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Two 'G.I. Joe' Movies In Works Between Danny McBride & Max Landis

Two Different 'G.I. Joe' Movies In Early Works At Paramount Between Danny McBride & Max Landis

EntertainmentBy Amanda SterlingFebruary 27, 20262 min read

Last updated: April 4, 2026, 6:53 PM

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Two 'G.I. Joe' Movies In Works Between Danny McBride & Max Landis

There are two different G.I. Joe movies in early development, Deadline has confirmed, between The Righteous Gemstones star/creator Danny McBride and American Ultra scribe Max Landis.

We hear Landis has a treatment while McBride is in talks to write a treatment. Know that Paramount has myriad Transformers projects in early stages as well. You’ll remember coming off of Steven Caple Jr.’s Transformers: Rise of the Beasts there was a tip-off to a Transformers-G.I. Joe crossover movie. That concept isn’t out of sight, out of mind.

Transformers producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura is also the producer on the G.I. Joe movies.

Landis, the son of filmmaker John Landis, made bank by selling three pitches out of college in a six-month time frame early on in his career. His script for Chronicle landed on the Black List and ultimately sold to 20th Century Fox and Davis Entertainment.

Landis was accused by multiple women of sexual abuse between 2017-2019. His management company Writ Large dropped him in June 2019 amid the allegations.

There’s a big fandom, particularly among GenXers, for G.I. Joe given the 1980s toys and TV series. While Paramount achieved tentpole box office with the first two movies with a combined global gross of $678.1M and stars such as Bruce Willis, Dwayne Johnson and Channing Tatum in the franchise, the post-Covid 2021 spinoff Snake Eyes, about one of the most popular G.I. Joe characters –a severely burned mute ninja turned sharpshooter– fell off a cliff with $40M at the global box office.

AS
Amanda Sterling

Culture Reporter

Amanda Sterling reports on music, pop culture, celebrity news, and the arts. A graduate of NYU's arts journalism program, she covers the cultural moments that define the zeitgeist. Her reviews and profiles appear regularly in the Journal American's arts and culture section.

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