Tolkien estate disavows forthcoming film starring Nicholas Hoult

Authored by theguardian.com and submitted by ManiaforBeatles

Lord of the Rings author’s estate declares it did not ‘approve of, authorise or participate in the making of’ new biopic

The family and estate of JRR Tolkien have fired a broadside against the forthcoming film starring Nicholas Hoult as a young version of the author, saying that they “do not endorse it or its content in any way”.

Out in May, and starring Hoult in the title role and Lily Collins as his wife Edith, Tolkien explores “the formative years of the renowned author’s life as he finds friendship, courage and inspiration among a fellow group of writers and artists at school”. Directed by Dome Karukoski, it promises to reveal how “their brotherhood strengthens as they grow up … until the outbreak of the first world war which threatens to tear their fellowship apart”, all of which, according to studio Fox Searchlight, would inspire Tolkien to “write his famous Middle-earth novels”.

Quick guide Other literary biopics that went up against estates Show Hide Sylvia In 2003, Frieda Hughes, the daughter of Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, decried the film Sylvia, starring Gwyneth Paltrow and Daniel Craig, saying: “I wrote a letter to them saying ‘No I don’t want to collaborate’, and they kept coming back. Why would I want to be involved in moments of my childhood which I never want to return to? I want nothing to do with this film. I will never, never in a million years, go to see it.” Hughes also refused to give the BBC permission to use Plath’s poems in the film, and even wrote her own about the experience: “Now they want to make a film / For anyone lacking the ability / To imagine the body, head in oven / Orphaning children.” The End of the Tour In 2014, the estate of David Foster Wallace objected to the release of The End of the Tour, a film which starred Jason Segel as the late author and was based on a book written by Rolling Stone reporter David Lipsky about a road trip he took with Wallace in 1996. “The trust was given no advance notice that this production was underway and, in fact, first heard of it when it was publicly announced. For the avoidance of doubt, there is no circumstance under which the David Foster Wallace Literary Trust would have consented to the adaptation of this interview into a motion picture, and we do not consider it an homage,” it said. Rebel in the Rye The Salinger estate was not involved in Rebel in the Rye, a 2016 biopic of JD Salinger that also saw Hoult in the role of the author. Salinger famously refused to sell the rights to his most famous book, The Catcher in the Rye, saying the idea of filming his “very novelistic novel” was “odious enough to keep me from selling the rights”. Rebel in the Rye was based on a 2010 biography – that was also not endorsed by the estate. Photograph: Allstar/BBC/Sportsphoto Ltd./Allstar

On Tuesday morning, the estate and family of Tolkien issued a terse statement in which they announced their “wish to make clear that they did not approve of, authorise or participate in the making of this film”, and that “they do not endorse it or its content in any way”.

A spokesperson for the estate told the Guardian that the statement was intended to make its position clear, rather than heralding future legal action.

John Garth, author of the biography Tolkien and the Great War, said he felt the estate’s response to the film was “sensible”.

“Biopics typically take considerable licence with the facts, and this one is no exception. Endorsement by the Tolkien family would lend credibility to any divergences and distortions. That would be a disservice to history,” he said. “As a biographer, I expect I’ll be busy correcting new misconceptions arising from the movie. I hope that anyone who enjoys the film and is interested in Tolkien’s formative years will pick up a reliable biography.”

Tolkien’s estate has been careful to protect his legacy. In 2009, his heirs settled a multimillion-pound lawsuit over royalties from the Lord of the Rings films. In 2011, the estate took legal action over a novel called Mirkwood: A Novel About JRR Tolkien, which used the author as a central character. The American author of the book, Stephen Hillard later went to a Texas district court to seeking a declaration that he had a right to publisher under the first amendment. The case was later settled when Hillard agreed to add the disclaimer: “This is a work of fiction which is neither endorsed nor connected with The JRR Tolkien Estate or its publisher.”

And in 2012, the estate also took legal action over gambling games featuring Lord of the Rings characters, saying that it was “causing irreparable harm to Tolkien’s legacy and reputation and the valuable goodwill generated by his works”.

Christopher Tolkien, the author’s son, has made clear his antipathy to further films, telling Le Monde in 2012 that “Tolkien has become a monster, devoured by his own popularity and absorbed by the absurdity of our time”, and that “the commercialisation has reduced the aesthetic and philosophical impact of the creation to nothing”.

Peter Jackson, the director of The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings films, has previously said that he thought it was unlikely any more films would be made because they couldn’t happen without the estate’s cooperation. But in 2017 the estate sold rights to a new Lord of the Rings television series to Amazon for $250m, beating Netflix to the deal. It is expected that Amazon may invest as much as $1bn in the multi-series adaption, which will be based on “previously unexplored stories based on JRR Tolkien’s original writings” and not just the narrative covered in the Lord of the Rings.

Play Video 2:06 Watch the trailer for Tolkien - video

Fox Searchlight has been contacted for comment.

Fireside419 on April 23rd, 2019 at 15:11 UTC »

I have an absolutely enormous amount of respect for Christopher Tolkien and what he has done for his father’s legacy. If it wasn’t for him we wouldn’t have The Silmarillion, The Fall of Gondolin, Beren and Luthien, The Children of Hurin, or probably even half the information we have on Tolkien’s life and writing process. It’s pretty significant that he won’t endorse this.

CowDuck on April 23rd, 2019 at 15:01 UTC »

Christopher Tolkien gets a lot of flack for being aggresive in his stewardship of his father's work. But here is some context as to why he is that way.

The Hobbit started out as a bedtime story that JRR would tell Christopher as he laid in bed. Eventually book was written down and the story solidified. It was a story/gift for Christopher in every way imaginable. Eventually, when Christopher was older and serving in South Africa and JRR was writing Lord of the Rings JRR would send Christopher copies of the chapters as they were written. More "bedtime stories" just for him.

Christopher would go on to draw the original maps for his father's work. But to call this "his father's work" is a bit misleading as they were works a father and son shared and bonded over. These stories are as much his as they are his father's.

After his father's death, Christopher went through everything. Every note, every scrap of paper, and every margin. He compiled all of his father's unpublished works and pieces and thoughts. Think about that. His father who created The Hobbit for him and the notes of the man who sent him each chapter of LOTR as they were written. Did he compile that for the world to enjoy? Or to stay close to his father and preserve his memory? The memories of his bedtime stories, of his chapters in the mail, and of his father's thought process of things he might have sent him or showed him later.

To him it is more than "his father's legacy" it is the connection and bond of a father and his son. So next time you say "man he's a hardass on his father's books" realize these are far more than his father's books.

Edit: for those interested in the scholarly study of Tolkien and his works look up Michael D. C. Drout. He is the person who has quite literally written the book on Tolkien;” J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment”. He teaches at Wheaton College Massachusetts and if anyone is going to college it’s a great place to study especially if you’d like to study Tolkien. And if you’re in a post college life his works are worth a read. Pardon typos on mobile

Edit v2: Thank you for the gold and silver. But I’d much rather people donate to a charitable organization of their choice or even to the a government org like the National Park Service. Your money would go to a much better cause.

logopolys_ on April 23rd, 2019 at 14:20 UTC »

I wasn't interested in before, and this guy explains why better than I could:

John Garth, author of the biography Tolkien and the Great War, said he felt the estate’s response to the film was “sensible”.

“Biopics typically take considerable licence with the facts, and this one is no exception. Endorsement by the Tolkien family would lend credibility to any divergences and distortions. That would be a disservice to history,” he said. “As a biographer, I expect I’ll be busy correcting new misconceptions arising from the movie. I hope that anyone who enjoys the film and is interested in Tolkien’s formative years will pick up a reliable biography.”