Universal to adapt Army of Two game

Screenshot from the Army of Two game
Screenshot from the Army of Two game
Electronic Arts recently announced that the company has closed a deal with Universal to bring top-selling videogame Army of Two, to the big screen.

Scott Stuber, through his Stuber Productions shingle, will produce the film along with EA, and screenwriter Scott Z. Burns, who recently co-wrote the blockbuster The Bourne Ultimatum, has signed on to adapt the game for the screen. Universal Pictures, Stuber Productions and EA are planning to begin production of the film in 2009.

Army of Two, which has grossed over $100 million in sales since its release in March 2008, is the second film project that EA has set in motion as part of an aggressive strategy to move towards more entertainment platforms. The company is also currently developing The Sims at 20th Century Fox with producer John Davis.

Army of Two, which shipped earlier this year for the Playstation 3 and Xbox 360, is a strategic co-operative third-person shooter which features a captivating and politically-charged storyline. The game is set in the world of private military contractors and follows the missions of Rios and Salem. After an extensive career in the Rangers, they’re drawn into the business of war. However, they quickly learn their employer is as corrupt as the people they’re sent to take out.

The unique gameplay of Army of Two brought a new and groundbreaking co-op gaming experience to players worldwide. Focusing on two-man tactics to ultimately create an advantage no enemy can withstand, players have to fight their way through war, turmoil and a conspiracy so vast it threatens the entire world.

Universal will release the Stuber Productions’ David Wain comedy Role Models starring Paul Rudd and Seann William Scott on November 7th, followed in April 2009 by The Wolfman, directed by Joe Johnston and starring Benicio Del Toro, Emily Blunt and Anthony Hopkins. The company is currently in preproduction on the Peter Billingsley-directed comedy Couples Retreat starring Vince Vaughn, Jason Bateman and John Favreau, who also wrote the script. Other films to be released by Universal include Traveling, directed by Brandon Camp and starring Jennifer Aniston, Aaron Eckhart and Martin Sheen and the sci-fi thriller Repossession Mambo starring Jude Law and Forest Whitaker and directed by Miguel Sapochnik.

Writer-director-producer Scott Z. Burns co-wrote the blockbuster The Bourne Ultimatum, the 2007 action thriller from Universal that grossed over $442 million worldwide, and wrote and directed the critically-praised HBO film PU-239 which was produced by George Clooney and Steven Soderbergh. He also wrote the screenplay for the upcoming The Informant, directed by Soderbergh and starring Matt Damon. Burns joined Laurie David and Laurence Bender as producers of the Academy Award-winning documentary An Inconvenient Truth, for which he received the Humanitas Prize and the Stanley Kramer Award from the Producers Guild of America. Burns is producing, along with Lorenzo di Bonaventura, the Colombian hostage crisis action thriller at Warner Bros. Burns is developing an original series for HBO based on the work of humanitarian aid organizations with fellow producers Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt. Burns’ credits also include writing for the ABC series Wonderland.

Below is the trailer for the Army of Two game.