
EXCLUSIVE: Hot on the heels of another splashy revisionist fairy tale opening in Oz The Great and Powerful, Disney is in talks with UK-based writer Joe Ahearne to reinvent its Beauty And The Beast franchise. Ahearne most recently scripted Trance, the film that Danny Boyle directed and then completed between his production of the Opening Ceremonies of the last Summer Olympics in London. This will be live action, and most certainly 3D.
Disney is calling this film The Beast, and considering the subject matter of Trance – an art auctioneer is pummeled so badly by his criminal cohorts that a hypnotherapist is needed to coax out the memories of where he hid a priceless painting — indicates that this revisionist take on Beauty and the Beast could be a bit on the dark side.
The film will be produced by Mandeville’s David Hoberman and Todd Lieberman and Disney’s LouAnne Brickhouse will steer the project. Ahearne is repped by Resolution and United Agents in the UK. He’s managed by Thruline and Principal Entertainment.
I thought Hollywood’s infatuation with public domain fairy tales would have abated by now, because they are running out of good titles. I figured they’d be looking at limericks by now, with development titles like There Once Was A Man From Nantucket and There Once Was A Man From Ealing. But these fairy tales seem to be hotter than ever. Despite lukewarm reviews, Oz The Great And Powerful was an absolute triumph for producer Joe Roth — the closest thing Hollywood has to a Grimm Brother — and for Sean Bailey’s production team at Disney. I read what had to be the dumbest Wall Street Journal article in a long time, the one that hailed new Disney film chief Alan Horn for making his mark on that blockbuster by suggesting that the talking flying monkey speak earlier in the film. Horn’s great gift was being in the right place at the right time.
Knowing how much pressure that production chief Bailey and his exec team were under after the mammoth failure of John Carter that cost Rich Ross his job (I still think Ross’s Big Mistake was not making that Andrew Stanton-directed disaster a Pixar film since Stanton’s animated success and clout with John Lassiter gave him a blank check he wasn’t ready for as a live-action director), I’m giving a shout-out here to Bailey and his production team even though they will probably be diving under the couch cushions when they read this, but what the hell. Horn should certainly have his share of victories at Disney eventually. Despite this ill-advised WSJ piece by a reporter who should know better (Horn seems too classy to overtly seek credit for something he was hardly involved in), Horn doesn’t deserve the credit for Oz The Great And Powerful, a film whose 3D format has a chance to crack the billion-dollar worldwide gross mark, like Alice In Wonderland.


Bailey is a true visionary. Screenwriter, Film Producer, TV producer, Entrepreneur, Studio Chief, Former Rock Star, Basketball MVP, Family Man, etc. etc. – some guys have all the luck and Sean is one of them and totally deserves it. He works hard and has a great moral compass. Huge network of friends too who genuinely love him.
Lots of peeps in this town are excited about his success this weekend. Good for him and GREAT for Hollywood! Ronnie James Dio is definitely watching him from above and smiling……
B+ cinemascore.
Sean is one of the greats and has many people rooting for him, which says a lot in this town. He has an excellent team executing at a high level. Congrats to all.
Brad Bird’s MI4 did fine without the Pixar name.
lol, it did fine because of the brands name.
Fairy tale IP doesn’t guarantee a good movie, but a great team such as this certainly gives it a good shot at being a quality film.
Stahp it.
Enough with the fairytale rehashes.
A limerick sounds like a better idea than a dark version of Beauty and the Beast especially since that is now a TV series on the CW and it’s a remake of the previous CBS series. Stop with the reboots already. Jack the Giant Slayer or Red Riding Hood or Hansel & Gretel Witch Hunters are the more likely outcome. The reason Oz works is because it’s a beautiful new vision of a classic film with a new story nobody ever saw before.
That reporter was Ben Fritz formerly of the LA Times and the whole article in question was misjudged, inexperienced, filled with errors and pandering.
I guess they took Beauty out of the title bc they were scared it wouldn’t appeal to litlle boys. If only they had taken Alice out of Alice in Wonderland, that could’ve been a worldwide blockbuster… oh wait it was! So why bother? Do you really think kids are that shallow? Rise of the guardians was a rather “boyish” film yet it didn’t work so well, not as succesful as Brave anyway (which imo should’ve remained The Bear and The Bow). So maybe Hollywood should just focus on making good films instead of squeezing every feminine aspect out of them, it’s no panacea.
A live action darker vision of Beauty and the Beast? Go ask Alex Petyfer how that worked out for him. 100% FAIL written all over this idea. If I were Hollywood, I’d definitely avoid making more junk along the lines od Jack the Giant Slayer, hoping that Oz’s success means fairy tale movies are back “on.” Oz doesn’t count as one of these fairy tale movies… it was never a fairy tale, and is only just barely entering the public domain.
I think I just threw up a little in my mouth. No need to fellate Mr. Bailey here. I am sure there is plenty of that going on in Burbank.
Very strongly agree with this articles author that the WSJ article was ill advised. It smells of an idea conceived in the Corporate office and imposed down upon the film PR team. Probably no coincidence that it came out the same week Bob Iger was under pressure at a shareholder meeting.
Truth is that “steady hand” can be looked upon as a lack of authority and direction. Rich Ross gutted the place. Most of the best talent were pushed or voluntarily walked out the door. Ross and MT Carney replaced those experts with a cadre of syncophants with little or no film experience. Alan Horn has done nothing in over a year to address the brain drain which continues to afflict the studio. Meanwhile almost all of the Ross and Carney teams remain in place.
It’s funny how Guillermo Del Toro has not directed a straight-up fairytale film post-’Alice in Wonderland’. He’s the most obvious choice. Nothing Hollywood has done since 2006 has come close to the quality of ‘Pan’s Labyrinth’, whilst Del Toro seems more than willing to attach himself to a 1000 interesting projects whilst finally choosing ‘Rock’em Sock’em Robots: The Movie’ or whatever the hell that ‘Transformers’ knock-off is called.
In a saner world the idea of making a big-budget movie based on a limerick because of its pre-awareness factor might be a ludicrous joke, unfortunately in our world a studio did just make a quarter-billion dollar movie based on a board game.
Problem here is that all kinds of modern/revisionist/”dark” BEAUTY AND THE BEAST takes have been done to death — on screen, on TV (multiple times), etc. etc. Aiming this more at young boys as if they’d care? This one’s a bad move all around.