When Disney pulled the plug on its expensive Lone Ranger project, which was to reunite Pirates of the Caribbean cohorts Johnny Depp, Jerry Bruckheimer, and Gore Verbinski, a few industry-watchers held out hope that the studio and the filmmakers would yet still reach an agreement over how many hundreds of millions of dollars the would-be franchise would cost. Almost exactly two months later, it seems theyâve reached that compromise. More stupid money for someone!
From Deadline:
On Lone Ranger, there has been a lot of behind-the-scenes drama as the three principal players made concessions in their deals, and worked on the script to salvage the spectacle that made the movie worth making in the first place while bringing the budget down to a more manageable figure in the $215 million range.
So, not quite the affordable $200 million that Disney reportedly initially wanted, but definitely less costly than the $250 million or more that the production was threatening to cost. $215 million makes it ever so cheaper than all but the last three Pirates movies, which cost a reported $225M (2006âs Dead Manâs Chest), $300M (2007âs At Worldâs End), and $250M (2011âs On Stranger Tides).
It remains to be seen if any further drastic creative changes will be implemented, especially given that naysayers took license at Augustâs project-halting announcement to blast certain rumored fantastical elements in the script which I wonât spoil here. Consider that a free litmus test, Disney.
Deadlineâs Mike Fleming thinks it unlikely for Lone Rangerâs initial December 2012 release date to stand, which solves at least one of the five challenges the project faces which Movieline pinpointed last August.
But, all things considered, is it wise for Bruckheimer, Disney & Co. to move forward after such a public false start? Weigh in below.
⢠âThe Lone Rangerâ Saddling Up With Johnny Depp And A Tighter Budget [Deadline]
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