Sunday, June 6, 2010

Guillermo Del Toro has to ramble on after he quits The Hobbit

Over two years ago, Guillermo Del Toro, the director of Pan’s Labyrinth and also the Hellboy series among other films, was attached to direct The Hobbit. It is the prequel to the wildly successful Lord of the Rings series, written by JRR Tolkien. Peter Jackson got Guillermo Del Toro to move to New Zealand to help him bring the book to the large screen. A new director is needed as the financial woes of MGM studios has caused too numerous delays, and Del Toro’s role as director has been put on the killing floor.

Source for this article: Guillermo Del Toro drops The Hobbit and rambles on to other work

Guillermo Del Toro attached after long struggle

A film of The Hobbit was inevitable after the success of the Lord of the Rings trilogy. The roadblock was the rights to The Hobbit are owned by United Artists and Metro Goldwyn Mayer, but Peter Jackson belongs to New Line and Warner Brothers. An agreement was made, but conditioned on someone other than Jackson directing. It was decided that Guillermo Del Toro would make online cash loans rain from the sky, as his films feature exquisite visual design.

No quarter from troubles in development

As MGM is still within the vice like grip of money troubles, work on The Hobbit has ground to a halt. The film can be in two installments scheduled for release a year apart, and initially the first was due in 2010, but now won’t debut until at least 2012, as outlined by CNN. Del Toro confirmed that him leaving the project has anything to do with the financial difficulties of the studio, but he will remain in no matter what capacity he can, as so much pre-production has already been done. He relocated himself and his family to Wellington to make the film.

Another film trampled underfoot by studio troubles

The live action version of The Hobbit is one of the latest projects in what is called development hell. Development hell is what it is called when a project, be it a movie or album or video game, has a real hard time getting put together and released. There appears to be a lot of smog around The Hobbit, and 2012 is beginning to look optimistic at best.

Read more on this topic here

CNN

Wikipedia



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