
EXCLUSIVE: Legendary Pictures, the successful feature financier/production company behind such tentpole franchises as The Dark Knight, The Hangover and The Clash Of The Titans, is putting its expansion into television on hold.
Legendary has proactively ended its development/production deal with Warner Bros. Television and is shutting down the TV division it launched in conjunction with the deal in January 2011. As a result, former AMC executive Jeremy Elice, who ran the department, handling Legendary’s day-to-day television activities, will be exiting the company. Legendary had been quiet on the TV front, with no significant sales despite a great brand name, a strong roster of feature titles to tap from and the backing of a big TV studio.
I hear the lack of TV output stemmed from Legendary management’s reservations towards the traditional TV development model. After testing it for a year, I hear they decided the template is not for Legendary, a company, which tends to produce content in non-traditional ways. Legendary, which is led by founder/chairman/CEO Thomas Tull and president/chief creative officer Jon Jashni, is not shutting the door completely and still intends to enter the TV space, but is cautiously exploring how and when to make such a move.
Legendary Pictures, which is coming off the releases of The Dark Knight Rises and Wrath Of The Titans, has a busy pipeline of feature projects through its co-financing part with Warner Bros., including a Godzilla reboot; 42, based on the life of Jackie Robinson; Pacific Rim, directed by Guillermo del Toro; The Seventh Son, directed by Sergey Bodrov; The Great Wall, directed by Edward Zwick; and a big-budget epic based on popular game World of Warcraft. The company’s credits also include Chris Nolan’s Inception and Ben Affleck’s The Town.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.


Of course TV development was going to fail at the financing company that doesn’t develop material.
Legendary is only there for producers when they have a franchise film package with all the elements set and ready to go.
Get your facts straight, Pacific Rim was developed entirely by Legendary and is poised to be a huge hit both financially and critically.
Get your facts straight. Pacific Rim, in addition to many others, have been developed entirely at Legendary and it is poised to be a huge hit both financially and critically.
“…reservations towards the traditional TV development model.” You mean Legendary thinks there’s something wrong with hiring the same six people to follow each other’s trends, Americanizing ideas created in other countries, and letting middle-management with no production experience decide everything from the wallpaper on sets to the casting of actors they’ve never seen before? And then to pull shows off the air before anybody knows they’re on? Who could possibly have reservations about that?
So true.
WBTV is old fashioned in their business model and taste in shows. Can’t sell foreign or to cable. They take no risks and are huge second guessers. Chuck Lorre is their taste in comedy. Homeland, Breaking Bad, Downton Abbey, Friday Night Lights would NEVER even make it to a pitch there. The place is so cautious and white bread in terms of content and it won’t sell anywhere interesting.
This is a shame for Jeremy Elice, who is a smart executive. He got a raw deal going over there as I’m sure he was promised a true TV production entity and got this… Hope he lands on his feet.
The future is in direct-to-web streaming for all content. Traditional network-tv model is history…this hand-writing has been on the wall for quite some time.
I don’t understand why Legendary would waste a year breaking into television. TV is not their melieu. Stick to features, Lagendary!
This is interesting…. The traditional format, meaning antiquated ways of seeking new material is over… Traditional anything, creates a natural conflict to creativity…. “We are looking for something hot like…. ” How can it be “Hot” and like something else at the same time?
The traditional ways of chasing each others tails for content ideas, will soon fall by the wayside. Solid content is now coming from the most unlikely places now… New Network Suits will have to break tradition and actually trust what moves them, what they feel… I know this sounds strange but our audience is much smarter than traditionally believed, and have an array of program options to choose from….
Tradition will no longer cut it, New Suits in search of content, will have to learn to trust their own instincts and audience to survive. It’s 2012, the world is not going to end, only the traditional form of choosing network content will die…
Smart decision by Legendary the old tv business distribution model doesn’t work for financiers like them. This will give them much more flexibility to put series together, pre-sell territories and own the shows. Good move on their part!
Didn’t Legendary develop several films on their own (as in without WB)? I think Pacific Rim was one of them, which is supposed to be one of the big films in Summer 2013.
Legendary is a FINANCE company. CEO and President don’t have ANY experience in this field, yet they micro-managed Jeremy Elice like white on rice. Jeremy, I’m sure was promised all kinds to creative license, but never came to fruition. Next departments to fall; comics and productions. For those in these departments, polish your resumes your next. Good luck to Jeremy and his talented team.
Respondin to TRU TV
A hybrid of Traditional and web is the future. It’s not just one way or the other. Everything is not black and white they have shades of gray. … Most people that say its only this way – or that way-sound like the dinosaurs that still run our studio system. And the phrase, that the writing has been on the wall,…so old- Sound like a broken record. Although I must say I agree.