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Time Warner Inc.'s New Line Cinema
settled dispute with the smash hit "Lord of the Rings" director Peter
Jackson and will make two more movies with him based on the children's
fantasy novel "The Hobbit," New Line said Tuesday in a statement.(Xinhua
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BEIJING, Dec. 19 (Xinhuanet) -- Time Warner Inc.'s
New Line Cinema settled dispute with the smash hit "Lord of the Rings"
director Peter Jackson and will make two more movies with him based on the
children's fantasy novel "The Hobbit," New Line said Tuesday in a statement.
"We resolved all the issues between us," said Michael
Lynne, co-Chief Executive Officer of New Line in an interview. "The slate is
wiped clean so we can move forward."
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. will help finance
and distribute the films, New Line said. Jackson will produce the movies with
screenwriter Fran Walsh.
Oscar winner Jackson sued New Line in 2005, claiming
the studio miscalculated his share of receipts for the "Rings" trilogy, which
came to 2.91 billion U.S. dollars worldwide.
The "Hobbit" films, scheduled for release in 2010 and
2011, are also based on the J.R.R. Tolkien books about the adventures of
imaginary creatures.
They will serve as prequels to the "Lord of the
Rings" trilogy, with the second film acting as a bridge to the first installment
of "Lord of the Rings," Lynne said.
The movie will likely be shot in Wellington, New
Zealand, he said. Starting in January, New Line will discuss with Jackson and
Walsh, who are married, elements such as the movies' director and cast. He
wouldn't reveal monetary terms of the collaboration.
Work on the film's script can't begin until Hollywood
studios and television broadcasters reach a new agreement with striking writers
represented by the Writers Guild of America, Harry Sloan, chief executive
officer of Los Angeles-based MGM, said.
In the past six months, MGM helped bring New Line and
Jackson together to resolve their issues and come to terms on the new
agreement, Sloan said in an interview.
"The Hobbit" will be MGM's second franchise after the
"James Bond" movies, Sloan said.
New Line's "The Golden Compass" opened to
lower-than-expected box office sales, according to Brandon Gray, president of
researcher Box Office Mojo LLC. The movie cost about 150 million dollars to
make and has garnered 91.7 million in worldwide ticket sales since its Dec. 7
release.
Jackson won a best director Academy Award for "The
Lord of the Rings: Return of the King," the third installment of the trilogy.
"Return of the King" grossed more than 1 billion dollars, second only to
"Titanic," which took in 1.13 billion.
(Agencies)