Why Universal Studios Passed On The Dark Tower And At The Mountains of Madness

Why Universal Studios Passed On The Dark Tower And At The Mountains of Madness

More from Ron Meyer, this time on Ron Howard's multimedia pitch for Stephen King's Dark Tower and Guillermo Del Toro's At The Mountains of Madness

By MarkJulian - Nov 03, 2011 09:11 AM EST
Filed Under: Fantasy
Source: Movieline


Source: Moveline

Here's more from the extremely candid Meyer, speaking at the at the Savannah Film Festival to students and members of the public at the Savannah College of Art & Design.

On why the studio passed on At the Mountains of Madness and Dark Tower:
“We looked at the economics of [At the Mountains of Madness and Dark Tower] and it just didn’t make sense for us, for what we would have to put out for what we could make back,” he explained. “It didn’t feel secure enough for us, and that’s the reason we didn’t do it.”

“They’re both good projects, they just were more expensive than made sense for us to spend. If I thought that we could get a better return and everybody was willing to cut their gross, I wasn’t afraid of the price — I was just afraid of the return. I didn’t want to invest, you know, $200 million to not make enough to show that that was worth investing that money.”


On the difficulty of turning down the Dark Tower project despite being good friends with Ron Howard.
No one wants to hear the word ‘No,’ so it’s never simple to just say it. My first responsibility is to do what’s right for the studio, so I can’t worry about what’s right for Ron. He has the right to take it elsewhere and I hope he gets it set up.”











Director Guillermo del Toro and screenwriter Matthew Robbins wrote a screenplay based on Lovecraft's story, but in 2006 had trouble getting Warner Bros. to finance the project. Del Toro wrote, "The studio is very nervous about the cost and it not having a love story or a happy ending, but it's impossible to do either in the Lovecraft universe." In July 2010 it was announced that the film would be made in 3D and that James Cameron would become producer, and Tom Cruise was attached to star. This "was a startling prospect considering Lovecraft's tale had long been considered unfilmable." Del Toro confirmed that the film would begin production as early as May 2011 and start filming in June. However, in March 2011, it was announced that "Universal refused to greenlight the project due to del Toro's insistence that it be released with an R rating rather than a PG-13." According to Salon.com, "Universal wants to hold onto the project in the event that it changes its mind and decides to make it later, either as an R or PG-13 movie. But del Toro is already trying to set up Mountains at another studio (possibly 20th Century Fox, which released Cameron's Titanic and Avatar).




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lnTylerWeTrust
lnTylerWeTrust - 11/3/2011, 11:07 AM
Universal!!!no you [frick]ed up
MassExecutions
MassExecutions - 11/3/2011, 11:13 AM
That's too bad. I would love to see Mountains of Madness, but it certainly is risky to pour a lot on money into a horror movie, especially if its rated R. Hope it still gets made somewhere.
SugarYumYum
SugarYumYum - 11/3/2011, 11:22 AM
Well, everything happens for a reason. Dark Tower and atMoM need studios who can foot big budgets to work and Universal can't afford to take the risk. Probably the best for all three parties that they move on.
Shaman
Shaman - 11/3/2011, 11:46 AM
Universal shooting itself in the foot again. That's twice today. But a Wolfman reboot is a good idea. Right.
ImaNerd
ImaNerd - 11/3/2011, 12:03 PM
So says the studio that passed on the star wars franchise and is making a battleship movie.
StrangerX
StrangerX - 11/3/2011, 12:26 PM
I can understand how the studios need to carefully choose their projects, but these would have been great opportunities. They screwed up with Cowboys and Aliens basically because 2011 had so many alien type movies, and Universal had C & A come out at the end of the summer; which by then, most people were sick of Alien vs type movies.
ManOfKrypton
ManOfKrypton - 11/3/2011, 2:20 PM
What a load of rubbish.... They passed up the Mountains of Madness, Halo and Dark Tower.... and what did they do? Spend 200 million on that stupid film Battleship!!!!

They've got some morons running this studio.
CorndogBurglar
CorndogBurglar - 11/3/2011, 7:03 PM
A Dark Tower movie would never be made right anyway.

I would love to see it if someone could make the way its supposed to be. Unfortunately, there is just WAY too much to fit into movies.

The only way it would be done justice is on TV with multiple seasons. like 7-10 seasons. Yes, there is that much to cover. The only problem is that the special effects would suffer.
logan9311
logan9311 - 11/3/2011, 8:24 PM
Is the Dark Tower really being made by HBO?
If so they should make it at least seven seasons, combining books 1 and 2, "The Gunslinger" & "The Drawing of the Three", and splitting book 7, "The Dark Tower", into two seasons because of it's enormity. But no matter what those stories deserve to come to life somehow, and HBO is probly the best place for King's charecters to grow and be explored the way they are in the books.
liveforfilms
liveforfilms - 11/4/2011, 1:27 AM
Could I just say that the At the Mountains of Madness logo used in this post was by Tabby Stardust who created for the Mountains of Madness poster competition I ran a while back.

(full posters if here - http://www.liveforfilms.com/2011/02/08/at-the-mountains-of-madness-design-challenge-winner/)

Just wanted to make sure they got the credit it for it.

I do hope the film eventually gets made.
EarOne
EarOne - 11/4/2011, 5:33 AM
that makes a LOT of sense..especially today, when the STARS don't carry the same burden and financial responsibility as the studio..just do the job, take the money and go to the next project...if they're getting paid like $30-100 mill., they SHOULD care bout this stuff and "adjust" the money they're gettin'.
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