Posted on 24 May 2008 by James Cormier at 9:00 PM | Comments (0)
Tags: Christopher Tolkien, JRR Tolkien, Movies, News, The Hobbit Movie, The Silmarillion
Christopher Tolkien, the son of J.R.R. Tolkien, long rumored to be at philosophical odds with New Line Cinema and the makers of the Lord of the Rings movie franchise, will ask a Californian judge to stop production on the upcoming Hobbit films on June 6 in an effort to secure profits he claims are owed the Tolkien Estate by the production company:He claims the Tolkien family is owed £80m by New Line Cinema under a deal for a 7.5% share of profits that was signed in 1969, when his father reluctantly sold film rights to pay a tax bill.One thing I've always wondered was whether Christopher Tolkien ever saw the Rings films and, if so, what he thought of them. It seems now that we have something of an answer:
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[A]t a hearing on June 6 Christopher Tolkien will ask a Californian judge to back his claim that he can "terminate" film rights to The Hobbit. He is said to be furious with the New Line studio, which earned £3 billion from the Rings trilogy. Tolkien's lawyers accuse New Line of "accounting chicanery". Warner Bros, owner of New Line, declined to comment.
Tolkien Jr, described by his biographer as "cantankerous", is unlikely to allow thefilm-makers free access to The Silmarillion. He has always been sceptical of Hollywood. Even now relatives are unsure whether he has watched The Lord of the Rings, which won a total of 17 Oscars.The Silmarillion is relevant to the second planned film in the Hobbit film duology, which is said to chronicle the intervening years between Bilbo Baggins's return home to the Shire and the beginning of The Fellowship of the Ring. Producer Peter Jackson and Director Guillermo del Toro likely plan to draw heavily on the material contained within the final book of The Silmarillion, Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age in order to write and produce the second Hobbit film.
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