UPDATED WRITE-THRU – EXCLUSIVE: In what amounts to a dream come true for fans of Middle Earth, Peter Jackson has decided to direct two installments of The Hobbit, trusted sources are telling me. His deal is being negotiated right now with Warner Bros , New Line, and MGM. He will shortly take the reins over from Guillermo del Toro, after Jackson extricates himself from other project obligations that caused Jackson and manager Ken Kamins to initially deny he would direct. While Jackson’s camp has been tight-lipped, I’m told that the case is being made to MGM’s owners to loosen the purse strings and make the movies happen. The impetus for these talks is that Jackson will be the director of both of The Hobbit films, which will be shot back-to-back in his New Zealand backyard. The secret’s out.
Despite Jackson camp denials that directing was a consideration, there were signs for cautious optimism from the moment del Toro bowed out. More recently, there have been major clues. While several directors have angled for the job — the most recent rumors focused on David Yates and Jackson’s District 9 protege Neill Blomkamp — no offer was ever made. I think that’s because Jackson was figuring out if he wanted to direct two more films, and finish the saga he started with The Lord of the Rings. And then once he decided, Kamins had to make it possible. It became more evident this week: he, Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens scheduled a trip to London the week of July 4, followed by a trip to Los Angeles the following week. They will meet the most impressive actors who’ve been put on tape by casting directors. Jackson, Walsh and Boyens wrote the scripts with del Toro, and they did the original trilogy together. But if they intended for someone else to direct, they would have made sure the filmmaker was part of the casting process.
This is quite a turn of events since del Toro surprised the industry by announcing on the Hobbit sounding board TheOneRing.net on Sunday, May 30 that he would not be directing. It was shocking, because del Toro interrupted his new deal to become a cornerstone director at Universal so that he could spend five years taking on The Hobbit, after being chosen over Sam Raimi by Jackson, MGM and New Line. After completing the writing of two scripts, del Toro sounded reticent days before, expressing concern about MGM’s financial situation. He left days later. Since the expectation is that somehow the film would get financed despite MGM’s woes, speculation was that perhaps del Toro didn’t see himself and his family living in New Zealand for the next several years required to make the films. This seemed more plausible, since Jackson said he expected to get the films into theaters for December 2012 and December, 2013.
Jackson seemed the obvious person to take his place as the director of the JRR Tolkien novel, particularly to keep those release dates on track. While he has been engaged with Steven Spielberg on the Tin Tin films, Jackson has been a creative partner with del Toro from the beginning. He certainly knows the terrain better than anyone alive, having shot three installments of The Lord of the Rings during a single production stint. Those three films grossed $2.9 billion worldwide and won a slew of Oscars. Though Kamins initially dismissed the possibility, Jackson opened the door a crack when he told a New Zealand daily he would consider it: “If that’s what I have to do to protect Warner Brothers’ investment, then obviously that’s one angle which I’ll explore,” Jackson said.
Numerous directors wanted the job, but hiring a star on Jackson’s level would have been difficult. Raimi, who is working on the Warner Bros/Legendary vidgame adaptation Warcraft and the Disney film The Great and Powerful Oz, was busy and would likely not return to a project for which he’d gotten passed over. Most of the other star directors like Alfonso Cuaron, Chris Nolan, Spielberg or Bryan Singer are busy on their own projects. In addition, it would be difficult to pay them properly, because of the amount of first dollar gross already committed to Jackson, the Tolkien estate, rights holder Saul Zaentz and Harvey Weinstein, who held the 5% gross stake he had in the original trilogy. That’s when Michael Eisner refused his request for Miramax to make the films with Jackson, and Weinstein gave the filmmaker a short window to find another home for the project. That window was almost closed when New Line founder Bob Shaye said yes to three films.
Jackson will have his deal sweetened, but he’s already completely invested in the process and there are built-in efficiencies. The films will use the soundstages and visual effects facilities that Jackson built with proceeds from the LOTR proceeds.
Pending a deal, the next step will be to discuss whether or not to shoot the films in 3D. That would beg a second discussion about transferring LOTR into 3D as well, a move that would give the trilogy a shot at another revenue cycle. These are all weighty discussions, but at least there are signs of forward motion, something that cannot be said for the other pictures that the debt-choked MGM has frozen while it figures out its future.




My absolute biggest hope is that this time Jackson packs 45 ending sequences into the films so that it reeeaaaalllly drags out.
Sigh. Ignorance gets you nowhere, my friend.
Jackson shortened the book’s ending by about 75%.
hahaha. yeah, too many endings…but i WAS sad they left out the scouring of the shire. HUGE, IMPORTANT theme in the book.
He did want to include The Sacking, but it simply would have made it too long. Not that it would have been too long for me or other Ringers!
you are absolutely right!
Urgent? But The Wrap is waiting on call backs from New Line and Jackson’s manager…
All I have to say is…HELL YES!
Please, please PLEASE don’t convert LotR to 3D. If a film is designed and shot for 3D from the outset like Avatar, that’s one thing. But taking a very well-executed trilogy like LotR and doing the 3D is only going to tarnish the original achievement.
As for the directorial shuffle, I think it’s good news on balance. I was excited to see what del Toro would do, but with his departure, Jackson seems like the absolute shoo-in.
Agree completely. Keep them in 2D. When will it end?
And I would just like to add, the people who decided not to release the extended editions on Blu-ray are complete idiots. Don’t you want my money?
Amen to that!
yes this is urgent. is anything in entertainment ever defined as urgent? believe it or not but the world could go on without entertainment.
figured it would only be a matter of time before lotr fans wound up with peter stepping up and deciding to finish the saga the way it was ment to be be directing the hobbit. and now that just leaves new line and warner to find some way to either get mgm to magicaly come up with the funds and give the green light or just get mgm out of the picture completly. the hobbit refuses to die .
The biggest surprise everyone saw coming.
A storm heading to the gulf in the middle of an environmental disaster is urgent, this ain’t !!!
Do you know what’s sad? No one mentions the fact that Clint Eastwood is the best choice.
He’s never done fantasy; he probably doesn’t have the patience to do a lot of green screen; the dialogue is probably too wordy–but, wow. He could turn it into a set-piece imagined by a prison shrink who’s daydreaming about being in a storybook fantasy (and then you slide in all of that hobbit stuff).
Meanwhile, his girlfriend leaves him for a terrorist and he has to stop daydreaming the hobbit stuff to get her back.
I’ll leave my number in case anyone needs to get the rights to this–I’m flexible.
LOL, I would like to see how Clint would do the Hobbit actually. Pretty funny stuff.
I don’t give slightest damn about these movies. Nor did I care about LOTR. If they ever get made or not it means nothing to me as long as the new Bond Movie doesn’t get further screwed as a result of everyone wanting to kiss Peter Jackson’s Ass. MGM better be prioritizing if it is sinking non-existant funds into this fanboy crap.
Haha, priorities? Maybe you should look at the amount of money the Bond movies made compared to the LOTR series. I didn’t mind the first Bond movie, but the second one was iffy. And fanboy crap? This is Tolkein, not Harry Potter or Twilight.
Haters gonna hate.
“squandered 200 mil”?
Yeah that 550 mil worldwide gross was quite the squandering.
Awesome.Nobody can create middle-earth like him. Impress us peter.
I´d also be really interested how he´d realize middle-earth. It´s the most popular fantasy book world wide and deserves the best producers.
Hmm. I don’t know. He lost his magical gut. Before he lost all that weight (lipo???) LOTR and Frighteners. Afterwards King Kong. I don’t trust the skinny Peter Jackson. Its like Tim Burton getting a hair cut.
What does losing weight have to do with his creative abilities? sheeeesh grow up. LOTR is as good if not better than Star Wars or Indiana Jones.
King Kong got 83% on Rotten Tomatoes. That’s almost as high the LOTR ratings and far, far higher than Frighteners. King Kong is also the only of Jackson’s movies to get 4 stars from Roger Ebert and make Ebert’s top 10 of the year. Jackson’s King Kong remains one of the best action/adventure movies of the last decade or even since the original Indiana Jones trilogy. And I’m not a Jackson fanboy, in fact, I’ve never seen any of his other movies including the LOTR trilogy. The fact remains it was a very well-liked, critically lauded, award-winning and solidly profitable film.
I have done some brief work on Hobbit and know a few of the actors that have read and are being seen very shortly from the producers. Everyone and I do mean EVERYONE I know involved in this production has pretty much known this would be the case and that the start date of November is still very much on IF MGM agree to finance, which they wouldn’t do under Del Toro, But would be more likely under Jackson.
Oh, and the film WILL be in 3D, it’s already been decided! Test footage has been shot for that (granted under Del toro)
FUCK THAT! say no to 3D. The only “3D” i trust is Disney RealD. it’s more like looking into a box with perspective. These movies are suppose to be timeless, making them 3D will mess all that up.
I don’t give a damn how shady it is ,it was -etc….what ever. This is the man to do right by The Hobbit, with an amazing team. Make it so.
So happy about this, yay Peter Jackson!
Why all the 3d hate? The Hobbit in 3D would rule! Just thinking about Smaug (the dragon) in 3D gives me goosebumps.
I want papers signed and this movie to FINALLY get made, the waiting is the worst.
Since Jackson makes the best fantasy/ science fiction epic movies, they should totally get him to remake Oz and do a whole trilogy about ‘Wicked’ and the books that follow. That’d be so fantastic. Only he could make that come alive the way it should.
Can we stop pretending this whole thing was not orchestrated by Jackson himself…
I know it feels very cold out there when you haven’t had a hit in a while…
Uh, yeah.
Don’t wait by the phone.
PLEASE let this be true! Jackson is the only man to get this done and done right.
Jackson was the man for the job in the first place. Hardly anyone has the ability or knowledge to match what he did with LOTR, and that is what is inspected from Hobbit. Can’t wait for the update on this movie development.
you are absolutely right! He´s the best man for it!
Please Jackson go for it, it is your art and it is our pleasure.
Meh —
Watching LOTR on blu-ray, I’m now reminded how sub-par the effects really were…
To sink that much money into a franchise that already looks like shit…
Peter Jackson and his Weta Workshop INVENTED the computer graphics that everyone else since has tried to copy. The Massive program was the first of its kind to have “massive” numbers of animated characters moving independently and/or reacting to each other. Yes, computer animation has come a long way since then (THEY did the animation for Avatar, and won the only Oscars for that movie), but NO ONE is anywhere near being as innovative or creative as PJ and Weta.
Terrible news! Jackson dumbed down LOTR, and made it a pathetic, droning, children’s story. Now he gets to ruin The Hobbit too.
I’m grateful to Jackson for making the LOTR trilogy such a smash, but he did so without grasping a good portion of the books. (E.g., saying “I don’t get Faramir,” the character who was closest to Tolkien’s alter ego; the Ents; I could go on). So I was really looking forward to someone else in the director’s chair. But, if this is what it takes for The Hobbit to come to big screen, then, bring it on! Besides, Del Toro would have been the guy and he’s already influenced the script to its near-completion. I’d have loved to see what Neill Blomkamp would have done.