: Fly an F/A-18 after the shields have been brought down against unlimited Alien Attackers. The player tries to break the record of number of kills before dying to win a contest.

Independence Day - Trendmasters Computer Mission Disks (1996) edit

In 1996, Trendmasters included 11 floppy disk 16-bit Macromedia games for PC with their action figures. There was a mail in offer for Mac versions but these versions never seemed to have a floppy release. Softcopy PC & Mac versions were available on Trendmasters site as free downloads until their license expired. The games were Mission Disk 1: Command the Alien Invasion, Mission Disk 2: Mutate DNA, Mission Disk 3: Construct Weapons, Mission Disk 4: Classified (Commandeer Earth Satellites), Mission Disk 5: Jumpstart an Attacker, Mission Disk 6: Infect the Mothership, Mission Disk 7: Bomb the City Destroyers, Mission Disk 8: Classified Attacker Information, Mission Disk 9: Top Secret, Mission Disk 10: Blast a Major City, and Mission Disk 11: Launch an Attacker.[24]

Independence Day (Pinball) (1996) edit

In June 1996, Sega Pinball, Inc. released a pinball game based upon the 1996 film of the same name.

Independence Day Tiger Games (LCD) (1996) edit

In 1996, Tiger Electronics, Inc. released 2 handheld LCD games based upon the film of the same name.

The standard edition involved flying an F/A-18 against incoming Alien Attackers, at the end of each of the 5 levels you could take out the Mothership & could play as Cpt. Steven Hiller on foot shooting at Aliens.

The Laser version involved using a small handheld laser gun to shoot at incoming Alien Attackers & Motherships. The receptors for the laser involved 4 points dedicated to a quadrant of the screen. It had 10 levels with each increasing in difficulty with more enemies approaching faster at multiple quadrants.

Inside Independence Day (1996) edit

In 1996 a "behind-the-scenes" multimedia CD-ROM titled Inside Independence Day was released for Microsoft Windows and Macintosh; it includes storyboards for the film, sketches, movie clips, and a preview of the Independence Day video game.[25]

Independence Day (ID4: The Game) (1997) edit

Independence Day is a combat flight simulator video game based on the 1996 film of the same name. The game was developed by Radical Entertainment and published by Fox Interactive for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and mobile. Originally meant to release in 1996 but was delayed until 1997. Involved arcade like controls, fighting under a City Destroyer at various besieged cities around the globe, bonus levels at remote locations & the final mission inside the Mothership. Many military jets were unlockable with the final mission allowing the player fly the captured Alien Attacker from Area 51 & using it to fire a nuke at the Alien primary power source.

Independence Day Online (ID4 Online) (2000) edit

ID4 Online (2000), known more formally as Independence Day Online, was an arena-based action game developed by Mythic Entertainment, and published by Centropolis Entertainment. The game was billed as a direct sequel based on the movie Independence Day. This game was no longer available on early 2006, along with all other games offered on the Mythic-Realms gaming center excluding Dragon's Gate. On June 20, 2006, Mythic Entertainment was purchased by Electronic Arts. The game was space based first person shooter using human alien hybrid technologies fighting above various planets in the solar system. The player could fight as either humans or Aliens.

ID4 Get Off My Planet DVD ROM Game (2000) edit

For the 2000 DVD Five Star Collection Special Edition release of the movie, a DVD ROM game named 'Get Off My Planet' was included. It involved decoding Morse code against a deadline timer in order to defeat the Aliens.

Independence Day 3D Java (2005) edit

Independence Day 3D was a wireless Java based mobile version of the brand released in 2005. It involves flying an F/A-18 Hornet over various cities where a miniature Alien City Destroyer destroys the skyscrapers one at a time. To win you must take out the miniature City Destroyer before all buildings are destroyed.

ID4Game.com (2016) edit

To promote the Blu-Ray 20th Anniversary & Ultimate Edition release, a web browser game was released by 20th Century Fox Home. It involved 8 bit graphics & was a side scroller where the player piloted a fighter jet against Alien Attackers. After which the player entered the interior of a Mothership (exterior had a City Destroyer appearance while interior resembled the Mothership) to drop a nuclear bomb on a precise target. The site was taken down once Disney acquired the Fox Home websites & domains.

Independence Day My Street (2016) edit

Promoting the release of the second film, 20th Century Fox produced a website where you could use satellite imagery of your neighborhood and see what it would look like after an alien attack.[26]

Independence Day: Join the ESD (2016) edit

Promoting the release of the second film, 20th Century Fox produced a website where you could enlist the fictional Earth Space Defense (ESD) and receiving new ranks by completing different challenges and games. These games were developed by MRM//McCann. This was tied to a recruitment planned with participation of the US Army. Each game while based on the fight against aliens tied back to real world professions within the US Army like Microbiologist & Cryptologic Network Warfare Specialist. The games were, 1. Aerial Recon: Pilot a drone simulation to disable the Alien shields, 2. Bio Extract: Isolate Alien microbes to ward off their telepathic mind control, 3. Crack the Alien coded message & 4. Spacecraft Overhaul: Perform mechanic repair to a Space Moon Tug.

Independence Day: Resurgence - Battle Heroes (2016) edit

Independence Day: Resurgence - Battle Heroes was a free mobile app strategy game based on Independence Day: Resurgence. The game was developed by Zen Studios and Fox Digital Entertainment and was available to download for free on the iTunes App Store, Google Play and the Amazon Appstore. The game was an online only, mostly spaced based combat game with turn based mechanics. The player worked to unlock & upgrade Earth space fighters from different nations to fight Aliens around various locations in the Solar System.

Independence Day: Extinction (2016) edit

Independence Day: Extinction was a mobile game created by Linekong U.S. and based on Independence Day: Resurgence. The game was released on June 30, 2016, and was available to download for free on the iTunes App Store and Google Play. The game was an online turn based strategy game where the player would choose to either fight as the humans or the Aliens. It involved resource mining, base building & upgrading technologies. You could then attack other players' bases while they were away using space based energy / gravity weapons, flying craft, tanks, hovering artillery & ground troops.

Toys edit

Trendmasters released a toy line for the original film in 1996 & a second wave in 1997.[27] Each action figure, vehicle or playset of the first wave came with a 3½" floppy disk that contained an interactive PC game (Mac version could be ordered via mail).[28] Cepia was scheduled to release a toy line of action figures, vehicles & hand held weapons in time for the second film, unfortunately due to delayed production they never saw wide release.[29] Pop Funko also released various figures based on the franchise.[30]

Attractions edit

Theme park rides edit

Independence Day: Defiance edit

ESD Global Defender edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Independence Day 3 and 4 also being planned". Den of Geek.
  2. ^ McMillan, Graeme (June 13, 2016). "'Independence Day' Director Shares Plot of the Movie's Original, Unmade, Sequel". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  3. ^ Semlyen, Phil De (June 22, 2016). "Independence Day 3 will be 'an intergalactic journey' says Roland Emmerich". Empire. Retrieved June 22, 2016.
  4. ^ "Independence Day Franchise: Roland Emmerich on Its Future". ComingSoon.net. October 18, 2016.
  5. ^ "Independence Day 3 meeting next week, TV now an option". Den of Geek.
  6. ^ Medina, Joseph Jammer. "EXCLUSIVE: Independence Day: Resurgence Producer Has No Plans To Do Another Film Anytime Soon". lrmonline.com.
  7. ^ "Independence Day 3 Is Completely Dead for Now". MovieWeb. March 27, 2018. Retrieved May 4, 2018.
  8. ^ "Independence Day (1996)". Box Office Mojo.
  9. ^ "Independence Day: Resurgence (2016)". Box Office Mojo.
  10. ^ "Independence Day Movies at the Box Office". Box Office Mojo.
  11. ^ "CinemaScore". CinemaScore. Archived from the original on April 13, 2022. Retrieved April 15, 2022.
  12. ^ "Independence Day (1996)". Rotten Tomatoes.
  13. ^ "Independence Day Reviews". Metacritic.
  14. ^ "Independence Day: Resurgence (2016)". Rotten Tomatoes.
  15. ^ "Independence Day: Resurgence Reviews". Metacritic.
  16. ^ a b The Complete Independence Day Omnibus. Amazon. Retrieved June 9, 2016.
  17. ^ "Independence Day: Silent Zone Product Details." Amazon.com. Retrieved October 8, 2007.
  18. ^ "Independence Day: Silent Zone by Stephen Molstad Publisher's Notes." Biblio.com. Retrieved October 8, 2007.
  19. ^ Independence Day: Crucible (The Official Prequel). Amazon. Retrieved June 9, 2016.
  20. ^ Independence Day: Resurgence: The Official Movie Novelization. Amazon. Retrieved June 9, 2016.
  21. ^ "Titan Comics reveals 'Independence Day' comics team and cover - AnimationXpressAnimationXpress". www.animationxpress.com.
  22. ^ "See Your Comic Book Store Destroyed For Independence Day 2016 - Bleeding Cool News And Rumors". December 1, 2015.
  23. ^ a b c "Independence Day UK." Archived November 19, 2007, at the Wayback Machine dswilliams.co.uk. Retrieved September 25, 2007.
  24. ^ "The Independence Day PC game that time forgot".
  25. ^ "ID4 Goes 32-Bit". GamePro. No. 97. IDG. October 1996. p. 26.
  26. ^ "Independence Day: Resurgence - Now Playing". Independence Day: Resurgence - Now Playing.
  27. ^ Trate, Robert T. (March 19, 2010). "10 Awesome Toys from 10 Awful Movies". Mania. Archived from the original on April 19, 2015. Retrieved July 4, 2013.
  28. ^ "iD-4: Independence Day- Model Alien Supreme Commander". Movie Art Museum. April 30, 2012. Retrieved July 4, 2013.
  29. ^ "Toy Fair 2016: 'Independence Day: Resurgence'". ScienceFiction.com. February 20, 2016.
  30. ^ "Funko Pop Independence Day Figures Checklist, Chase, Exclusive". The Cardboard Connection. May 4, 2016.

External links edit

  • Official website