Perfect Alibi helped Sommers acquire independent funding to write and direct his first feature film, the teen racing film Catch Me If You Can, filmed for $800,000 on location in his hometown of St. Cloud.[2] The film was sold at the Cannes Film Festival for $7 million and later debuted on video in the United States.
In 2004, Sommers founded his own company (along with editor/producing partner Bob Ducsay), The Sommers Company, and returned to theater screens with Van Helsing, a film pitting legendary vampire hunter Gabriel Van Helsing against the triumvirate of Universal movie monsters: Count Dracula, The Wolf Man, and Frankenstein's monster. Before Van Helsing even premiered, Sommers and Ducsay began developing a spin-off TV series for NBC called Transylvania. Though featuring none of the characters from the film, the series (which was to have made use of the film's Prague set) was about a young cowboy from Texas who becomes a sheriff in Transylvania, has many strange adventures, and encounters many strange creatures. Sommers and Ducsay were to have been executive producers, and Sommers wrote scripts for the pilot and first several episodes, but NBC decided not to go through with the show.[4]
Since Van Helsing, Sommers has been attached to a number of projects. He was originally set to direct Night at the Museum, but dropped out due to creative differences. He was also attached to a remake of When Worlds Collide (to be executive produced by Steven Spielberg),[5] a new big-screen adaptation of Flash Gordon,[6] a swashbuckling adventure film called Airborn based on the novel by Kenneth Oppel,[7] a romantic/adventure story called The Big Love based on the novel by Sarah Dunn,[6] and a remake of the French film Les Victimes. Sommers opted out of directing the third Mummy film, titled The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, instead becoming one of its producers.[8]
Sommers directed Paramount Pictures' 2009 live-action adaptation of G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, and also served as a producer.[9] Around that time, he was developing a Tarzan adaptation for Warner Bros. but left the project.[10] His most recent film, Odd Thomas, had been delayed from release due to lawsuits against the production company,[11] but was eventually released.