WB launches film foray with $160 mil deal

NEW YORK — The WB Network is going to the movies — big time.

Although New Line and the WB were still discussing the fine print on Thursday, WB has agreed to pay at least $75 million for New Line’s “Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring” and its two forthcoming sequels in a 10-year shared window with Turner Broadcasting’s TBS and TNT.

The total license fee for all three could end up at $160 million or more, depending on the box-office performance of the sequels; “Fellowship of the Ring” has already grossed $258 million, and it’s still tracking.

The “Rings” transaction is a family affair because the WB, New Line and Turner are all divisions of AOL Time Warner. But the deal is by far the biggest movie buy ever engineered by the WB. Insiders say the WB is so juiced by the pickup of the “Rings” trilogy that it’s planning to go after more theatrical movies in their first network window.

Games Workshop’s The Lord of the Rings translates the first of the trilogy’s movies into a strategy game featuring the Fellowship in their battle against the forces of Sauron. Drawing from their experience with their legendary Warhammer and Warhammer 40k games, Games Workshop has created a tabletop game that falls somewhere between the massive scale of a wargame and the small battles common in role-playing games. [More]

llynn writes: Jay Leno did a segment on the Tonight Show called ‘name that sound’ and had Gilbert Gottfried dressed as Frodo. The feet were really funny and Jay referred to him as toejoe.

Kim writes: Empire are going to be interviewing Ian Mckellen (Gandalf) and you can send in questions for him. [More]

Jusslin writes: The developers at Sun Microsystems seems to be inspired by our friend Sauron. Are they aiming to rule us all? [More]

Niels writes: I just wanted to mention that the Danish ticket sale will extend 1.000.000 tomorrow (friday), and with a population at 5,352,815 (July 2001 est.) I think we might have a record.