The Weinstein Company (formerly basically Miramax before their falling out with Disney) and Warner Bros. Pictures announced they will join forces to distribute the first all-CGI-animated movie in the long and phenomenally successful history of the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" franchise, the fourth in the series. The announcement was made by Jeff Robinov, President of Production, Warner Bros. Pictures, and Harvey Weinstein of The Weinstein Company. The film will be released early in 2007.
The movie will be directed by Kevin Munroe from his own screenplay, developed in consultation with Turtles co-creator Peter Laird. The film will be produced by Thomas K. Gray and Galen Walker. The executive producers are Francis Kao, Peter Laird, Gary Richardson and Frederick U. Fierst. Worldwide merchandising rights for the movie will be exclusively represented by 4Kids Entertainment, Inc.
The two studios acquired the worldwide movie distribution rights from Imagi Animation Studios, who had obtained the production and distribution rights from the Mirage Group, which owns, nurtures and manages the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" property. The new CG-animated, PG-rated movie will derive its tone from the original comic-book series and will be slightly grittier than the previous live-action pictures. The animation will be created in Imagi's state-of-the art facility in Hong Kong.
The "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" motion picture history began in the early 1990s, with three live-action films that grossed a cumulative total of more than $256 million domestically, adding to the entertainment phenomenon that spawned games, toys, costumes and a virtual Turtles industry. In 2003 the Turtles returned to television after a five-year hiatus, now appearing on Cartoon Network and 4Kids TV on Fox in the United States and on major TV channels around the world. Additionally, the entertainment re-launch of the "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" has generated hundreds of millions of dollars of worldwide retail sales of new licensed products, including an entirely new range of toys from longtime licensee Playmates Toys.
"We are very happy to have obtained the rights to this new 'Ninja Turtles' movie," said Robinov. "We think that a new generation of kids will love discovering the Turtles, especially supported by the enthusiasm of fans of the original movies, comic books and TV shows."
"Reintroducing the 'Ninja Turtles' in an animated movie will enable the filmmakers to fully realize the adventure and humor of the property," said Weinstein. "We believe that there is a global audience for the Turtles and we're thrilled to be bringing them to their fans, old and new."
Imagi USA's President and CEO, Tom Gray, said, "The Weinstein Company and Warner Bros. Pictures are ideal partners in this venture, and I am extremely pleased to be working with them. Their marketing and distribution expertise will bring the Turtles to a whole new generation of fans."Kevin Munroe has been quoted as saying he will regard the earlier three movies as a kind of vague history, much in the way the forthcoming Superman Returns (Superman 5) will regard the first two installments of that series as a loose history.
See the official Imagi site for "TMNT : Immortal" here.
Just for fun, to see this site's former informational page about TMNT 4, click here.
Also, if you're really bored, you
can check out my fan screenplay for "Ninja Turtles,"
a potentially R-rated sequel to the original three TMNT movies
here.