TV Guidance

TV Guidance

Jaime Weinman writes about all kinds of television and other kinds of popular culture. He does not write Gossip Girl episode reviews. Follow Jaime on Twitter: @weinmanj

Why Hasn't There Been a Good ARCHIE Adaptation?

by Jaime Weinman on Monday, June 8, 2009 5:09pm - 10 Comments

All the Archie/Betty/Veronica talk the other week got me thinking again about Archie comics, to the point that I promised on my other blog that I wouldn’t make such references for a while. (But I made no such promise here.) One question that interests me: we can see, from the immense public interest in this gimmick, that the Archie characters are some of the best-known comic book characters around, for better or for worse. (I say it’s for better if they are drawn by someone as great as the late Harry Lucey.) Yet they’ve never been adapted into other media with anything resembling real success, unless you count “Sugar, Sugar,” and that doesn’t actually have anything to do with the comics. There have been several TV cartoons, but all of them kind of stunk; the main question is whether the Filmation cartoon stunk worse than “Archie’s Weird Mysteries.” There was that live-action TV movie where they’re grown-up and return to Riverdale, and many, many rumours about possible feature films, TV series and stage musicals, which never come to pass. How many comic book characters are that popular yet have such a dismal track record in adaptations? For God’s sake, they did a flop movie version of Josie & the Pussycats, which flopped because they didn’t include Pepper in it, but not an Archie movie.

More proof that Betty is an insane psycho stalker

More proof that Betty is an insane psycho stalker

One reason why the adaptations never happen is that the Archie world is so generic that you can do virtually the same characters and setting without actually having to adapt the comic book. I can think of at least three successful franchises from the last 20 years that owe an obvious debt of inspiration to Archie comics: 1) Saved By the Bell; 2) High School Musical; 3) Beverly Hills 90210. (I doubt Darren Star intended to do a California Archie show with the Peach Pit standing in for the Chok’lit Shoppe, but that’s what he came up with.) It’s not like superhero comics, where if you want to use the specific powers and villains in your movie, you have to pay for them. There’s no copyright on the concept of teen hijinks and chaste love triangles.

Also, the Archie characters are harder to cast than superheroes, because superheroes depend to a large extent on the costume: you put the actor in a Superman suit, he looks like Superman. Casting someone who looks like Archie, let alone Jughead, let alone Betty and Veronica (who, let us remember, have the exact same face) is much trickier. How do you convince us that this guy is Archie, just because he has red hair and maybe wears an “R” on his shirt?

Still, I think that with all the zillions of comic-book movies around today, it would make sense for someone, somewhere to do an Archie movie. It could even work if they went back to the old Frank Doyle scripts for inspiration on how these characters should talk (which is to say, like old-time Vaudeville comedians).

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  • Scott M.

    I know I loved Corner Gas' send up of Archie, Jughead and the gang. Other than that, I don't know if I've seen any other adaptations at all!

    Richie Rich never came across on the little (or big) screen very well.

  • andrew potter

    there was stage version of Archie in Toronto a long while ago — I believe it starred Adam Sternbergh as the redhead himself.

  • Charles

    I now feel obligated to defend the Josie movie. It wasn't perfect, but it was a pretty good satire on commercial culture. And the soundtrack (by Kay Hanley from Letters to Cleo) was much better than it had any right to be. I think the film ultimately flopped because it was too much satire for the kiddies and looked too bubblegum for adults (who couldn't get past the name/heritage).

    • http://www.iheartmusic.net matthew

      Agreed! I saw this on TV over the weekend, and I was reminded by how much I loved it…as mainstream satires go it was pretty scathing, plus the music was outstanding.

  • http://www.macleans.ca/weinman Jaime Weinman

    Now I've got to check that movie out, though I stand by my assertion that Pepper should have been in it. Pepper is awesome.

    Interesting that movies and TV have had more success with the subsidiary Archie properties — the Josie cartoon, and especially the Sabrina live-action TV show — than with the actual Archie title.

  • David

    The Archie comic strip was adapted for a Saturday morning radio series that premiered in the mid-1940s and ran into the 1950s. The examples of that I've heard were all pretty bad.

  • http://bjdwsm.wordpress.com bjdwsm

    If there was an adaptation, I don't think I could get my head around the fact that there are teenagers actually named Betty, Midge and Ethel.

    All this Archie talk reminds me of the Betty and Veronica Forum from Seattle's Almost LIve: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DV08HIEJXfU

  • Alan

    "…an obvious debt of inspiration to Archie comics"

    Really? You said it yourself, that Archie is very generic. I'm not sure how you can call those shows inspired by Archie, unless you're going to claim that any teen movie/show is inspired by Archie.

    My first thought when you mentioned an Archie adaptation was to do some sort of Alan Moore type adaptation, when Jughead has a drug addiction and Archie lives on the street. I'd suggest Robert Altman direct, but then who can forget his Popeye adaptation.

  • http://classicquarters.blogspot.com CQc

    or rather: How many comic book adaptation characters are that popular(?) [over the past 20 years] yet have such a dismal track record in modern printed form?

  • http://kbweb.blogspot.com Kenny

    It would not be going too far to say that any teen movie/show is inspired by Archie, which was created in the 40s, just before the idea of teen culture as a thing took off. Archie was one of the first things about teenagers, since before Archie, there wasn't any such thing as teenage life as we know it.

    Also, I second the endorsement of the Josie movie as an unexpectedly great satire with excellent music, and a time capsule of pop culture circa 2000. It still has its dumb moments and works better with low expectations, so don't get your hopes up too much, but it's definitely worth checking out.

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