"Universal Pictures has ended plans to turn the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical In The Heights into a feature with director Kenny Ortega. I'm told that the studio made a hard decision to drop the project. Expectation is that creator Lin-Manuel Miranda can set up the musical elsewhere. The studio backed out because the film's budget was $37 million, but the original expectation that big Latino names would in small roles didn't pan out.
That made it a high price tag for a film built on the draw of Miranda, playing a bodega owner in Washington Heights who inherits his late grandmother's lottery winnings and plans to close his store and retire on the beach in the Dominican Republic. In the three day span, he realizes that the neighbors on the block are his true family, which makes the exit decision a hard one. Universal acquired the rights in late 2008 with the show's book writer, Quiara Alegria Hudes, writing the script..."
Tonya Pinkins: Then we had a "Lot's Wife" last June that was my personal favorite. I'm still trying to get them to let me sing it at some performance where we get to sing an excerpt that's gone.
Tony Kushner: You can sing it at my funeral.
After the dead silence behind the scenes regarding the film, and Universal moving forward with Les Miz, and possibly Gypsy, I saw this coming a mile away.
No big movie studio is going to put 3 different musicals into production at the same time. But, I must say for a movie musical $37 million is pretty cheap. Sweeney was $50 mil, Hairspray was $75 mil, and Rock of Ages will be the same. Updated On: 3/28/11 at 06:20 PM
Why is anyone surprised? It was never going to happen, was never close to happening, and let me tell you they do NOT pull out at a 37 million dollar budget, which these days is quite reasonable for any kind of major studio film. It was all BS at every step of the way.
Not at all. The talks were very good. Everyone is supportive of the material. But a film of IN THE HEIGHTS needed security before it would happen (like any movie musical does), and that security is NAMES.
You gotta wonder who said 'no.' I'm sure EVERY actor that is or could pass as hispanic is on their shortlist. We've all named the names before so no need to do it again.
"The Spectacle has, indeed, an emotional attraction of its own, but, of all the parts, it is the least artistic, and connected least with the art of poetry. For the power of Tragedy, we may be sure, is felt even apart from representation and actors. Besides, the production of spectacular effects depends more on the art of the stage machinist than on that of the poet."
--Aristotle
So, if they end up getting picked up elsewhere(which I hope they do), how far back will that push them back? Can they just pick up where they left off?
EDIT: Variety even said the casting for some parts was going to be decided by the end of the week.
Updated On: 3/28/11 at 10:23 PM
i really hope another studio picks this up, or that they do it as an independent film. i love this story and show and believe it deserves to be seen by the masses!
the best thing about ITH is the music. the story's kind of a snore and not so original. if they could find a popular medium for the music and dance part, that would be more interesting and unique than another movie musical that doesn't translate to the big screen. especially if the casting isn't going to be precise and represent REAL people in the barrio. the original cast on broadway was the lightest washington heights I'VE ever seen. even the black guy looked puerto rican.
"Don't f*** a baby. I'll get rid of your AIDS. If you f*** this frog."
"People have their opinions and that doesn't mean that their opinions are wrong or right. I just take it with a grain of salt because opinions are like as*holes, everyone has one".
-Felicia Finley-
bumping this up, because I heard Seth Rudestky claim that there is talk and perhaps movement to get the film version of In The Heights made after all - but no details....