
EXCLUSIVE: The moment has come for Universal Pictures to fish or cut bait on The Dark Tower, the ultra-ambitious adaptation of the Stephen King 7-novel series that was going to encompass a trilogy of feature films and two limited run TV series. The studio has said, No Thanks. Universal has passed on going forward with the project, dealing a huge blow in the plan for Ron Howard to direct Akiva Goldsman’s script, with Brian Grazer, Goldsman and the author producing and Javier Bardem starring as gunslinger Roland Deschain. Now, the filmmakers will have to find a new backer of what might well be the most ambitious movie project since Bob Shaye allowed Peter Jackson to shoot three installments of The Lord of the Rings back to back.
This stunning development comes after Universal in May pushed plans to start production this summer on the first film. The studio claimed to be on track for a February, postponing to reduce the budget. This temporarily dispelled rumors that Universal was putting the project in turnaround, rumors that cropped up when the studio put workers on hiatus. But it was only a temporary respite. I’m told that this time, the studio reviewed Goldsman’s script for the first film and the first leg of the TV series, and would only commit to the single film. That wasn’t good enough for the filmmakers, who had already hired comic book and Heroes and Battlestar Galactica writer/producer Mark Verheiden to co-write the TV component with Goldsman, which was to be made for NBC Universal Television (studio insiders deny that the studio was only willing to make the movie and not the series). I know the filmmakers planned to make it all part of the first shoot while they had the cast in place and the sets erected. I’d heard back in May that Warner Bros–where Goldsman’s Weed Road is based and which is fully financing two installments of Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit–was a possible landing place for the adaptation of King’s 7-novel epic that is that author’s answer to Tolkien’s LOTR novels. The Dark Tower is about the last living member of a knightly order of gunslingers, with Deschain becoming humanity’s last hope to save civilization as he hits the road to find the Dark Tower. Along the way, he encounters characters, good and bad, in a world that has an old West feel.
Why did Universal chairman Adam Fogelson and co-chairman Donna Langley decide not to go forward? They weren’t saying, at this point. Nor were the filmmakers. Universal has put big chips on the table for several tent pole films and maybe that has something to do with it. The big bets include the Peter Berg-directed Battleship with Taylor Kitsch starring, as well as the Keanu Reeves-starrer 47 Ronin with Carl Rinsch directing. If you listen to word on the street, both of these are $200 million realm with huge marketing budgets. Universal recently passed on green lighting At The Mountains of Madness, which Guillermo del Toro was to direct with Tom Cruise starring, based on HP Lovecraft horror tale. That time, the studio balked at funding a $150 million film that gave del Toro the latitude to deliver his cut with an R-rating.
Insiders said that Universal brass loved the filmmakers and the project, but couldn’t make it work with the current budget in its business model.


Wow – the one’s they passed on seem like surer bets than the ones they’re going with.
I know, right?
The director, actor, producer and writer all have won Oscars. Stephan King has sold countless books. Adam and Donna should say yes and get out of the way. This is the same studio that put Forrest Gump into turnaround. When are Adam & Donna getting fired? Where is the new Robert Evans of the 70′s? Ron Meyer out yachting? I bet WB or Paramount will pick it up those studios have balls.
Exactly.
I cant see anyone other then Josh Brolin as Roland…..
Me neither!
As dumb as people are going to say Universal is for not doing this, and as much as I think making “Battleship: The Movie” is crap — frankly this whole project was FAR too risky a proposition. Three movies and a TV series, and the high likelihood of an R rating for the films? Who wants to put up the budget for that?
I don’t blame them at all. Plus, Howard and Goldsman were both all wrong for this as well.
I have to agree with you on this. Universal has had some stinkers lately, but they are completely right to only want to put up the money for a single film. It’s not fair to compare this material to the “Lord of the Rings” which was in publication for nearly 60 years before the first film went into production.
“Dark Tower” is not a guaranteed hit. Just look at what happened with the “Narnia” franchise and “The Golden Compass.”
And “Percy Jackson” and “Lemony Snicket” and so forth. I think it was a tad greedy for the filmmakers to insist on the full deal going in. After the first film is a smash sure, but before? Come on, how many Steven King adaptions have failed? At least half, right? Dicey.
You’re absolutely right.
I myself am a King-fan since Cujo and The Dead Zone, but only read the first 3 books in this series.
I live in Finland and could represent a non-American audience (and Hollywood-movies get half of their revenue, or even more, outside of the US) and beside myself I don’t know any person who has ever heard of The Dark Tower, beside real Stephen King -fans.
With The Lord of the Rings you wouldn’t have had to read the books to know what they are about, because they had already become legendary stories. (I read a comic of the books when I was like 9 and the books later.)
So to compare this story to the Lord of the Rings or even to hope that it could get the same kind of audience is a stretch.
Read the rest of the books. The Dark Tower is epic in nature just as Star Wars or LOTR. You have only read the beginning of the story. I think that all the books 4-7 are as long as 1-3 combined.
Narnia was just for kids, and it wasnt a really good book either, The Dark Tower is a much more adult and complex film and im sure that it will be a success, too sad i must add
Totally agreed. When I heard the scope of it I was skeptical, but then hearing Ron Howard’s name made me hope it would get delayed long enough to replace him.
Totally disagree. The first book stands on its own as does the next two. I can’t believe they didn’t at least greenlight the first book, which wouldn’t be all that hard to make I wouldn’t think. The Marvel prequel series has done extraordinarily well (see http://www.stephenking.com/DarkTower/the_graphic_novels.html), with the first HC becoming the best-selling graphic novel hardcover of 2007. It’s like refusing to make The Firm. That book is HUGE. It has cowboys, aliens, AND vampires, plus a heroic kid, zombies, time travel, knights . . . unbelievable.
Good move…Adam.
Unfortunately, and with all due respect to Ron Howard…he has not been directing “A” quality films for some time. Between the Dan Brown books and the most recent fiasco with Vince Vaughn…Ron seems to have lost his way. On the other hand, he is not alone as several big time directors like Zemeckis, Spielberg and others just are no longer cutting edge storytellers…at least at the moment.
Let him do “Spy vs Spy’, and keep the costs down…although this seems like a bad choice, too, for Ron Howard.
Comcast baby. They don’t trust Adam or Donna. Nor should they.
Disagree with that. If that were the case neither would be there. Just look at the way Comcast changed the crew at NBC etc. Also, how do you explain the budgets Comcast approved for Battleship and 47 Ronin?
They are easily explained. Both were approved before the merger.
Comcast have not figured out Movies yet. See if they are there when they do.
My point exactly. How DO you explain the budgets for those two films? Keanu Reeves hasn’t exactly been lighting up the boards recently.
This needs to be an HBO series and not a film/tv series.
You know, HBO could actually do justice to the series. Didn’t even think of it, but you’re right. They’d make sure it was worth watching. Either way, it’s buhbye Universal and hello somebody with cojones.
I second that. Look how well game of thrones is doing
Damn. I was looking forward to the series/movie. The books are awesome. That being said, I’m not sure that Ron Howard was the right choice as director as the material can get really dark and I’ve never seen him go there…. so maybe this is a blessing in disguise IF they can get this going somewhere else.
Howard’s western was pretty dark.
Smart move by Universal and it actually took some balls. The story simply isn’t big enough, or interesting enough, to justify the breadth of multiple productions with huge costs attached. Imagine’s approach would have flopped. It’s no LOTR or HP and never could be.
Clearly you haven’t read the books.
wow man what the hweck are you talking about! read the books befroe you leave a stupit comment!
“The story simply isn’t big enough, or interesting enough.” Wow, you obviously haven’t read this series! Go back to reading Danielle Steele novels you sniveling pussy!
The story isn’t big enough or interesting enough? You can’t have read the books. Stephen King fan or not this story is ridiculously enormous in breadth and absolutely requires a trilogy at least if not more. It lasts for thousands of pages, involves alternate dimensions, worlds and realities, vampires, wolves, magicians, witches, knights, talking animals, giant animatronic villains, cowboys, a train that tells riddles and kills you if you get them wrong. It may not be your cup of tea but uninteresting? No.
Clearly you have not read the books. The story isn’t big enough? The opus includes 7 books of close to 1000 pages a piece and more characters and worlds than I can count. That is why the 3 movies and 2 TV series are critical to its success. So many Stephen King film adaptations have been poorly done, and it is time to get one right. As far as not being interesting enough, that’s your opinion, which I have to respect. However, just because you did not like the books, doesn’t mean the millions of people who put all of the books in the series on the NY Times Bestseller list for years did not like them. I’m sorry, in an age where Hollywood kicks out so much garbage, how something with the breadth and depth of “The Dark Tower” is passed over, I will never understand. They’re making a movies based on the board game “Battleship” for crying out loud…
They gave Carl Rinsch a $200 million film? are they absolutely nuts? i guess they don’t remember Kinka Usher’s debut at the studio.
Carl WHO? Who the hell is Carl Rinsch??
Director of 47 Ronin. Previous credits: None.
Sad to say, but this was the right move.
COMCAST please fire this team, Donna et all.
Why? Well this. And also LAND OF THE LOST, ROBIN HOOD, SCOTT PILGRIM, THE DILEMMA, PAUL, YOUR HIGHNESS, GREEN ZONE, DUPLICITY, LITTLE FOCKERS, LARRY CROWNE, CHARLIE ST CLOUD, the list of terrible flops this group has made for three years goes on and on.
THEY DON’T KNOW WHAT THEY ARE DOING.
Look at the other studios slates and look at theirs. FIRE THEM and hire people that know how to make good movies that people want to see.
UNIVERSAL is and has been for a while the worst studio and worst place to work in town.
youve just listed 6 or 7 films i enjoyed from the last year or so… let them carry on if theyre responsible! (and little fockers made $310 million. how was that a flop?? lol.)
they passed on these movies because they dont have an infinite supply of money.
These films underperformed. And you have no taste.
Wow, you liked 6 of those 7 films? Simply stunning.
In light of the craptacular movies Universal has tossed to movie-goers these past few years, I would liken its ditching of The Dark Tower 3-movie option right up there with the editors who said “Thanks, but no thanks” to J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series. Stupid, stupid mistake.
I don’t blame them for not wanting the TV series AND three movies – there is such a thing as drowning a market rather than saturating it – but Universal definitely should have kept the flicks. It took years for Stephen King to write The Dark Tower series, and his readers were willing to go the distance. Movie enthusiasts have proven themselves willing to do likewise with series like Potter and LOTR. They would do the same with Dark Tower, given the chance. Good luck and best wishes to the studio that picks them up – they’ll reap the rewards Universal foolishly tossed away for junk movies.
Some of those movies you named did very, very well. Just cos you didn’t like them hardly means they are flops. Little Fockers is awful but it made barrels full of money. Scott Pilgrim is STILL being shown in theaters around the world due to its massive cult following. And you know Your Highness is going to make up for its theatrical run on DVD and Blue-Ray as movies of its nature tend to do.
Hey now. Scott Pilgrim was awesome.
The film itself was so-so.
From biz standpoint, just a total freakin disaster and a sterling example of how not to produce a movie.
60 mil production budget, up over 100 mil with Adv, for a niche comic book movie with no crossover appeal and no bankable star?
You deserve everything you get when it brings in 47 mil WW.
Shoulda been a 20-30 mil movie, god knows what they spent it on.
How a single person could look at that property with that cast and okay a 100 mil expendture is beyond me. Let alone the numerous people it takes to go thru at a studio to get that coin.
Just bad business.
so mountains of madness and now dark tower
is universal dumb?
They turned down Guillermo del Toro doing LOVECRAFT.
Heck yeah they’re dumb.
Yeah, saw this one coming. Maybe Universal couldn’t get the rights to use the Daffy Duck ending from Warner Brothers?
Good move.
First they pass on Cameron/del Toro/Cruise AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS epic 3D horror extravaganza (which would’ve been a huge global event), and then they pass on this? And it took them how long to figure out?
Why did they start down either of those roads to begin with?
How much development money (not to mention time) did they just flush down the toilet on both projects? I get the naysayers will argue they’re saving more money by not going forward, but the fundamental value proposition of both projects remain unchanged, and could clearly be assessed from day one. If Universal wasn’t serious, they shouldn’t have wasted everyone’s time.
And how were the budgets a surprise? It’s not like these people don’t do this for a living or anything.
Meanwhile, Battleship and 47 Ronin? Come on. I remember those when they were called Battle: Los Angeles and The Last Samurai. Base-runs at best.
Universal has no balls. Warners & Legendary should snatch this up.
P.S.: Universal’s website (universalpictures.com) still has The Dark Tower listed as May 17, 2013.
First AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS, now this? What is going on?
If WB picks it up they could probably have an easier time with the Harry Potter references
Ok, I (barely) understand Battleship’s budget possibly ballooning to $200 million, but how the hell do they explain 47 Ronin?!
THANK GOD!
I know King gave Howard and Goldsman his blessing, but holy fuckin’ Jesus shit, RON HOWARD??? NBC???
Maybe for some of King’s cuddlier, gentler work (??), but The Dark Tower is just that: DARK. Ron Howard does safe, warm, fuzzy (yes, Frost/Nixon was fucking safe), and that’s okay, it’s just not a good match for the material in question.
R-rating. Director with balls. Or get the fuck out. I realize this means we’ll probably never see an adaptation of The Dark Tower, and you know what? That’s fine. Not everything needs to be a damned happy meal.
I agree. Ron Howard can’t compare with the likes of Nolan, Danny Boyle, Aronofsky, Jackson, Cuaron and countless other auteur directors. And NBC hasn’t produced anything remotely good scifi-wise in years.
There IS an audience for the Dark Tower. How many books have sold over the years? But the project needs an auteur director at the helm and a bold producer behind him/her, supporting them. One who isn’t afraid of great storytelling.
You are kidding me. You actually compare Danny Boyle to Ron Howard? OMG. I guess I am the ONLY person who thought Slumdog Millionaire was just a dog. I hated that movie.
127 Hours was great because of James Franco.
Ron howard makes 3 stars movies with 4 star talent and 4 star budgets.
Lots of gloss, little depth. Nice man. Capable director, but no great.
He’s never made anything that emotionally or artiscally compares to Slumdog or Trainspotting.
Wrong man for the project and NBC was the wrong platform.
HBO is the way to go. 2.5 hour movie out of the first book, series for the rest.
Says you and you’re just a kid. I can’t believe you have the nerve to say that Danny Boyle makes more emotionally compelling movies than Ron Howard.
Boyle directed a movie called “Vaccuuming Completely Nude in Paris.”
I’d rather watch Ron Howard’s “Cinderella Man.”
Cinderalla Man is a fine film. and its the perefect examle of a ron howard 3 star film with 4 star talent and 4 star budget– which is why it has an 80% on the RT meter.
Its a paint by numbers redemption mellow-drama with very little originality.
Not even in Slumdog’s or Trainspotting’s league emotionally — or prob in Million’s or Shallow Graves.
Ron Howard is a very good studio movie director. Danny Boyle is a filmmaker.
BTW — spare us the snark, Howard made The Grinch which is unwatchable.
I’m absolutely with you. These are the directors I’d like to see helm DT. Alfonso Cuaron. Guillarmo Del Torro. Sam Raimi. Maybe Zack Snyder if he has absolutely NOTHING to do with the script.
Terry Gilliam…or wait for Jackson to get freed up.
Comcast Listen To Me
BILL MECHANIC
Tan Rested Ready
also Mike Ovitz
I can’t see how Ron Howard can do this justice, so I can’t really blame Universal here. Sanctioning all this money for Battleship and a Keanu Reeves movie is so mad that it seems so usual in this day and age.
This was a good move for Universal. This is too ambitious of a project. The studio would have had to put up alot of money and trust into the filmmakers to deliver. What if they fail, Universal would have been in trouble. I think they were smart to pass on this project, but kinda dumb to pass up on Mountains of Madness. That movie would have been a sleeper hit no doubt.
@Farzan – “Sleeper Hit?!” There is no such thing anymore, man! If a movie doesn’t have a huge opening weekend, it’ll be out of theaters in less than a month on average. Even relatively big movies don’t last more that 6 weeks or so in the theater. Studios are trying to get movies on DVD and blu ray 3 months fron their theatrical rekease date! Maybe a few movies here and there will open in select cites and go wide around Oscar time and have a little but of a chance to build, but something with the budget of “At the Mountains of Madness” won’t be given that opportunity. I was very saddened when I heard that Del Toro’s project probaby wasn’t happening. He is one of the more interesting director working right now, but he isn’t putting out mass market crap like Michael Bay or Roland Emmerich, so the studios won’t take a chance unless his directing something with wider appeal like “Hellboy”.
Worry not. Warners will make this, and it will be awesome.
Yep…
Warner Brothers could do the movies, HBO the tv series. In fact, scrap the movies altogether and just do a tv series. It has worked for True Blood and Game of Thrones.
Normally I’d be depressed at this kind of news but I don’t have enough faith in Ron Howard at this point to be sad.
With the great job that HBO has done on Game of Thrones I’d be ecstatic if they gave Dark Tower a shot. The ratings for GoT have proved there is a serious audience for this kind of story.
It’s a communication failure on the studio end. That’s undeniable.
The proven track record of Ron Howard and his team ensure that there will not be failure. Universal chairman Adam Fogelson and co-chairman Donna Langley may not be qualified to make decisions that require vision – short term risk and long term gain.
This is very stressful news for fans with taste. Javier Bardem is great casting. Ron Howard and his team know what they are doing. With them, a seven-part project is a wise investment. Better than throwing out the work they have done on the adaptation and then using the money to make 7 projects nobody is excited about.
Once again, because there are some slow-witted people posting on this topic – RON HOWARD IS QUALIFIED and he has the right sensibility to keep this project on track. Fans need to badger universal or once the project has moved on call for the heads of Universal chairman Adam Fogelson and co-chairman Donna Langley. It may be golden parachute time for them, if Universal doesn’t mind financing those prachutes.
Fogelson and company are on upswing though between Hop, Bridesmaids and Fast Five. In the what have you done for me lately crowd, they are doing pretty well.