Other Adaptations >> Peter Jackson Working on New ‘Lord of the Rings’ Films for Warner Bros., Targeting 2026 Debut
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That is a really nice thing for WB to do, props to them for seeing the positive of the film being available for fans.
onthetrail wrote:
That is a really nice thing for WB to do, props to them for seeing the positive of the film being available for fans.
You mean seeing the fan film as a potential tool in drumming up interest in their own film?
I am seeing the positiveMr. Underhill wrote:
onthetrail wrote:
That is a really nice thing for WB to do, props to them for seeing the positive of the film being available for fans.
You mean seeing the fan film as a potential tool in drumming up interest in their own film?
Well, there's a report from the BBC in 2009 with a quote from one of the makers:
Clearly the details of this (gentleman's?) agreement are not public, but if the now Middle-Earth Enterprises & Friends already gave permission for the film to be available non-commercially, then I don't see how WB, merely the licensee, can object. I presume it was WB lawyers and YT's automated copyright machine that resulted in the film being taken down.
We got in touch with Tolkien Enterprises and reached an understanding with them that as long as we are completely non-profit then we're okay. We have to be careful not to disrespect their ownership of the intellectual property. They are supportive of the way fans wish to express their enthusiasm.
Clearly the details of this (gentleman's?) agreement are not public, but if the now Middle-Earth Enterprises & Friends already gave permission for the film to be available non-commercially, then I don't see how WB, merely the licensee, can object. I presume it was WB lawyers and YT's automated copyright machine that resulted in the film being taken down.
Recently I have been thinking of writing that The Curse of Peter Jackson's Legacy for Middle-earth post but then it would not really change a thing - so why bother?
War of the Rohirrim is written by Philippa Boyens' daughter and her partner and Boyens is the face of it right now for the press; Hunt for Gollum is just the same thing, even if you have Serkis as the director. It's all being done by the same people which means we will - in all probability - never get anything new and interesting ever again
The one good thing I appreciate about this is that - given the fact how Amazon left NZ in the lurch - that Weta Workshop et al. are getting a production hub for the work they are doing in New Zealand which will massively benefit the local economy. And to me that sounds way nicer than making the coffers of WB or Embracer ring...
Which will happen anyway.
War of the Rohirrim is written by Philippa Boyens' daughter and her partner and Boyens is the face of it right now for the press; Hunt for Gollum is just the same thing, even if you have Serkis as the director. It's all being done by the same people which means we will - in all probability - never get anything new and interesting ever again
The one good thing I appreciate about this is that - given the fact how Amazon left NZ in the lurch - that Weta Workshop et al. are getting a production hub for the work they are doing in New Zealand which will massively benefit the local economy. And to me that sounds way nicer than making the coffers of WB or Embracer ring...
Which will happen anyway.
The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Ideas … is a standalone Gandalf movie on its way?
A film about the wizard and his search for Gollum is coming – and it turns out a second may also be in the offing. Will he battle Balrog, entreat Entwines or just plod about perplexed?
Well thank goodness for that. One can only imagine the panic at Peter Jackson’s WingNut Films when that doughty old japester Sir Ian McKellen told the world last month that the Oscar-winning film-maker’s return to Middle-earth, The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum, would be not one but two movies. First of all because Jackson suffered major brickbats a decade ago for somehow contriving to turn The Hobbit (a novel that it is conceivably possible to read in less time than it would take Bilbo to hide the silverware from Lobelia Sackville-Baggins) into an entire trilogy of epic movies about elf-dwarf romances and Alfrid the greedy servant’s penchant for cross-dressing. And secondly because it is not, in fact, true.
“I can tell you definitively it isn’t two films,” screenwriter Philippa Boyens tells the new issue of Empire. “That was a genuine misunderstanding that happened because we’ve begun to work, conceptually, on two different live-action films. The first being The Hunt for Gollum, the second one still to be confirmed.”
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2024/ ... -gandalf-movie-on-its-way
I think this is the original piece all other news outlets are referring to...
The Hunt For Gollum Won’t Be Two Films, But A Second LOTR Film Is Incoming, Philippa Boyens Confirms
The Hunt For Gollum Won’t Be Two Films, But A Second LOTR Film Is Incoming, Philippa Boyens Confirms
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