Cancelled film In 1994,
Walt Disney Studios obtained the film rights to the character, with
Caravan Pictures producing. Several scripts were written, including an early version family comedy written by Greg Erb, a co-writer at Disney. The script which cast
Tim Allen in the role of Stretch Armstrong as a "kind of single dad who is a research scientist" and is "stretched too thin" trying to balance his work and family life before he inadvertently accidentally takes one of his experimental serums giving himself "stretchy powers". A later version from screenwriter Michael Kalesniko was created and it was set in
San Francisco. It was about a somewhat socially awkward nobody beset with troubles trying to venture out his failing personal life. He is then genetically modified with stretching abilities after a failed nuclear fusion experiment and must use his newfound abilities to solve the tragedy that has befallen his family. Among the actors who were considered for the role was
Danny DeVito, who refused to do the film if the script made any jokes about his height. Several other writers, such as
Mike Werb and
Michael Colleary, provided rewrites, and
Peter Care was attached to direct, but due to lack of time on the rights, both ideas from Disney were scrapped and the rights were bought up by
Hasbro. In 2008,
Universal Studios signed a deal with Hasbro to create another film based on Stretch Armstrong from a screenplay written by
Nicholas Stoller. It was announced from the studios co-chairman
Donna Langley that
Taylor Lautner would star as Armstrong and that the film would be in
3-D. She stated that "with Lautner's success energy and athleticism he is a perfect fit to a unlikely hero." Producer
Brian Grazer stated "Stretch Armstrong is a character I have wanted to see on screen for a long time ... It's a story about a guy stretching ... the limits of what is possible to become all that he can be." Another script was being made by writer
Steve Oedekerk introducing the character in the form of an uptight spy who stumbles across a stretching formula, which he takes and now must adjust to his newfound abilities when fighting crime and in his everyday life. Two years later, after the excitement drummed up by the Studios ideas for the character,
Relativity Media announced that they had picked up the film after it was dropped by Universal and set a new release date of April 11, 2014. Planning to make the film more serious than originally intended by Universal, Relativity hired
The Manchurian Candidate writer Dean Georgaris to write a new script, dropped Lautner, and hired Breck Eisner to direct. The film origin story was going to introduce an overwhelmed high schooler and the life-or-death consequences he was going to face after undergoing a transformation granting him superhuman abilities. Production was scheduled to start filming on May 15, 2013, in
Montreal but by October 2013, both the studio and Hasbro had abandoned the film to work on other projects.
Television After four attempted films for Stretch Armstrong, Hasbro Studios made a deal with the video streaming service website
Netflix where the property was picked up for a full 26-episode animated series, making it the first deal between the company and the streaming service. This superhero action/comedy animated series followed a teenager named Jake Armstrong and his two best friends as they go into action after being exposed to an experimental chemical making them
Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters—a team of stretchable superheroes who must work together and embark on a series of adventures. The series debuted on Netflix on November 17, 2017. The series was developed by Kevin Burke,
Victor Cook, and
Chris "Doc" Wyatt. Burke and Wyatt also wrote a tie-in comic book for
IDW Publishing. The first 13 episodes of the 26-episode first season were released on
Netflix on November 17, 2017.
Comics A similar concept with Stretch as a superhero was also shown in a one-off comic produced by Hasbro in 2011 dubbed
Unit:E; there, the descendant of Acroyear and a Biotron (both from
Micronauts) and Synergy (from
Jem; here an alien artificial intelligence) conducted
reconnaissance on heroes from Earth and beyond (including characters from
G.I. Joe,
Transformers,
MASK,
Battleship Galaxies,
Action Man, and even
Candy Land) to help fight against Baron Karza (the enemy of the Micronauts). In September 2017,
IDW Publishing announced a new comic book based on the Netflix series
Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters for January 2018.
Video game In 2018, an interactive special called
Stretch Armstrong: The Breakout was released on Netflix. It is set in the universe of the
Flex Fighters series and involves Jake Armstrong, Ricardo and Nathan stopping villains from rampaging through Charter City. ==References==