Hasbro Game Movies

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Hollywood is running out of ideas for original movies,so they plan on making movies out of Hasbro games.

The following are in script stage:
Battleship
Monopoly
Chutes and Ladders
Candyland

If you watch Attack of The Show,it was mentioned in "The Feed".

There will probably be more Hasbro games becoming movies in the near future.
 
Twister has already been done though.
 
Hollywood is running out of ideas for original movies,so they plan on making movies out of Hasbro games.

The following are in script stage:
Battleship - Wow, you're late, 'cause this one's almost in the can!

Monopoly - I would honestly love to see an Monopoly film. You could make a pretty smart/silly comedy around the world of high-end real estate.

Chutes and Ladders
Candyland

You could probably make cute kid movies out of these last two.

If you watch Attack of The Show,it was mentioned in "The Feed".

There will probably be more Hasbro games becoming movies in the near future.

Who would have thought Clue would have made such a great movie?
 
Twister has already been done though.

That was about a tornado.
They could do one about the game.


KenK---You're right about Battleship.I'm late with that news.
 
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From The Playlist:
Updated: Who Sunk What ‘Battleship’? Board Game Blockbuster Due For Reshoots, Multiple Endings


From Enewsi 2008.02.20:
Universal Pictures and Hasbro Sign Strategic Partnership
Jay Cochran said:
Universal Pictures and Hasbro, Inc. [NYSE:HAS] announced today that they have formed a six-year strategic partnership to produce at least four motion pictures based on some of the world’s best-known and beloved brands, including “MONOPOLY,” “CANDY LAND,” “CLUE,” “OUIJA,” “BATTLESHIP,” “MAGIC, THE GATHERING,” and “STRETCH ARMSTRONG.” The announcement was jointly made by Marc Shmuger and David Linde, Chairman and Co-Chairman of Universal Pictures, and Brian Goldner, Hasbro’s Chief Operating Officer.

Under the terms of the deal, Hasbro will partner exclusively with Universal Pictures for feature films, with the exception of TRANSFORMERS, which became the centerpiece of the 2007 smash hit movie directed by Michael Bay and has already spawned a sequel; and GI JOE, which is currently filming under the direction of Stephen Sommers. The first movie from this deal will be released in 2010 or 2011, and Universal will release at least one film a year thereafter.

“This deal gives Universal access to some of the greatest brands in the world,” explained Shmuger and Linde. “Hasbro’s portfolio of products has tremendous emotional resonance with children and adults. They offer an exciting opportunity for us to develop tentpole movies with built-in global brand awareness, which is a key component of our slate strategy.”

“Universal’s creativity and worldwide marketing and distribution strength make them the perfect partner,” said Goldner. “Today’s Hasbro is so much more than a traditional toy and game company, and this partnership is a powerful example of how we are offering our consumers new ways to enjoy unique and immersive experiences with our brands.”

As part of its commitment to expanding its presence in the world of entertainment, Hasbro has recently hired Lisa Licht as its new General Manager of Entertainment and Licensing; she is based in Los Angeles. In addition, in August 2007, Hasbro announced an agreement with Electronic Arts to develop digital games based on many of its properties across a variety of platforms.

On behalf of Hasbro, the agreement was brokered by the William Morris Agency.


From Vulture:
Ron Meyer May Be Sunk at Universal: Was a Roster of Board-Game Movies His Final Mistake?
Claude Brodesser-Akner said:
Everyone was expecting some very big dominoes to fall in the months before NBC/Universal is officially handed over to Comcast. First came Jeff Zucker. Now, Vulture hears there may be more fallout from NBC/Universal's imminent acquisition by Comcast: Sources tell Vulture that several candidates, including former Disney studios chief Dick Cook, have been approached about replacing Universal Studios president and COO Ron Meyer.

Universal’s troubles have been well-documented, if not well-attended: Their nearly uninterrupted string of flops (Land of the Lost, Public Enemies, State of Play, The Wolfman, Green Zone, Repo Men, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World) dates back to two summers ago. Meyer’s movie studio is largely bereft of big franchises, and if he is forced out one of the last straws may have been his enormous gamble to get more of them: A constrictive — some say punishing — six-year deal with toy giant Hasbro to turn at least four familiar games and toys like Candy Land, Battleship, Stretch Armstrong, and the Ouija Board into big-budget films. Right now, Peter Berg is shooting a $200 million Battleship in Baton Rouge, Lousiana after a warp-speed development process that resulted in an alien spacemen versus American seamen plot that has almost nothing in common with the classic board game (except for the cry of “You sunk my battleship!” that will undoubtedly appear at some point in its trailer). Universal is trapped and hurriedly ramming through other projects in order to avoid seven-figure penalties, all at a time when audiences are wrinkling their noses at movies based on musty brand names (Marmaduke, Land of the Lost, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra). It seems like Meyer played a giant game of Risk, and lost.

Back in February 2008, when the studio struck the deal with Hasbro that pledged to make four or more feature films based on some of the toymaker's biggest brands, Universal Pictures then-chairman Marc Shmuger explained the rationale behind the deal to Advertising Age: “As we're gripped with fear and anxiety, we look for something we can rely on and trust.” Shmuger was speaking about moviegoers preferences for the familiar in a time of uncertainty, but he could easily have been speaking about Universal Pictures' executives own worries over their lack of franchise films. At the time, these nostalgic brands seemed like a good bet: Transformers had emerged as an unlikely blockbuster for DreamWorks the previous summer, grossing $709 million worldwide, and just nine days earlier, Paramount had started shooting Hasbro’s G.I. Joe. Universal’s only franchises were the Fast and Furious and Bourne movies (the latter of which Matt Damon was uninterested in continuing); other than that, they just had a pile of moldy B-movie monsters from the fifties. A Hasbro deal could jump-start a dependable line of profitable series.

For Hasbro, on the other hand, the deal meant finally getting the upper hand in its relationship with Hollywood. The two William Morris talent agents who lured the company away from Creative Artists Agency, Rob Carlson and John Fogelman, had done so by promising Hasbro’s then-COO (and now CEO) Brian Goldner that they could put some very nasty and sharp teeth into the language of any future studio deals — and they delivered. Universal would face multi-million-dollar penalties and the loss of the property rights if Hasbro films weren’t made in a timely manner. No more waiting around twenty years for Warner Bros. to make a film out of GI Joe: Any studio they now dealt with would pay dearly for dithering.

By the next year, harsh realism replaced optimism when it came to familiar brands being a sure thing at the box office. G.I. Joe, with its $170 million budget, grossed less than half of what Transformers made; after splitting half of its box-office haul with movie theaters and paying Hasbro a share of its gross, Joe was a single, maybe a double, but certainly not a home run. And Speed Racer had tanked for Warner Bros. the year before.

But at least the source material for those movies actually had adventures at their core. What was the jumping-off point for a board game or Stretch Armstrong? "Except for Transformers and G.I. Joe, there is no mythology [in a Hasbro product]," sneers one producer who has worked with the toy company, adding, "What's the point of a Ouija board film or ****ing Candy Land, except creative bankruptcy?"

The studio’s enthusiasm for Hasbro’s aggressive timetable waned. But they were trapped: The Hasbro deal contained awful consequences for delaying production. Not interested in making Battleship for 2011? Lost your Candy Land screenwriter to another studio’s project? How does a $5 million kill fee and the loss of the rights to make the film grab you?

“The language was so strict, Universal begged to get out if it,” explains one insider who insisted on anonymity because of involvement in settling up another Hasbro film at the studio. "But they jammed a gun to their head to make the movies.” (Universal reps declined to speak about the Hasbro dealings.)

In February 2009, almost a year had elapsed since its deal with the toymaker, and Universal needed to pick a Hasbro title to greenlight soon, or start writing fat checks and immediately start losing the properties. They surveyed the progress on their inventory: Etan Cohen (Tropic Thunder) had been working on a script for Candy Land with Enchanted director Kevin Lima, but Cohen was leaving the project to work on Sony’s greenlit sequel to Men in Black 3. Ridley Scott had been developing a Monopoly movie for ages, but was busy with Robin Hood, and in any event was more interested in planning his back-to-back 3-D Alien prequels. Execs thought a Oujia board script by National Treasure’s Cormac and Marianne Wibberley had promise, but it wasn’t greenlightable yet. As for Stretch Armstrong, it was delayed waiting for Taylor Lautner’s availability, which was limited by the Twilight movies that had made him a star. The best choice seemed to be Battleship, which Berg had been attached to since 2008, but on which little progress had been made. The film may not have had a plot yet, let alone a script, but it had the summer-tentpole potential for explosions and great special effects, and Berg was a military history buff and beloved at NBC/Universal. That was good enough. While it may seem odd that the execs were more worried about paying a $5 million penalty than committing to a $200 million blockbuster with just a title, they were driven by both the desperate need for a big movie and the looming Comcast deal that would decide all of their future employment. They had to have something hugely promising on the books; at the least, Battleship was certainly huge.

At the time, Berg was also being wooed to direct Paramount’s Dune remake and DreamWorks’ robot battle movie Real Steel. But Universal was able to lock him down by promising him that after Battleship, he could make his passion project, Lone Survivor, based on the nonfiction account of the life and death of Lieutenant Michael Murphy, the U.S. Navy SEAL posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for his valor in Afghanistan. Berg’s Survivor was a gritty, intensely realistic, and graphic war movie, everything that Battleship couldn’t be: Universal’s deal specified that no Hasbro movie could be rated ‘R’. There were toys to be sold!

Berg agreed to make both, and by March 2009, he’d begun working on a script with Red screenwriters Jon and Eric Hoeber to come up with the spaceships versus battleships plot. With only a treatment in hand, Universal quickly set a July 4, 2011 release date. Not long after, however, Michael Bay announced that that would be the opening date for his Hasbro movie, the third Transformers movie. Universal didn’t want to move to later in the summer, afraid that then their blockbuster would be considered an afterthought, so new studio heads Adam Fogelson and Donna Langley went to Hasbro’s Goldner to plead for an extension.

Let’s stop for a moment to really underline the moviemaking times we are living in: Hollywood studio heads were begging a Rhode Island toy company for more time so they could spend $200 million on a state of the art CGI film based on an early twentieth-century board game. So, there we are.

Hasbro, which already had a surefire hit pegged in Transformers, felt benevolent and let them move Battleship to May 2012. Meanwhile, Berg and company continued to work on their script, though much of the work was devoted to the practical matter of figuring out just how many giant alien battles they could afford and reasonably pull off. The plot was finally hashed out in June, just two months before production was to begin with a cast that includes Liam Neeson, Rihanna, Alexander Skarsgard, and Taylor Kitsch. Unfortunately, though the alien naval battles had been mapped out, there was just one small problem left to clear up: the dialogue. Sources say it was sounding a little … alien. So Universal quickly hired screenwriters Brian Koppelman and David Levien (A Solitary Man, Ocean's Thirteen) for a six-week-long polish. When the initial ten-day shoot of the water-battle scenes began in August in Hawaii, Berg’s production was so big that New Line Cinema — which was also filming a sequel to Journey to the Center of the Earth there — had to fly in extra crews from Los Angeles because Battleship had conscripted everyone local.

Meanwhile, the Hasbro obligations continue back at Universal. Following Hasbro's third-quarter earnings report, CEO Goldner said that Universal could potentially move Stretch Armstrong, starring Taylor Lautner, out of 2012 and into 2013. But people familiar with the situation say that in exchange for allowing Universal to delay Stretch, the studio has had to essentially greenlight Ouija, with an $80 to 100 million budget. The take from the Lost and Tron: Legacy screenwriting team of Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis follows the adventures of an Indiana Jones–style family, though it’s not yet clear if it will be directed by French action director Pierre Morel (Taken), Sylvain White (Losers), or Scott Stewart (Legion). But either way, it will hit theaters — ready or not — in November 2013. (The fact that they’re stuck with this deal is why some think Cook would be the right person for Meyer’s job: He is the man who oversaw turning the theme-park ride Pirates of the Caribbean into one of Disney’s most valuable franchises.)

While hasty development rarely helps a movie, there is always the chance that Battleship won’t end up a disaster: Berg is a talented director who excels at improvisation. But having the Dillon Panthers wing it on the field of Friday Night Lights is a lot different than having CGI aliens improv while sinking destroyers at a quarter of a million dollars a day. And ultimately, some wonder what the point is of rushing a movie just to have the rights to name it after a product the film has so little to do with. “In the end, we did something wholly original here,” one member of the Battleship creative team tells Vulture. “But they say, ‘You can’t sell that, unless there’s some source material underneath!’”

This insider adds that there is also a very good argument to be made that having such a tenuous connection to Hasbro’s product — marketing plastic pegs as ‘intellectual property” — actually hurts the movie’s chances with audiences; it makes it a joke. “The worst part is that people get their knives out, especially online,” says our source, citing a Colbert Report segment from late September 2009, when Battleship began casting. “It should tell you something when Stephen Colbert is making fun of your movie on TV, saying, 'Pete Berg, consider this my audition: A … 4!'”


From The Playlist:
Updated: Who Sunk What ‘Battleship’? Board Game Blockbuster Due For Reshoots, Multiple Endings


From /film
James Cameron Calls Out ‘Battleship,’ Says Hollywood Reliance on Brands ‘Degrades Cinema’

From Collider:
James Cameron Disses the BATTLESHIP Movie
 
From Deadline:
'Ouija' Conjures Up Directing Candidates

From MTV:
Monopoly Movie Will Be All About 'Greed,' Ridley Scott Reveals
Filmmaker says the board-game film will focus on a Donald Trump-like character in New York.

HEAT VISION EXCLUSIVE:

'Taken' Director Presents His 'Ouija' to Universal
Pierre Morel may be *this* close to getting his latest directing project.

The French director, who came to Hollywood’s attention with the hit Liam Neeson action movie Taken, is making a presentation this afternoon to Universal outlining his take on Hasbro board game adaptation Ouija.

The studio has already heard a presentation from Sylvain White, and Scot Stewart and John Moore have also been having conversations about directing the supernatural thriller centered on the spirit board that is used to communicate with the dead.

Morel is also in talks to direct Warner Bros.’s EDF, aka Earth Defense Force, a giant alien invasion movie which is being produced by Sam Raimi and Bill Block, head of QED International, the outfit that is financing the project.

The story is set after three alien fighters attack the planet, leaving countries humiliated. The governments of Earth then race to create a space fighting force in preparation for a second attack by an approaching alien horde.

Warners is high on Morel for EDF, which is a favorite amongst certain execs but is waiting to see how Ouija plays out. Ouija is a high priority for Universal and would certainly go before EDF.

Morel, meanwhile, also has Taken 2 on the docket, if Ouija and EDF don’t work out.


From 24 Frames:
Ouija movie could conjure Pierre Morel



From Motion Captured:
The Morning Read: Are directors really fighting over who gets to direct 'Ouija'?


From 24 Frames:
'The Thing' is loose: Universal adjusts 2011 release schedule
The Universal Pictures slate is getting a little cloudy.

The studio has decided to remove "The Thing," its prequel to the 1982 John Carpenter science-fiction picture, from its scheduled April 29, 2011, opening, leaving the film without a release date.

In its place, the studio has moved up "Fast Five," the fourth sequel in the auto-racing "Fast & Furious" franchise from June 10 to the April slot. A studio spokeswoman said that "The Thing" was not yet ready and that the studio was very keen on the new "Fast & Furious" movie, citing the successful release of the franchise's fourth film in April 2009.

"The Thing," which tracks the discovery of an alien craft in Antarctica (the events directly precede those from Carpenter's film), is being directed by debut filmmaker Matthijs van Heijningen Jr. Production began last spring.

Meanwhile, the studio has also faced a setback on its "Ouija" project, a big-budget picture adapted from the Hasbro board game that's being produced by Michael Bay's Platinum Dunes production company.

Universal executives met Thursday with "Taken" director Pierre Morel, who had been considered a front-runner for the directing job. But Morel and the executives couldn't find common creative ground, according to two people familiar with the conversations who asked not to be identified because of the sensitive nature of the discussions. That leaves executives and producers to continue casting a net for directing candidates.

Universal still hopes to make the movie in time for a Thanksgiving 2012 release. There is added pressure to move forward on the big-budget property, with the planned release for another Hasbro-derived movie, the Taylor Lautner-starring "Stretch Armstrong," already pushed from 2012 to 2013.

Hasbro properties are also a priority for more practical reasons: penalties kick in if the movies don't move forward within certin time limits. Another complicating factor is that the film has to sync with the merchandising machine, which is set into motion years in advance.

A Universal spokeswoman declined comment on the "Ouija" situation.

The uncertainty comes as Universal sees its ownership transition from GE to Comcast, putting the fate of the studio's leadership in new hands.

Finally, the sports comedy movie "Ballers," which according to Rentrak had still been on the docket for next November, is now officially undated.

The fictional film, which was to revolve around characters at a LeBron James fantasy camp and was to star the Miami Heat forward himself, had been set to shoot last summer. But scheduling proved tricky as the athlete made the move from Cleveland and was courted anew by Madison Avenue, and the project was put on hold.

-- Steven Zeitchik
 
Yeah. As awesome as Ridley Scott is, his background would suggest that this won't be a comedy. Darn. I think Monopoly would've been awesome as one. :(


As for Hollywood running out of ideas, at least they're not making a movie about Hungry Hungry Hippos. :woot:

Well, have you seen Matchstick men. It's more of a drama, but it is light hearted and has plenty of comedy. So you never know.
 
Monopoly is the one I can see working out the best as a film. They could have characters representative of the game pieces:

Shoe: a successful designer for high fashion women's shoes.

Racecar: either the head of a car company or an actual racecar driver.

Dog: a "pet guru", like those folks with their own shows on Animal Planet, or something?

Thimble: a fashion designer

Iron: a hard-working domestic? Someone who would probably be the underdog protaganist?

Top Hat: The rich mogul all trying to play them in some grand real estate scheme.
 
Monopoly is the one I can see working out the best as a film. They could have characters representative of the game pieces:

Shoe: a successful designer for high fashion women's shoes.

Racecar: either the head of a car company or an actual racecar driver.

Dog: a "pet guru", like those folks with their own shows on Animal Planet, or something?

Thimble: a fashion designer

Iron: a hard-working domestic? Someone who would probably be the underdog protaganist?

Top Hat: The rich mogul all trying to play them in some grand real estate scheme.

I think a far more obvious and visually interesting thing to do is to somehow incorporate the original 8 objects amongst the main characters For instance, having a character who walks around while carrying a Scottish terrier, a guy who drives a replica of the race car, etc. It would be simpler to do (less restrictive in what characters you have to create and/or what stories to do) and possibly a better homage to the playing pieces.

P.S.: Yes, I'm fully aware that the examples I gave were not part of the original 6 used in Charles Darrow's initial design (though they were added in time for the first edition). :)
 
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i read their making roller coaster tycon moive. i think it would be cool its game were you create your own theme park. their also making lego moive and a battle ship moive.i think it could begood moive. i think it wouldbecool if they did game bord were people contact the dead that would be acreepy moive.


coming soon
slickey the moive
terties the moive
the sims live aciton moive
hungery hippoe
eight ball moive
 
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Hollywood is running out of ideas for original movies,so they plan on making movies out of Hasbro games.

The following are in script stage:
Battleship
Monopoly
Chutes and Ladders
Candyland

If you watch Attack of The Show,it was mentioned in "The Feed".

There will probably be more Hasbro games becoming movies in the near future.

To be fair, Hollywood has never been much about originality.
 
i read their making roller coaster tycon moive. i think it would be cool its game were you create your own theme park. their also making lego moive and a battle ship moive.i think it could begood moive. i think it wouldbecool if they did game bord were people contact the dead that would be acreepy moive.


coming soon
slickey the moive
terties the moive
the sims live aciton moive
hungery hippoe
eight ball moive

Minesweeper the Movie!!! :D:D

[YT]LHY8NKj3RKs[/YT]
 
Universal Drops "Clue," "Magic" & "Monopoly"


By Garth Franklin Thursday August 4th 2011 04:25AM
Universal Pictures has quietly dropped "Clue", the third of seven Hasbro board game properties which the studio contracted to make into movies reports Deadline.
The studio has also reportedly dumped plans for films based on "Monopoly" and "Magic: The Gathering" which have both been in development for a few years. Despite this, the projects are said to still be alive with Hasbro funding the development and production of "Clue" with Gore Verbinski (the first three "Pirates of the Caribbean" films) still attached to direct and produce.
"Flash Gordon" scribes Burk Sharpless and Matt Sazama have been hired to write a new "Clue" script based on a take by the producers that "retains the murder mystery spirit of the board game" but shifts the setting to a global stage.
Universal is still committed to the four other projects with Hasbro, the first being next Summer's action epic "Battleship". Also in the works are the Taylor Lautner-led "Stretch Armstrong", the fantasy epic "Candy Land" and the McG-directed "Ouija". Hasbro continues to develop "Monopoly" with Scott Free but the 'Magic' adaptation seems to be truly dead for now.
 
Please Please! Make a Friendship is Magic comedy movie! Please!
 
I have no doubt we'll get more movies based on their games. If Battleship's a hit then I'd expect a ton more to be made.
 
It's BS that hollywood is running out of ideas. Ideas are not a finite resource. They're just being lazy plain and simple.
 

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