Not if they don't want a lawsuit.
I'm saying they can't borrow the changes Disney gave to their tales as they got copyright on their alterations.Well surely if they can get Snow White. They can get other popular Princess's besides just using Snow White ?
Exactly.snow white is a public domain character I think, most of the grimms fairy tales are. so they can use other fairy tale characters, just not duplicate disney imagery. idk, maybe it's a deal like how anyone can use the frankenstein character, but not the freen skinned jar head look with the bolts in the next without paying universal.
snow white is a public domain character I think, most of the grimms fairy tales are. so they can use other fairy tale characters, just not duplicate disney imagery. idk, maybe it's a deal like how anyone can use the frankenstein character, but not the green skinned jar head look with the bolts in the neckwithout paying universal.
Story reads like all kinds of BS.
You know, I couldn't care less about this Kristen Stewart-banged-her-director crap, but if this latest news is true, then at least some good has come out of it. Because Snow White sucked, and if they're going to push ahead with a sequel anyway, at least now there's a chance that they might hire a competent director.
Director's Wife Bans Him from Returning for "Show White and the Huntsman" Sequel
Read more: http://www.worstpreviews.com/headline.php?id=25661&count=0#ixzz22V93E97J
We recently learned that Universal Pictures is still pursuing a sequel to "Snow White and the Huntsman," and is interested bringing back both Kristen Stewart and director Rupert Sanders, despite the fact that the two slept together. In the process, Stewart cheated on Robert Pattinson and Sanders cheated on his wife, Liberty Ross, who he has two young children with.
Pattinson quickly ended his relationship with Stewart, but Ross is sticking by Sanders. And while Universal is fine with having Stewart and Sanders on set together again, Ross has banned Sanders from directing the sequel.
"She just doesn't want him to ever work with Kristen again," a source told RadarOnline. "Rupert is obviously disappointed because 'Snow White and the Huntsman' was his directorial debut and he had hoped on building on that. But he knows his actions were inexcusable, and he's going to have to listen to his wife on this one."
Meanwhile, Summit Entertainment says that Stewart and Pattinson will both be available for the promotion of the upcoming "Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2," which hits theaters in November. Obviously things will be very awkward.
You know, I couldn't care less about this Kristen Stewart-banged-her-director crap, but if this latest news is true, then at least some good has come out of it. Because Snow White sucked, and if they're going to push ahead with a sequel anyway, at least now there's a chance that they might hire a competent director.
Director's Wife Bans Him from Returning for "Show White and the Huntsman" Sequel
Read more: http://www.worstpreviews.com/headline.php?id=25661&count=0#ixzz22V93E97J
We recently learned that Universal Pictures is still pursuing a sequel to "Snow White and the Huntsman," and is interested bringing back both Kristen Stewart and director Rupert Sanders, despite the fact that the two slept together. In the process, Stewart cheated on Robert Pattinson and Sanders cheated on his wife, Liberty Ross, who he has two young children with.
Pattinson quickly ended his relationship with Stewart, but Ross is sticking by Sanders. And while Universal is fine with having Stewart and Sanders on set together again, Ross has banned Sanders from directing the sequel.
"She just doesn't want him to ever work with Kristen again," a source told RadarOnline. "Rupert is obviously disappointed because 'Snow White and the Huntsman' was his directorial debut and he had hoped on building on that. But he knows his actions were inexcusable, and he's going to have to listen to his wife on this one."
Meanwhile, Summit Entertainment says that Stewart and Pattinson will both be available for the promotion of the upcoming "Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2," which hits theaters in November. Obviously things will be very awkward.
I rather liked that honestly. While I know the love triangle was supposed to be there, I'm happy it wasn't at the forefront.Script could've been a lot better, it needed a lot more polish.
For starters the romance was ****. No tension or love triangle or anything. The Prince Charming character could've been completely cut.
He did.I thought rpat's left her?
I thought rpat's left her?
Sources tell The Hollywood Reporter that the sequel to June's Snow White, which starred Stewart, Hemsworth and Charlize Theron, is being reconceived as a spinoff movie. It's unclear whether director Rupert Sanders will return, though one source with ties to the production says he will. However, screenwriter David Koepp, who had been hired to pen the continuation of the original film, is being settled out of his rich contract, according to sources, as the project is being transformed into something other than the movie that Koepp had been hired to write.
"The studio is currently exploring options to continue the franchise," a Universal spokeswoman says.
The move comes in the wake of Stewart, 22, and the married Sanders, 41, apologizing publicly for a romantic affair after compromising photos of the duo were published in July. (Stewart was dating her Twilight co-star Robert Pattinson.) While it might have been awkward for Stewart and Sanders to reunite for a sequel, it is not clear why the decision to move forward without Stewart was made.
It is highly unusual for Hollywood studios to drop stars of franchises between the first and second installments. The original plan, according to sources, was to make two films featuring the Snow White character and a third film spinning off the Huntsman, similar to how Fox's X-Men series has spun off Wolverine.
It's far from clear whether a Snow White follow-up will ever get made. The movie was a modest hit for Universal, grossing $389.2 million worldwide on a budget of about $170 million. But Stewart, one of Hollywood's top stars thanks to the Twilight franchise, commands a hefty salary. Declining to pick up her option would shave millions from the budget of a second movie.