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View Full Version : Finally official: Su alteza serenísima Guillermo del Toro Gómez to direct The Hobbit


Regulus Tera
04-26-2008, 05:17 AM
Link (http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117984595.html?categoryid=13&cs=1).

Guillermo del Toro to direct 'Hobbit'
Filmmaker signs on helm feature and sequel

Guillermo del Toro
Del Toro
In a major step forward on “The Hobbit,” Guillermo del Toro has signed on to direct the New Line-MGM tentpole and its sequel.

The widely expected announcement -- which had been rumored for several weeks -- came Thursday afternoon jointly from exec producers Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh, New Line president Toby Emmerich, and Mary Parent, newly named chief of MGM’s Worldwide Motion Picture Group.

Del Toro’s moving to New Zealand for the next four years to work with Jackson and his Wingnut and Weta production teams. He’ll direct the two films back to back, with the sequel dealing with the 60-year period between “The Hobbit” and “The Fellowship of the Ring,” the first of the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy.

New Line is overseeing development and will manage production. Both pics are being co-produced and co-financed by New Line Cinema and MGM, with Warner Bros. distributing domestically and MGM handling international.

Del Toro won’t leave for New Zealand immediately as he’s still in post-production on U’s “Hellboy 2,” due out in July. His previous pic, “Pan’s Labyrinth,” was released through New Line’s Picturehouse and set a record as the highest grossing Spanish language film in U.S. box office history.

The official signing of Del Toro comes four months after New Line settled a lawsuit with Jackson over “The Lord of the Rings” and announced that it had agreed with MGM to turn J.R.R. Tolkien’s “Hobbit” into two live-action films. Sam Raimi had been preceived as the initial front-runner as director but Del Toro had emerged in recent months as the likely candidate.

The studios didn’t give a start date on production and don’t yet have a script. Though no screenplay deal’s been set, it’s expected that the “LOTR” scripting team of Jackson, Walsh and Philippa Boyens will collaborate with Del Toro.

With Del Toro blocking out four years for the project, it’s likely that the studios are aiming at starting shooting next year and releasing the films in late 2011 and 2012.

Jackson’s WETA stages, post-production and visual effects facilities -- built for “The Lord of the Rings” -- will be used for both films. And New Zealand will again be the site of Middle-Earth, with the story centering on Bilbo Baggins taking the Ring of Power from Gollum.

Let the circle-jerking begin.

Invisible Queen
04-26-2008, 03:21 PM
Kick ass-news! I wanna have del Toro's babies. I mean I really like the kind of movies he makes; that layering of the fantastic and realistic, to paraphrase something someone said about someone else. Coupled with Jackson's nearly unparalleled technical skill and a budget drawing on the money made from Lord of the Rings we can probably best describe as "unbreakable", this could easily become one of the best movies of the century if it was about navel lint.

But it's The Hobbit, a story I think you'll agree is excellent. I don't think any fanwank will be necessary, the movie will make people come in their pants anyway. :)

EVILNess
04-26-2008, 10:11 PM
Blade 2.

That is all.

Actually, I am kinda excited. Hobbit > LOTR

RickZarber
04-26-2008, 11:44 PM
Blade 2 was my favorite of the three Blades...

Anyways, this is the happiest news ever. I don't think I need to tell youse guys what a bit Tolkien nut I am.

I AM UNREASONABLE HAPPY.

...So who's Ron Pearlman gonna play?

Magus
05-02-2008, 03:14 PM
I wouldn't pick on Guillermo Del Toro for movies like Blade 2, he will probably bring the type of direction he had in The Devil's Backbone and Pan's Labyrinth to something like this, both of them modern classics.

MFD
05-12-2008, 11:01 AM
Aww... looks like At the Mountains of Madness is on the back burner.

Also, didn't he want to do a Doctor Strange movie as well? It just seems like, I dunno... The Hobbit would be a walk in the park compared to those two potential movies.

Magus
05-12-2008, 08:32 PM
Oh, the interquel between The Hobbit and LOTR might be difficult to do. They have to make up some stuff, I can tell. The only thing I can think of that can make maybe a half-hours to 45 minutes worth of film is the wizard raid on Dol Guldur, some sort of epic battle. There's probably lots of other stuff they can call on but it seems difficult. I guess Aragorn and Gandalf tracking down Gollum, too.

How long was each of these movies supposed to be? I can see The Hobbit taking maybe 2 and a half hours but the other one...maybe only 2? Really, as director, I hope Guillermo Del Toro does good editing and the movies are long enough but not too long (stretching things out).

EDIT: I'll call on my vocabulary skills and change "sequel" to "interquel." 'Cause it sounds cooler.

Masked Jedi
05-12-2008, 09:05 PM
While I love del Toro and think he's the best person for the job after Jackson, I was kinda hoping Sam Raimi would do it as was rumored just so we would have Bruce Campbell as Bard.

Magus
05-12-2008, 09:25 PM
Haha, LOTR is too serious for Bruce Campbell, I don't think I've seen him in a serous role (well, the first Evil Dead was sort of serious, before they turned the series into comedy).

OctoberRaven
05-12-2008, 09:42 PM
But it's The Hobbit, a story I think you'll agree is excellent.

I HATED The Hobbit.

Still, this might be interesting. I'd be a bit more interested if Raimi was indeed the one directing it, though.