LegendofJoe said:Oh, without a doubt they'll have to. It's definitely a cause for concern, but at least they do have something to work with so it won't be a 100% hollywood production.
Yeah. JRR Tolkien sold the rights to LOTR and The Hobbit in large part because he needed the money. When you read his letters you see how he's quite poor (even though he's a professor) and is strapped for paper to write on and sometimes resorts to napkins and stuff like that.Rindain said:Doesn't Christopher Tolkien still own the rights to The Silmarillion, and refuse to allow it to be filmed?
Anyway, this news ROCKS.
Tieno said:Yeah. JRR Tolkien sold the rights to LOTR and The Hobbit in large part because he needed the money. When you read his letters you see how he's quite poor (even though he's a professor) and is strapped for paper to write on and sometimes resorts to napkins and stuff like that.
The letters he wrote to the company who were making LOTR into a movie where filled with disappointment on how they butchered the story and got so many basic things wrong.
Very fascinating. I always wonder what he'd think of PJ's version, I like to think he would be ok with it.
But it seems the Tolkien family still holds the rights to the Silmarillion.
"I think the book quite unsuitable for 'dramatization', and have not enjoyed the broadcasts - though they have improved. I thought Tom Bombadil dreadful - but worse still was the announcer's preliminary remarks that Goldberry was his daughter (!), and that Willowman was an ally of Mordor (!!)." (The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, Letter 175, 30 November 1955)
"I think poorly of the broadcast adaptations. Except for a few details I think they are not well done, even granted the script and the legitimacy of the enterprise (which I do not grant). But they took some trouble with the names. I thought that the dwarf (Glóin not Gimli [...]) was not too bad, if a bit exaggerated." (The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, Letter 176, 8 December 1955)
[To Terence Tiller, concerning accents]: "I paid great attention to such linguistic differentiation as was possible: in diction, idiom and so on; and I doubt if much more can be imported, except in so far as the individual actor represents his feeling for the character in tone and style." (The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, Letter 193, 2 November 1956)
[To Terence Tiller, concerning scripts for three of the episodes]: "Here is a book very unsuitable for dramatic or semi-dramatic representation. If that is attempted, it needs more space, a lot of space. [...] Personally, I think it requires rather the older art of the reading 'mime', than the more nearly dramatic, which results in too great an emphasis on dialogue (mostly with its setting removed). [...] I feel you have had a very hard task." (The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, Letter 194, 6 November 1956)
[Replying to his publisher concerning an enquiry about the possibility of making a cartoon of The Lord of the Rings]: "I think I should find vulgarization less painful than the sillification achieved by the B.B.C." (The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, Letter 198, 19 June 1957)
It's not the Bakashi one. I read his letters, the animated version Tolkien talked about was another one that in the end didn't get made.ManaByte said:Funny, Tolkien died seven years before the first movie version of LOTR (Bakshi's animated one). He did complain about the BBC radio drama in the 50's, but he wasn't around when Bakshi was working on his animated version.
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White Man said:Well, Guillermo is off my hype list now. This is going to be a waste of like 4 years of his time. It's a shame, after Pan's, I really, really wanted to rank him amongst my current favorite directors.
White Man said:Well, Guillermo is off my hype list now. This is going to be a waste of like 4 years of his time. It's a shame, after Pan's, I really, really wanted to rank him amongst my current favorite directors.
Mifune said:I really wish Raimi was doing these as originally rumored, so that Del Toro would be free to do In the Mountains of Madness or his third Spanish Civil War ghost story movie.
He also signed for a Tarzan movie.White Man said:Well, his third ghost story and Mountains have already been announced, and 3993 (the ghost story) is at least partially written, and won't be affected by the strike, whereas there isn't a script for these yet (though they have already decided there needs to be two movies, lol. Milking of the Rings!)
In short, I think we will get at least one more acceptable movie before he starts on these.
Dan said:He also signed for a Tarzan movie.
No, he's the asshole that directed Spider-Man 1 and 2 and then somehow Spider-Man 3.Shoho said:raimi? is he the asshole that directed spiderman 3?
fixed.temp said:No, he's the asshole that directed Spider-Man 1 and 2 and then had Spider-Man 3 ripped out of his hands by the studios, then placed back after a total car wreck was complete.
Shoho said:raimi? is he the asshole that directed spiderman 3?
DarkJediKnight said:I think the best course of option would be to split the Hobbit into 2 movies. I see no way Silmarrillion can be made into a single movie. There is no way.
Amir0x said:hmmmmm.
I really, REALLY want this to be good... but, I dunno. I just don't know. Del Toro is a good director, but for LOTR? I...just don't know.
Not a chance in hell, between the post-production time for Hellboy II and the probably massive pre-production time for The Hobbit. I'm really disappointed as well. I expect he'll do a decent job, but I'd much rather see him doing something weirder (like finally getting At The Mountains of Madness or one of the half-dozen other projects he's still attached to in some capacity off the ground) than picking up Jackson's sloppy seconds.White Man said:In short, I think we will get at least one more acceptable movie before he starts on these.
He's attached to like 6 projects in some capacity, and seems to add at least one more every few months. Off the top of my head, he's attached to do:Dan said:He also signed for a Tarzan movie.
FoneBone said:Not a chance in hell, between the post-production time for Hellboy II and the probably massive pre-production time for The Hobbit. I'm really disappointed as well. I expect he'll do a decent job, but I'd much rather see him doing something weirder (like finally getting At The Mountains of Madness or one of the half-dozen other projects he's still attached to in some capacity off the ground) than picking up Jackson's sloppy seconds.
bengraven said:No to Raimi. I'm sorry, but with each new Raimi movie, he loses his luster in my eyes.
White Man said:Well, Guillermo is off my hype list now. This is going to be a waste of like 4 years of his time. It's a shame, after Pan's, I really, really wanted to rank him amongst my current favorite directors.
Napoleonthechimp said:Whoa, that is amazingly elitist.
Thinking Pan's Labyrinth is a shallow waste of time (like me) is probably moreso, I bet.Napoleonthechimp said:Whoa, that is amazingly elitist.