Fifty, 60 years ago, with popular entertainment, you didn’t get much of an “origin” story. You usually got more-or-less fully formed heroes. A few examples:
Dr. No: James Bond is an established 00-agent and has used a Baretta for 10 years. Sean Connery was 31 when production started. If Bond is close to the actor’s age, that means he’s done intelligence work since his early 20s.
The Man From U.N.C.L.E.: During the first season (1964-65), Napoleon Solo (Robert Vaughn) has worked for U.N.C.L.E. for at least seven years (this is disclosed in two separate episodes). A fourth-season episode establishes that Illya Kuryakin (David McCallum) graduated from U.N.C.L.E.’s “survival school” in 1956 and Solo two years before that.
Batman: While played for laughs, the Adam West version of Batman has been operating for an undisclosed amount of time when the first episode airs in January 1966. In the pilot, it’s established he has encountered the Riddler (Frank Gorshin) before. There’s a passing reference to how Bruce Wayne’s parents were “murdered by dastardly criminals” but that’s about it.
The FBI: When we first meet Inspector Lewis Erskine (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.) in 1965, he’s established as the “top trouble shooter for the bureau” and is old enough to have a daughter in college. We’re told he’s a widower and his wife took “a bullet meant for me.” (The daughter would soon be dropped and go into television character limbo.) Still, we don’t see Young Lewis Erskine rising through the ranks of the bureau.
Get Smart: Maxwell Smart (Don Adams) was a top agent for CONTROL despite his quirks. There was no attempt to explain Max. He just was. A 2008 movie version gave Max a back story where he had once been fat.
I Spy: Kelly Robinson (Robert Culp) and Alexander Scott (Bill Cosby) have been partners for awhile, using a cover of a tennis bum and his trainer.
Mission: Impossible: We weren’t told much about either Dan Briggs (Steven Hill) or Jim Phelps (Peter Graves), the two team leaders of the Impossible Missions Force. A fifth-season episode was set in Phelps home town. Some episodes introduced friends of Briggs and Phelps. But not much more than that.
Mannix: We first meet Joe Mannix (Mike Connors) when he’s the top operative of private investigations firm Intertect. After Joe goes off on his own in season two, we meet some of Joe’s Korean War buddies (many of whom seem to try to kill him) and we eventually meet Mannix’s father, a California farmer. But none of this is told at the start.
Hawaii Five-O: Steve McGarrett (Jack Lord) is the established head of the Hawaiian state police unit answerable only to “the governor or God and even they have trouble.” When the series was rebooted in 2010, we got an “origin” story showing McGarrett (Alex O’Loughlin) as a military man, the unit being formed, his first meeting with Dan Williams, etc.
And so on and so forth. This century, though, an “origin story” is the way to start.
With the Bond films, the series started over with Casino Royale, marketed as the origin of Bond (Daniel Craig). The novel, while the first Ian Fleming story, wasn’t technically an origin tale. It took place in 1951 (this date is given in the Goldfinger novel) and Bond got the two kills needed for 00-status in World War II.
Nevertheless, audience got an “origin” story. Michael G. Wilson, current co-boss of Eon Productions (along with his half-sister, Barbara Broccoli) wanted to do a Bond “origin” movie as early as 1986 after Roger Moore left the role of Bond. But his stepfather, Eon co-founder Albert R. Broccoli, vetoed the idea. With The Living Daylights in 1987, the audience got a younger, but still established, Bond (Timothy Dalton). In the 21st century, Wilson finally got his origin tale.
Some of this may be due to the rise of movies based on comic book movies. There are had been Superman serials and television series, but 1978’s Superman: The Motion Picture was the first A-movie project. It told the story of Kal-El from the start and was a big hit.
The 1989 Batman movie began with a hero (Michael Keaton) still in the early stages of his career, with the “origin” elements mentioned later. The Christopher Nolan-directed Batman Begins in 2005 started all over, again presenting an “origin” story. Marvel, which began making movies after licensing characters, scored a big hit with 2008’s Iron Man, another “origin” tale. Spider-Man’s origin has been told *twice* in 2002 and 2012 films from Sony Pictures.
Coming up in August, we’ll be getting a long-awaited movie version of U.N.C.L.E., this time with an origin storyline. In the television series, U.N.C.L.E. had started sometime shortly after World War II. In the movie, set in 1963, U.N.C.L.E. hasn’t started yet and Solo works for the CIA while Kuryakin is a KGB operative.
One supposes if there were a movie version of The FBI (don’t count on it), we’d see Erskine meet the Love of His Life, fall in love, get married, lose her and become the Most Determined Agent in the Bureau. Such is life.
Filed under: James Bond Films, The Other Spies | Tagged: A movie version of The Man From U.N.C.L.E.?, Adam West, Alex O'Loughlin, Armie Hammer, Barbara Broccoli, Batman, Batman Begins, Bill Cosby, Casino Royale, Christopher Nolan, Daniel Craig, David McCallum, Don Adams, Dr. No, Efrem Zimbalist Jr., Get Smart, Hawaii Five-0, Hawaii Five-O, Henry Cavill, I Spy, Iron Man, James Bond Films, Mannix, Marvel Studios, Michael G. Wilson, Mike Connors, Mission: Impossible, Peter Graves, Robert Culp, Robert Vaughn, Sean Connery, Steven Hill, Superman, The FBI, The Living Daylights, The Man From U.N.C.L.E, The Other Spies, Timothy Dalton |
You forgot to mention the origin The Saint got in the Kilmer film where he was an orphan named John Rossi who dubbed himself Simon Templar. Charteris never gave Simon an origin.
I wonder if this is caused by the ever younger actors taking the lead roles in films and TV. Most of them look to be in the 20s so an origin story fits with there fresh faces. I look at the actors of the 50s, 60s and 70s and these men looked like they had some experience when they started playing their roles. I don’t buy these fresh faced kids as seasoned anythings.
i like the comment about ‘the saint’ not getting a origin story by it’s
creator leslie charteris. the facts remains did the makers of the film
version of ‘the saint’ (1997)
did they really do some research and come-up with the orphan named
john rossi aka simon templer, or the filmmakers made it up ?
however the news is out that theres a new reboot ‘the saint’ tv series
is in the works.
the idea of using origin stories in movies, are good it gives the audience
a feeling of familiarity with the hero character towards the end of
the movie.
Regarding the Kilmer Saint film, the filmmakers made it up. Nothing in the Charteris Saint stories points to Simon being an orphan named John Rossi.
You forgot the Young Bond novels; they’re origin stories as well.
@Phoenix: Only so much space for each post. This one already was longer than most.
[…] The rise of the ‘origin’ storyline (April 11, 2015): It’s not just the U.N.C.L.E. movie that favors an “origin” storyline. […]
I always assumed that The Saint traced his family to the Knights Templar. Hence his name. It brings a mysterious history to him. I thought it was mentioned in a book but I may be wrong. I think the whole origin thing came from comic books and then became a big part of the movies. The best one I think is the 1989 Batman where Batman has already been operating in Gotham City and we see bits of his origin in flashbacks. I am getting very tired of reboots and focusing on origins but not having a decent story that the movie revolves on.