Showing posts with label harriet mcdougal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label harriet mcdougal. Show all posts

Thursday, 20 April 2017

WHEEL OF TIME TV series picked up by Sony

Sony Television Pictures have confirmed that they are the company who purchased the Wheel of Time TV rights last year and are now actively developing the project for television.


The saga of the Wheel of Time TV rights is long and complex. Suffice to say, a company named Red Eagle Productions attempted to get a film or TV show of The Wheel of Time made for over a decade before their option was due to expire in early 2015. To keep the rights, they self-funded a brief TV pilot based on the prologue to The Eye of the World, the first book in the series, resulting in a legal tussle with the Robert Jordan Estate. Last year we were told this tussle had been resolved and the TV project was moving forwards with an unspecified production partner, now revealed to be Sony.

So far no TV network has picked up the series, but there will likely be keen interest from a number of sources. HBO, I am informed, are not remotely in the running, preferring to develop series of this magnitude in-house and are also not interested in developing internal competition to Game of Thrones and its rumoured, early-in-gestation spin-off series.

The network most likely to show the series is AMC. They have been developing an enviable portfolio of genre programming, spearheaded by the ratings-destroying The Walking Dead, and have previously worked with Sony Television on Preacher, Better Call Saul and, of course, Breaking Bad. They are also rumoured to be the frontrunners to air the Dark Tower TV series (a prequel spin-off from the forthcoming Idris Elba movie), also in development with Sony. The main concern over AMC being involved is that they are infamously frugal, with even the massively popular Walking Dead made on a relative shoestring budget (for its scale) of about $3.2 million per episode. The Wheel of Time would comfortably require $5 million per episode at the start and a lot more later on, which AMC would seem less likely to stump up for. However, AMC likely want their own Game of Thrones-challenging fantasy show and would know that this would come with a much higher price tag.

Starz are also likely a strong candidate. They are more generous with the pursestrings and have likewise worked with Sony Television on their breakout success, Outlander. Showtime are also possible, as Sony has worked with them on Masters of Sex and The Tudors, but are perhaps less likely to stump up the large budget required.

An intriguing possibility is FX. FX and Sony previously worked together on The Shield, Rescue Me and Justified. FX is probably underrated in the TV stakes, but their portfolio of shows is far more impressive than might be first thought: in addition to the above, FX have also produced Sons of Anarchy, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Archer, American Horror Story, Legion, Atlanta, The Americans and Fargo (the latter two both strongly claiming the title of Best Show on TV). FX also showed Red Eagle's self-funded pilot back in 2015. Although that was a self-funded advert with no creative input from FX, FX did pick up a lot of queries about the project and obviously would be aware of the ratings and other feedback.

More tantalising would be a collaboration with an online streaming service. Sony have worked with Amazon on Mad Dogs and The Last Tycoon and with Netflix on The Get Down. Both Amazon and Netflix would likely loosen the pursestrings for The Wheel of Time (Netflix is spending $7 million per episode on Altered Carbon, and that novel is all but obscure compared to WoT) and Sony are likely interested in exploring the streaming space further.

Sony have confirmed that they have already hired the writer and showrunner for the series. Rafe Judkins entered the Hollywood sphere in 2005 as a contestant on Survivor before becoming a writer. He has since worked on The 4400Chuck, My Own Worst Enemy, Hemlock Grove and Agents of SHIELD. Judkins frequently collaborates with screenwriter Lauren LeFranc, so it may be possible she will also write for the show.

The next step will be finding a network partner and beginning the process of developing scripts and casting. I suspect it will be 2019, at the earliest, before we see The Wheel of Time on TV. But although it will be a while before we see Rand, Loial and Nynaeve's Braid on TV, at least we now have a beginning.



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Wednesday, 4 January 2017

Rumourmill: Amazon developing the WHEEL OF TIME TV show?

Back in April 2016, the Robert Jordan Estate (aka the Bandersnatch Group) confirmed that a Wheel of Time TV series was in development with a major studio and that this would be subsequently confirmed by the studio. However, since then there has been radio silence on the subject, save a single comment that the project was still going on and that announcements should still be forthcoming.



A comment on Wheeloftime.tv and Geeklyinc.com has suggested that Amazon's TV division is the studio that has picked up the rights and is currently developing the project. This is purely hearsay and rumour so should be taken with a pinch of salt, but it does have a lot of logic to it and Amazon had emerged as (potentially alongside AMC) already the most likely home for the Wheel of Time TV series anyway.
"I have a friend who works for Amazon, and he tells me they were heavily involved in negotiations for the rights to Wheel of Time. Jeff Bezos loved the books and felt that wot would be great for their platform."

Based on other information from people involved (if more at the periphery), it sounds like HBO is not involved at all. This makes sense because HBO typically does not pursue multiple series in the same genre simultaneously. Game of Thrones is their current epic fantasy show and they are considering a spin-off as its thematic follow-up. So it is unlikely that they will look at another epic fantasy TV show in the near future anyway.

In addition, the TV rights to Wheel of Time were sold for "a eight-figure sum", so a minimum of $10 million. This is extremely high, much higher (I believe) than the figure that Game of Thrones went for, and there's not too many companies that would be capable or willing of paying that much. This pretty much rules out any of the standard American TV networks or cheaper cable stations, such as ABC, NBC, CBS or the CW. SyFy is also unlikely: although they can shell out quite large sums on show they generally only do that for one show at a time, and that the moment their big tentpole show is The Expanse.

That really only leaves two possibilities: one of the other big cable networks, such as AMC, Starz or Showtime, or a big streaming platform like Amazon or Netflix. Starz and Showtime might be unwilling to spend that much on a show and Netflix are pretty hot on announcing deals as soon as they are done, which makes it less likely it's them. Although Netflix are prepared to spend big money on certain shows (like Sense8 and House of Cards) they are also quite sensible in keeping a lot of their other projects at a fairly low budget, and it's questionable if they would spend that amount of money on just the rights. But they remain an outside possibility.


AMC, buoyed by the recent success of The Walking Dead and Preacher, had strong potential because they would probably quite like an epic fantasy project which can take the fight straight to HBO. They also have a proven track record with Sony TV, which produced Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul for them, and we know for a fact that Sony were talking to Red Eagle about the project a year or so before the rights reverted (or should have done) to the Jordan Estate. This has always strengthened this argument. Fans were also hopeful for this deal because AMC give their shows 16-episode seasons, which is really the bare minimum Wheel of Time would need to get a decent amount of the story done in a reasonable timeframe (say 6-8 seasons). However, there were also concerns that AMC tend to be quite tight with their budgets (The Walking Dead's budget is $3.5 million per episode, which is pretty stingy given its monster ratings; Game of Thrones's seventh season will have a budget close to $14 million per episode, in comparison).

Amazon emerged as the front-runner for several reasons. First, they are looking for a TV drama project to really make people sit up and take notice. Despite critical acclaim, The Man in the High Castle hasn't quite done that for them. The Grand Tour has been successful but they want a drama show that can compete with GoT, Westworld, Stranger Things and The Walking Dead in terms of buzz, watercooler discussion and driving subscriptions. Second, Amazon have been selling Wheel of Time novels worldwide since 1998 and are well aware of the almost-100 million copies the book has sold, the massive pre-orders and buzz around the series whilst it was ongoing. They also have access to detailed demographic information on the people who bought the books and opportunities for cross-marketing. Based on the boom in sales of other franchises, Amazon could make back a chunk of budget just by the explosion in book sales a high-profile TV series would generate.

In addition, Amazon held a creative reorganisation of their TV division in 2016 that took up a bunch of the year and involved, amongst other things, Frank Spotnitz leaving The Man in the High Castle as a producer and a radio silence descending on their new project announcements for several months. This would explain why we initially got news on the TV show and then abruptly nothing since.

Of course, the Wheel of Time TV project may still end up somewhere else or dying in development hell and this rumour remains just that, but it is credible. Hopefully we will know more soon.

Tuesday, 15 November 2016

What news on the WHEEL OF TIME TV series?

Back in April, the Robert Jordan Estate (aka the Bandersnatch Group) confirmed that the TV and films rights issues related to the Wheel of Time novels had been resolved and a studio had optioned the rights, with an announcement anticipated from the studio directly shortly thereafter.



Seven months later, we still haven't received any confirmation of the studio involved or any other information. This is unusual given the significance of the deal. With between 90 and 100 million copies sold, The Wheel of Time is easily the biggest-selling epic fantasy novel series since Lord of the Rings*, giving it a much bigger audience, name value and cachet than the likes of Brandon Sanderson, Patrick Rothfuss, Peter Brett's Demon Cycle or other works of fantasy that have been optioned, if not indeed actually put into production (or in the case of Shannara, already filming a second season).

There are several likely reasons for this. There may have been a last-minute legal snarl-up which has put everything on hold. Given the contentious state of the rights, with the Jordan Estate in dispute with Red Eagle Productions (who optioned the screen rights in 2004 on an eleven-year basis), that is quite possible. It's also possible that the studio which has bought the rights has decided to hold back and make a much more substantial, "done deal" announcement with a showrunner confirmation as well. If the option is tentative, that may prevent another studio from trying to outbid them (which after an option is sold is unusual, but not impossible given the brand value of this particular series).

Here's what we know so far:
  • A "major studio" has bought the rights.
  • They are to make a big announcement at some undetermined point in the future.
  • The Estate's legal contentions with Red Eagle have now been satisfactorily resolved, allowing the project to go ahead.
  • This will be a TV series. The previously-mooted movie deal is dead in the water.
  • Universal previously held the film rights but let them lapse.
  • Sony Television held talks with Harriet McDougal (Robert Jordan's widow and chief executor of the Estate) and Red Eagle in 2014 about a possible TV project but it is not known if they are involved in this new deal.

Here's the text of the original announcement from 28 April 2016 in full:
The following is a press statement that has been approved by the studio involved in contract negotiations:

Update: Wanted to share with you exciting news about The Wheel of Time. Legal issues have been resolved. The Wheel of Time will become a cutting edge TV series! I couldn’t be more pleased. Look for the official announcement coming soon from a major studio —Harriet 


And the last official word from the Jordan Estate, made on 9 September:
Sorry, folks, we would love to be able to tell you more about the announcement Harriet made in April, but according to the terms of the contract, we can't say anything more about it. We assume the next statement will come from the studio. We share your frustration.

Here's what is heavily rumoured but not confirmed:
  • The deal is allegedly worth "eight figures" (so therefore $10 million minimum).
  • Some well-known Wheel of Time fans may be involved in an advisory capacity on the project.
  • HBO is not involved in the project whatsoever, already having their epic fantasy TV show (Game of Thrones) and recently confirming that they have started speculative, early work on a spin-off from that show as their next fantasy project.
  • Given that the book rights have been purchased, we can assume the TV show will directly adapt the novels and will not be a new story set in the same world, or a prequel or sequel to the books. 
  • Given the money apparently involved, this will be a live-action project (an animated series would involve far smaller figures).
  • Given the money involved, this would likely either be a cable or streaming (Netflix/Amazon) show. A mainstream network is unlikely to have spent so much money on an option alone.


I have previously speculated on how a Wheel of Time TV series should be adapted and undertaken. The current big debate in the fandom over the TV project is what studio is on board. I think the following options are possible:
  • Sony Television previously held discussions with the Estate and Red Eagle. Having deep pockets and a string of recent hit shows (Breaking Bad, Better Call Saul, The Blacklist), this makes them a stronger contender for the role. They are also working on The Dark Tower TV series, a spin-off from the new film, which may have given them a taste for fantasy.
  • AMC are currently on a roll with shows like The Walking Dead and Preacher. A Wheel of Time TV show would allow them to go head-to-head with Game of Thrones in the fantasy stakes. If Sony are developing the project, AMC (whom they previously partnered with on Breaking Bad) are the most likely contender to air the show.
  • Starz have some big-hitting genre shows at the moment, such as Outlander and the forthcoming American Gods. Starz likewise are looking at big fantasy projects and may be the second-most-likely home after AMC on cable.
  • Netflix have a lot of original content and are going all-in on it, producing vastly more original content in the next couple of years. A full-scale epic fantasy series, their own Game of Thrones, has to be an attractive prospect. They certainly have the funds to do it and a flexible release schedule, not to mention automatic worldwide distribution.
  • Amazon have some very solid original content (such as the excellent Man in the High Castle), but arguably lack a killer app, a must-see show which gets people to sign up in droves. Wheel of Time could provide that. They also have access to sales figures of the Wheel of Time novels since 1998 and a much greater pre-built awareness of the franchise. I would rank Amazon as a more likely streaming possibility than Netflix.
I would comfortably rule out the following options:
  • HBO already have Game of Thrones and Westworld as their mega-budget shows, and they are interested in a Game of Thrones spin-off show as their next fantasy project. According to rumour, HBO are highly unlikely to be interested in Wheel of Time.
  • SyFy has spent big bucks recently developing The Expanse, The Magicians, Dark Matter and Killjoys. It is unlikely they have the resources to also buy and develop Wheel of Time.
  • The CW has some additional critical kudos recently with The 100, but they have severe budget restrictions which makes them highly unlikely to be able to afford Wheel of Time, at all.

Hopefully, we won't have to wait too much longer until we can get some reliable information on what's going on.



* If you assume that Harry Potter isn't epic fantasy, as some do. Also, A Song of Ice and Fire has sold c. 70 million copies and is bearing down on Wheel of Time like a freight train, and already has far more sales-per-book (and thus overall readers) than WoT.

Friday, 29 April 2016

The Wheel of Television: Parts 3 and 4

Following the news that a Wheel of Time TV series is now officially in development with a major studio, here are the third and fourth parts of my blog series The Wheel of Television: Bringing The Wheel of Time to the Screen. It's worth checking the original posts for the interesting commentary from readers: Part 3 and Part 4.


Part 3: Shaping the Story
Originally published: 25 March 2012

 In the first two parts of this article series, I argued that the current plans by Red Eagle Entertainment and Universal to turn The Wheel of Time into a series of movies were impractical and unrealistic, and that adapting the books into an ongoing television series was more logical. This especially makes more sense in the wake of the success of fantasy TV projects such as Sky's Discworld TV movies and of course HBO's Game of Thrones. I concluded that getting the series made by one of the three big remaining cable channels (Starz, AMC or Showtime) was essential to give the project the right combination of high production values and a decent amount of time to adapt the complex storyline.



Story into Seasons
In the second article I suggested that it would be possible to adapt The Eye of the World and The Great Hunt (the first two books in the series) into one 12-episode television season. On paid cable, lacking advertisement breaks, this mean just under six hours to adapt each book to the screen (or three times as much time as a possible film adaptation). Whilst tight, this would be doable without too many storylines or characters cut. Later seasons could be more problematic (particularly adapting the 1,900 pages of the fifth and sixth books, The Fires of Heaven and Lord of Chaos, into just twelve hours) though the hope is that the series would be such a success that later seasons could expand to maybe 16 episodes each (as AMC has recently done with the third season of The Walking Dead).

At the same time, the later books in the series - particularly the eighth through eleventh - have some pacing problems and issues that the TV adaptation would do well to avoid by compressing the more stationary parts of the story into a shorter space of time, and perhaps moving things around.


Overall, I envisage the following structure as being potentially successful (note: SPOILERS for people who have not read the books):

Season 1: The Eye of the World and The Great Hunt
This season introduces the principal storylines and characters. Thematically it is Rand's story of self-discovery as he uncovers the truth of his birth and his destiny and initially tries to reject it. Season finale: the battle between Rand and Ba'alzamon at Falme and the destruction of the Seanchan expeditionary force by the Heroes of the Horn of Valere.

Season 2: The Dragon Reborn and The Shadow Rising
This season sees Rand investigate the truth of his background and what he is fated to do. He decides to seize the reigns and take control of his own destiny and recruit his own allies. Season finale: Rand uniting the Aiel clans at Alcair Dal.

Season 3: The Fires of Heaven and Lord of Chaos
The turning-point of the series as Rand (and, to a lesser extent, his friends) become famous and major players in the affairs of governments as the continent falls into warfare and chaos. Season finale: the Battle of Dumai's Wells, naturally.

Season 4: A Crown of Swords, The Path of Daggers and Winter's Heart
Rand consolidates his gains and alliances, confronts the resurgent Seanchan and, ultimately, challenges the Dark Ones taint on saidin. Season finale: the Cleansing.

Season 5: Crossroads of Twilight, Knife of Dreams and The Gathering Storm
Rand's journey into the heart of darkness and, ultimately, out of the other side. Season finale: Rand's epiphany atop Dragonmount and Egwene reunifying the Aes Sedai in the face of the Seanchan threat.

Season 6: Towers of Midnight and A Memory of Light
Rand finally confronts the Dark One. Season/series finale: the Last Battle.


Of course, if the first two or three seasons are successful it might be possible to extend the series to seven seasons and cover two books per season, which would be easier in many ways. However, the slowing of the pace in the latter books as the story expands to cover ever more storylines and minor characters and the moving away of the focus from Rand and the other core characters is something that I feel on TV should be avoided. Post-Dumai's Wells, I also feel the story should start accelerating and moving decisively towards the ending.

With this structure, it should be possible to get the entire story of The Wheel of Time done in six years and 70-80 episodes. The majority of storylines and characters from the books would appear on-screen and the adaptation would be relatively faithful, and certainly far moreso than in a series of film adaptations.

Next time: the challenges of showing the One Power, Trollocs, Ogier and massive armies on a TV budget.


Part 4: Practicalities
First published: 2 June 2013

In the first three parts of this article series, I argued that the current plans by Red Eagle Entertainment and Universal to turn The Wheel of Time into a series of movies were impractical and unrealistic, and that adapting the books into an ongoing television series was more feasible. This especially makes more sense in the wake of the success of fantasy TV projects such as Sky's Discworld TV movies, the BBC's recently-concluded Merlin and of course HBO's Game of Thrones. I concluded that getting the series made by one of the three big remaining cable channels (Starz, AMC or Showtime) was essential to give the project the right combination of high production values and a decent amount of time to adapt the complex storyline before going on to address the issue of how you structure the series from a top-down approach. In this part I address several major technical and practical issues standing in the way of adapting the books to television.




Sets and Locations
If there is one major cost saving that TV shows have over movies, it's sets. A film with a budget in the tens of millions of dollars can afford to construct a specific set for each and every scene, and use a different location in every other shot. TV shows spread their costs more widely by the use of regular, recurring sets. Think of the bridge of the Enterprise in Star Trek, the throne room in Game of Thrones or the school library in Buffy the Vampire Slayer. You can spend a fair bit of money on an impressive set and then spread that cost over dozens of episodes.

With Wheel of Time, there is one rather huge problem: there is no single standing set that could be constructed and re-used a lot in the first season (if you recall, in the hypothetical plan we are discussing the first season would adapt the first two books, The Eye of the World and The Great Hunt). The first two books are constantly on the move, taking the characters from the Two Rivers to Baerlon to Shadar Logoth to Whitebridge to Caemlyn to Shienar, and thence to Tar Valon, Cairhien and Falme. Later in the series we would get standing sets and regularly-appearing locations, such as the Royal Palace in Caemlyn and the White Tower in Tar Valon (which would debut in the first season, but would not be revisited until later), but it's a while before such places recur regularly.

This is fairly headache-inducing, although compensated for to some extent by how much of the first two books takes place outdoors. This brings its own headaches in terms of the expense and practical issues of location filming (dealing with the weather and so on), but at least is better than having to build dozens and dozens of different sets and then discard them. A surprising number of locations in the first two books are in fact pubs of different description (the Winespring Inn in Emond's Field, the Queen's Blessing, the inn in Cairhien that Rand, Hurin and Loial stay in etc). A standing 'pub set' could be built, possibly in modules, with walls and partitions that can be switched around. Combined with redressing and the use of different camera angles, this can turn one set into several different locations. The same principal can be applied to shops, houses and even palaces (the Royal Palace of Caemlyn could pull double-duty as Fal Dara, for example, if you dropped in a few partitions and redressed things).

For location filming, Wheel of Time does have some problems with how much of it is set in large cities (especially later on, when scenes unfold near-simultaneously in Caemlyn, Cairhien and Ebou Dar). Caemlyn, for example, would likely have to be a real medieval-looking city, possibly in Europe, just as both Mdina in Malta and Dubrovnik in Croatia have stood in for King's Landing on Game of Thrones. Given the weird and otherwordly nature of Shadar Logoth, on the other hand, it might be possible to get away with realising that city through small set-pieces and CGI backdrops (CGI is of course a powerful and useful tool but we are not at the stage yet where full CGI sets and locations are believable or affordable on such a scale).

As for where the series should be filmed, there are quite a few options. Eastern Europe is both affordable and would have the right look for most of the main continent. The Republic of Ireland (probably not Northern Ireland, since a lot of the more interesting locations have already been used by GoT) would also be an attractive option. Morocco or the American West (heavily CGI-enhanced) could also be viable options for the Aiel Waste.

Costumes
Costuming is probably the least-challenging aspect of the production, thanks to both Robert Jordan's clear descriptions in the books and the availability of costumes and costumer designers familiar with the appropriate period.

"Awesome. I want 100,000 of them for the next shot."

Prosthetics
Wheel of Time features a large number of non-human creatures, including the friendly Ogier and the hostile Shadowspawn: Trollocs, Myrddraal, Draghkar and so on. Some of these creatures appear infrequently enough that they can be rendered in CGI: the Green Man immediately comes to mind. Draghkar and Darkhounds also appear infrequently enough that this should be viable. Trollocs and Ogier are more difficult to achieve. Loial is a fairly major character with a lot of screentime. Rendering him in CGI would require a Gollum-level performance and technology to achieve satisfactorily, neither of which may be available on a TV budget and time schedule. On the other hand, prosthetics/animatronics large enough to depict the Ogier as described in the books may be stiff and unconvincing. This is something that would require screentesting to find the best solution.

It should be possible to depict Trollocs by just using large extras with prosthetics. A mix-and-match of prosthetics could be made available to blend the different animal parts together to make each Trolloc unique (or as unique as possible), rather like how the creatures themselves are created in the books. CGI would be used for scenes with large numbers of Trollocs (which is most of them) to render more of them in the background.

"More lightning bolts!"
"Not too many, they cost $10,000 a time!"

The One Power
The One Power is one of the most detailed magic systems ever created, with a lot of complex rules on how it works, how it's detected and what the different types of the Power can do. Depicting the One Power on screen risks looking cheesy - people sticking their hands out and firebolts roaring off - and depicting people glowing when they embrace the Source could be confusing (as only those able to use the Power can sense it when others are using it).

The best way to handle this is as it is in the books, with 'our' characters initially unable to see or sense the Power itself, only its effects (i.e. someone pointing and the ground exploding or mist appearing). As our core characters become more acquainted with the Power, then we can start to see POV shots from them, showing the glow of the Power (I'm thinking a subtle haloing effect rather than people blazing with the light of a thousand suns). We'll only see this if we have a POV character in the scene who can sense the Power, otherwise they'll just see the effects.

A related issue is how to handle the issue of Aes Sedai ageing. As book-readers know, Aes Sedai gain an 'ageless' appearance as they get older, so that it becomes impossible to tell whether a woman is in her 20s or 40s (and that appearance may be only a reflection of their true age, as Aes Sedai can live for several centuries). Such an effect would be prohibitively expensive to achieve with CGI - 'de-aging' Moiraine alone in her every appearance in the series would cost a fortune, not to mention the problem being exasperated when a dozen Aes Sedai appear in the same scene - so this would have to be a practical make-up effect. If unconvincing or too odd-looking, this may have to be an element from the books that is dropped or perhaps changed to something less notable.

There are obviously a lot more complexities and practicalities that would have to be addressed to make these books into a TV show, but these were a few thoughts on how you'd achieve some basic questions.

This may be the last entry in this blog series, though I may do one more focused on how you'd write and structure the first episode, to put some of these ideas into practice.

Thursday, 28 April 2016

WHEEL OF TIME TV series officially in development

The Robert Jordan Estate has confirmed that a Wheel of Time television series is in development with a major studio.



A more detailed announcement is to follow, but the Jordan Estate has confirmed that protracted legal disputes between themselves and Red Eagle Entertainment, who previously held the TV and film rights, have been resolved, clearing the way for a television series.

The timeline of previous events is as follows:

  • 1990: Publication of the first Wheel of Time novel, The Eye of the World, by Robert Jordan.
  • 2000: NBC options the Wheel of Time as a network TV show, but drops the option after the people developing the series depart the company.
  • Early 2000s: A Japanese anime company proposes an edited version of the story which adapts only the first three books into an animated series and concludes the story there. Robert Jordan declines.
  • 2004: Robert Jordan sells the film, TV, comic book and video game rights to Red Eagle Entertainment, a rights-holding company, for $600,000.
  • 2007: Robert Jordan passes away from cardiac amyloidosis. Brandon Sanderson agrees to complete the novel series, working from Robert Jordan's notes.
  • 2008: Universal options the movie rights to The Wheel of Time from Red Eagle for "a seven-figure sum" and a film script for The Eye of the World is developed.
  • 2013: The final Wheel of Time novel, A Memory of Light, is published. Around this time Universal drops its film option.
  • 2014: Sony Television develops an interest in developing a television series based on The Wheel of Time. No option is purchased, but they hold meetings with Red Eagle and with the Robert Jordan Estate.
  • January 2015: The media rights are due to revert to the Robert Jordan Estate (aka the Bandersnatch Group). Red Eagle self-produce a 22-minute test film starring Billy Zane as Ishamael and air it as a paid-for infomercial on FX, claiming this allows them to retain the TV rights. The Jordan Estate disagrees and requests legal clarification of the situation. Red Eagle count-sues for defamation.
  • August 2015: Red Eagle withdraws its counter-suit.

At the time Red Eagle withdrew its suit, there was speculation that this was part of a legal manoeuvre which would allow Red Eagle to retain a production credit on the project as it went forward. The full details should be made clearer in the coming days and weeks.


The question now is who has won the rights and where will the show end up being broadcast? I addressed this in my "Wheel of Television" blog series a few years ago (I may reprint and update in the coming weeks in light of this news), but we know that Sony were very interested in the project before the legal storm erupted. Assuming they retain that interest, they have to be the firm favourites to have won the rights. It is very likely that one of the major US cable channels would also be in the running, most likely AMC as they have the financial firepower, the timespan allotment (the 16-episode seasons they are giving - unnecessarily in some cases - to The Walking Dead would be pretty essential for The Wheel of Time), the genre savviness and the pre-existing Sony relationship (from Breaking Bad). Starz, Showtime and FX would also be other potential candidates to be interested. HBO is pretty much out of the running due to their refusal to double-dip in the same genre at the same time, or even within a few years of their previous genre show ending. However, we cannot rule out the possibility that Amazon or Netflix has swooped in on the project as well.

The Wheel of Time spans 14 novels, a prequel, two companion volumes and a computer game. Worldwide sales of the series are approximately 90 million, with over 56 million sales in the United States alone and another 5 million sales in the United Kingdom. It is the biggest-selling work of epic fantasy series* since The Lord of the Rings, dwarfing the sales of all other works in its subgenre, including Shannara (which has just had a second season of its TV adaptation on MTV greenlit) and The Kingkiller Chronicle (which has both a film and TV series in development at Lionsgate). Only A Song of Ice and Fire (the book series that Game of Thrones is based on) is in any danger of overtaking Wheel of Time in sales any time soon. In terms of unoptioned fantasy series, it was by far the highest-profile.

More news as it comes in.

* If you don't count Harry Potter as epic fantasy, which some people do, but that's a separate argument.

Saturday, 10 October 2015

A History of Epic Fantasy - Part 17

In 1984 James Oliver Rigney, Jr. started writing what he believed was going to be the first volume of a trilogy. His publisher, Tom Doherty, took one look at the outline and suggested that they sign a contract for a six-volume series instead. Twenty-nine years later, six years after the author's death, the fourteenth and final volume in that saga was published. In the meantime the series knotched up almost 90 million sales, seven #1 New York Times bestsellers and was the first fantasy series to really capitalise on the advent of the internet and discussion boards. This is a series that changed fantasy irrevocably. This is the story of The Wheel of Time.


The Wheel of Time totals fourteen novels (plus a prequel novel, plus two companion guidebooks), 11,916 pages in paperback and 4,410,036 words. The audio book version of the series is 461 hours and 25 minutes long. 22 years, 11 months and 24 days elapsed between the first and last volumes of the series being published. The series has sold over 56 million copies in North America alone, with a conservatively estimated 90 million sales worldwide.

James Oliver Rigney, Jr. was born on 17 October 1948 in Charleston, South Carolina. At the age of 20 he was drafted and sent to fight in Vietnam as a soldier and helicopter gunner. He served two terms of duty and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Bronze Star and two Vietnamese Gallantry Crosses. His colleagues nicknamed him "Iceman" for his cool and collected demeanour under fire, and his ability to attend to vital tasks (such as eating and sleeping) even with dead bodies around. Returning home to the USA, Rigney had to deal with the stress of re-adapting to civilian life, which he later said he accomplished by metaphorically "killing" the soldier he'd had to become on the battlefield.

He studied at the Citadel, the military college of South Carolina, and got a degree in physics, graduating in 1974. He worked for the United States Navy as a nuclear engineer, serving at the Charleston naval shipyard. During a routine assignment, he suffered a serious fall and developed a life-threatening blood clot. Although he survived and recovered, he had to use a cane to walk. Deciding that life was too short to not pursue his dream of being an author, he switched careers to writing and began penning articles for local newspapers and magazines.

James Oliver Rigney, Jr. whilst serving with the 68th Assault Helicopter Company in Vietnam, 1969-70.

In 1977 he tried to sell his first book, a stand-alone fantasy novel called Warriors of the Altaii. Renowned genre editor Jim Baen considered the novel but left it unpublished when he switched publishing houses. Rigney vented his frustrations to a local bookshop owner, who relayed the story to Harriet McDougal, a former editor who'd worked with Jim Baen and Tom Doherty and set up her own imprint, Popham Press. McDougal and Rigney met and she read Warriors of the Altaii. She rejected it, but asked him for something else. He submitted a historical bodice-ripper, called The Fallon Blood. This was published in 1980.

During the process of writing, editing and publicising the book, Rigney and Dougal began a relationship, marrying in March 1981. When it came time to put his name on the novel, Rigney hesitated. His experiences in Vietnam had left him with the idea of one day writing a definitive novel about the war. He decided he only wanted to put his real name on that book, and would use pen names for everything else. The first pen name he used was Reagan O'Neal, which was used on the cover of The Fallon Blood and two sequels, The Fallon Pride (1981) and The Fallon Legacy (1982). He also used another pen name, Jackson O'Reilly, for a stand-alone Western called Cheyenne Raiders (1982).

Whilst this was taking place, Tor Books had acquired the rights to publish new material about Robert E. Howard's famous hero, Conan the Barbarian. Wanting to capitalise on the imminent release of the Arnold Schwarzenegger movie for his new Tor Books imprint, Tom Doherty needed someone who could bash out a Conan novel very quickly. He turned to McDougal, who put him in contact in turn with Rigney. Rigney was faster even than Doherty expected, turning in Conan the Invincible and Conan the Defender in time for both to be published in 1982. Five further short novels in the series followed, eventually collected in two omnibuses. Working in a different genre, fantasy, Rigney decided he needed a new pen name. After playing around with new combinations of his initials (and taking no inspiration from Hemingway's For Whom the Bell Tolls, despite reports to the contrary), he came up with the name "Robert Jordan".



The Conan books had been quite successful for Tor, although the relative failure of the second film, Conan the Destroyer, in 1984 meant that they decided to wrap up the series whilst they were ahead. Impressed by Rigney's work rate, Tom Doherty asked what else he was working on.

Rigney had been a big fan of fantasy, including Howard and Tolkien, and had begun considering his own epic series in the late 1970s. He had gotten involved in roleplaying, serving as the Dungeon Master for his stepson Will's Dungeons and Dragons games. Through his wife Harriet he also saw how the rest of the field was developing, with Harriet editing both Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game and Glen Cook's The Black Company, both published to significant acclaim in 1984/85.

Rigney gave an outline of his proposed fantasy story to Tom Doherty. This outline was set in a world both in the distant future and distant past. It was the story a "chosen one", Rhys al'Thor, who has to defeat Sa'kahn, a being from another universe who had previously waged war on Earth through a transdimensional portal. Sa'kahn was abetted in his mission by the Forsaken, half-human, half-demon hybrids. The outline was fairly plot-dense, so when Doherty asked how many volumes the story would cover he was surprised when Jordan said three. Doherty, having a feeling this might go longer than initially thought, proposed they make a contract for six books instead.

Rigney began writing The Eye of the World in 1984. It took over four years to complete the novel. During this time he radically reconceptualised his original plan for the series. His primary hero, the Dragon Reborn, had originally been an older man, a war veteran and soldier when he was tapped on the shoulder by fate. This was changed so the Dragon Reborn was the veteran's son, and the former hero instead became Tam al'Thor. The main character's name was changed from Rhys to Rand. Realising he'd piled too much material on Rand's shoulders, Rigney split his story responsibilities between three other characters: Mat, Perrin and Dannil. Later still, he realised he'd then split the story too thinly and removed Dannil as one of the major characters, instead sending him off to be a minor character in the Two Rivers (hence Dannil became The Wheel of Time's Fatty Bolger, or Pete Best). The primary villain went from being a powerful (but not omnipotent) alien being to the primal force of evil in the universe. The main force of magic in the setting, simply called "Power", became the "One Power", divided into its male and female halves.

In a fresh outline that Rigney provided Doherty closer to finishing the first novel, many of these changes had now been made and a storyline closer to that of the finished books emerged.

The cover art (by Darrell K. Sweet) for the "preview booklet" of The Eye of the World, released in August 1989.

Oliver Rigney, writing as Robert Jordan, completed The Eye of the World in 1988. He sent the manuscript to Tom Doherty at Tor. Doherty got very excited, believing he had in his hands a fantasy novel that was a gamechanger. He ordered a print run of 40,000 copies - colossal for a debut novel - and sent an advance reading copy of the book to every single listed bookstore in the United States. He took out major advertisements, sought blurbs from top authors (Orson Scott Card, Piers Anthony and Anne McCaffrey, among others, obliged) and even had a pre-released booklet published, consisting of the first few chapters of the book. This was released in August 1989, followed by the novel itself in January 1990.

The lengthy gestation period for the book helped Rigney build up a head of steam on the following books. He already had some of the second volume in the series, The Great Hunt, finished when he delivered The Eye of the World, and finished the second book and was into the writing of the third volume, The Dragon Reborn, before The Eye of the World even came out. This allowed Tor to adopt an aggressive one-book-a-year release schedule. In fact, they did better than that and got six volumes out in less than five years.

It became apparent early on that six books was not going to be enough. The story had expanded in unforeseen circumstances, with the introduction of invaders from beyond the western ocean, and many more characters than first envisaged becoming important to the plot. Rigney had also become concerned about issues of style, consistency and background. He had numerous maps to keep track of the action and was keeping copious notes about his world, invented languages and cultures. With some reluctance, he hired an assistant (and later another one) to help with research and note-keeping. As this need for consistency grew, the writing speed began to drop off. Some health concerns raised by the stress of completing the seventh volume in less than eighteen months caused a rethink of the author's working practices. After the seventh volume, the series fell back to a book every two to two and a half years, which was more sustainable.

The more familiar (and iconic) cover art for The Eye of the World itself, released in January 1990.

The critical and popular reaction to the series was (mostly) highly positive. Sales started out strong and soon went through the roof, reaching the tens of millions within half a decade. Every book in the series from the eighth onwards hit the #1 spot on the New York Times bestseller list. Rigney found himself swamped at book signings across the United States and around the world. Fan mail grew and Rigney found himself particularly praised for his unusual worldbuilding and magic system, which allowed only women to use magic safely and as a result created a (somewhat) gender-reversed world where women mostly had more power and prestige than men. During one book signing Rigney was confronted by several fans convinced that he was a front for the real author, who was clearly a woman (he seemed to take this as a compliment).

Fans also took advantage of emerging technology. They gathered on early CompuServe and GEnie networks to talk about the books, changing to more familiar, modern forums as technology improved and the Internet came of age. Some of the biggest early forum for discussing science fiction and fantasy were based around The Wheel of Time, including Dragonmount and Wotmania. Fans met, talked about the books and characters, became friends and in some cases married and had children. Technology also allowed the fans to talk directly to the author: after some initial reluctance, Rigney began hosting a regular question-of-the-week feature for Tor Books and later established his own blog where he would post news and also chat to the fans about the books, music or life in general.

Success also brought with it the inevitable backlashes. The series enjoyed (generally) positive reviews up until around the seventh novel, but both fans and critics began to ponder how long the series was going to run on for. Rigney replied that he could now see the series running for ten books, but when the tenth novel, Crossroads of Twilight, was published in 2002 it was roundly criticised for featuring minimal character or plot development compared to the previous volumes in the series (and the eighth and ninth novels had not featured a lot of events either). Rigney's decision to expand an old short story into a full prequel novel, New Spring, slightly delaying the eleventh book in the series also attracted opprobrium from some commentators. The advent of fresher fantasy series like A Song of Ice and Fire (of which Rigney was a huge fan, giving A Game of Thrones a generous blurb in 1996 that George R.R. Martin has credited with boosting its sales) and The Malazan Book of the Fallen, with grittier characters and more focused storytelling, also started to make The Wheel of Time look like it was yesterday's news.

Robert Jordan in 2005.

Rigney responded with surprising style. Published in late 2005, the eleventh book in the series, Knife of Dreams, scythed down a huge number of subplots, redundant characters and secondary locations. The latter half of the novel was packed with incident, featuring dramatic rescues, reversals of fortune and huge battles. The life that had seemingly started draining out of the series returned and things seemed to be set for a dramatic and satisfying finale, which Rigney promised would follow in the twelfth and final novel in the series, which would be the last even if it was 2,000 pages long in hardcover and fans had to cart it out of the shops with wheelbarrows.

Just a few months later, Rigney announced that he was suffering from cardiac amyloidosis, a vanishingly rare blood condition that causes a thickening of the artery walls around the heart. His fans sprang into action, donating generously to the research hospital where he was being treated. Rigney confirmed that he would finish the final book no matter what, but as his condition worsened he had to acknowledge that this was less likely. He instead began writing notes, dictating tape after tape of outlines and information on how to bring the series to a conclusion. The treatment for his disease was devastating and debilitating, but whenever he had the strength to blog, send a message to fans or work on the outline for the final novel, he would do so. In his final messages, he castigated a rights-holding company, Red Eagle Entertainment, for failing to achieve anything with the Wheel of Time TV and film rights he had sold to them years earlier. But he also thanked his fans for their support.

James Oliver Rigney, Jr., known to the world as Robert Jordan, passed away on 16 September 2007. It was expected that there would be a lengthy period of grieving and mourning before any decisions were made about the future of The Wheel of Time, but that wasn't what the author had wanted. Before the year was out, Harriet McDougal had convinced up-and-coming fantasy author Brandon Sanderson to take on the Herculean task of finishing the series. Sanderson, a fan of the series since its beginning, was daunted but knew it was a task that he could do. Assessing the notes left behind, he realised that finishing the series in one more volume was not possible, so split the planned final volume into initially two and later three: The Gathering Storm (2009), Towers of Midnight (2010) and A Memory of Light (2013). The three books consisted of passages written by Jordan, along with material written by Sanderson but based on Jordan's notes.

Cover art by Michael Whelan, after Darrell K. Sweet sadly passed away before painting the final book in the series.

The three books were all well-received (despite some tricky timeline issues and hoops caused by the chronologically tricky split between the twelfth and thirteenth volumes) and Sanderson congratulated for achieving the impossible: finishing a work of immense popularity and success started by another author, and doing so well. The history of fantasy and science fiction is littered with "sequels by other hands", almost all of them unremittingly awful. Sanderson instead brought The Wheel of Time to a conclusion, not flawlessly, but with respect and skill.

It wasn't quite the end. In November 2015 The Wheel of Time Companion will be released, consisting of vast reams of Robert Jordan's notes that didn't make it into the series itself. And there are signs that a long-running legal dispute over the Wheel of Time TV and film rights is close to being resolved. With companies such as NBC, Universal and Sony having previously expressed an interest in the series and The Wheel of Time being easily the highest-profile and most successful fantasy book series not under some kind of development deal, it looks likely that the series will soon be heading to the screen as well.

So that was how The Wheel of Time was written, but what did it do? How did it change epic fantasy, and was it for the better or the worse?

Thursday, 13 August 2015

Red Eagle de-escalates WHEEL OF TIME legal battle

Red Eagle Entertainment has withdrawn its curious attempt to sue Wheel of Time editor Harriet McDougall (also the widow of the series author Robert Jordan) for "slander" after she criticised their decision to self-produce an infomercial to try to hold onto the film and television rights to the novels.



Way back in 2004, shortly before he was diagnosed with cardiac amyloidosis, Robert Jordan sold the film and television rights to The Wheel of Time to Red Eagle Entertainment for $600,000. There is some confusion over whether this was for the entire series (it seems rather low given the colossal popularity of the series at that time), or just for the first novel, The Eye of the World, by itself. In 2009, two years after Jordan's passing, Red Eagle signed a deal with Universal worth "seven figures", meaning that Red Eagle made a minimum of $400,000 on the deal. That option with Universal expired a couple of years later, after no film or TV project had gotten off the ground.

With Red Eagle having failed to get a project rolling, the TV and film rights would have reverted to the Robert Jordan Estate in February 2015. Red Eagle attempted forestall this by producing a near-zero-budget 25-minute infomercial based on the prologue to The Eye of the World, paying for it to be aired on FX. It appeared at least questionable if this fulfilled the terms of the deal and McDougall took legal steps to see what the position was, publicly declaring that the news came as a surprise to her. Red Eagle issued a legal threat of their own, stating that McDougall's comments were endangering negotiations with interested parties (specifically, Sony TV, the studio behind Breaking Bad, amongst others) that may have led to a Wheel of Time television series being made.

Red Eagle's decision to abandon this legal posturing a month ago was accompanied by confirmation that the Jordan Estate and Red Eagle were continuing to talk about the situation. It is possible that Red Eagle's move is a strategic one, de-escalating the situation in return for a slice of whatever film or TV deal is eventually made.

Full legal clarification of the situation needs to be made, but with the appetite for fantasy on TV never higher than right now and with The Wheel of Time inarguably the biggest name in the genre not attached to any development deal, it needs to be resolved quickly if the biggest epic fantasy series since Tolkien isn't to miss its best-ever shot at getting on the screen.

Friday, 13 February 2015

Red Eagle suing Robert Jordan's widow

Red Eagle Entertainment, producers of the widely-panned Wheel of Time "pilot" informercial, have decided to alienate the few remaining Wheel of Time fans who didn't despise them by suing Robert Jordan's widow for 'slander'. The text of their complaint in full:

Law360, San Diego (February 12, 2015, 8:08 PM ET) -- The producers of a TV adaptation of Robert Jordan’s “Wheel of Time” fantasy book series accused the author’s widow of slander on Thursday in California federal court, alleging she publicly ridiculed the pilot that aired days before the producers’ rights were set to expire.

Red Eagle Entertainment LLC’s 30-minute pilot for the series aired on FXX in the early hours of Feb. 9, at 1:30 a.m. EST, and was quickly derided by fans and writers for its low-budget special effects, slow pacing and stilted acting. Red Eagle’s rights to the series would have expired on Feb. 11 if it hadn’t aired anything.

Jordan’s widow Harriet McDougal released a statement Monday distancing herself from the pilot. She claimed that her company Bandersnatch Group Inc., which is Jordan’s successor in interest, had a deal with Universal Pictures to produce the show, not Red Eagle.

“I see no mention of Universal in the ‘pilot,’” she wrote. “Nor, I repeat, was Bandersnatch, or Robert Jordan's estate, informed of this in any way. I am dumbfounded by this occurrence, and am taking steps to prevent its reoccurrence.”

Red Eagle alleges that it granted some rights to Universal but they reverted back to Red Eagle last year. McDougal knew Universal was no longer involved because she and her lawyers were told about the rights change, according to the suit. Her statement was meant to disparage the show and cast doubt on Red Eagle’s legal ability to produce the pilot, the company alleged.

“Instead of confirming the rights for which she has been so richly compensated for, McDougal sought to harm the business prospects of [Red Eagle] by making statements she knew to be false,” Red Eagle said.

Red Eagle’s dealing with Jordan dates back to 2004, when a subsidiary paid Jordan $35,000 for a one-year option to buy movie and TV rights for the first of 15 books in the “Wheel of Time” series. The company eventually paid another $595,000 to extend the option and buy the rights, which would revert back to Bandersnatch if nothing came of the deal, according to the complaint.

The subsidiary, Manetheren LLC, signed a separate deal with Universal in 2009, giving it an interest in making films or a TV show based on the book, but the rights came back to Manetheren in February 2014 because Universal hadn’t started shooting by then, the complaint said.

McDougal was invited last year to a series of meetings between Manetheren, Sony Pictures Television and Radar Pictures LLC about a possible TV series and offered to serve as a consultant, according to the suit. Red Eagle claims McDougal never raised any concerns about Manetheren’s rights to go ahead with the show.

Manetheren further claims McDougal breached a 2008 deal over comic book rights, with both sides agreeing not to make any negative or contentious public statements about each other. And contrary to McDougal’s released statement, Manetheren was not required to get her approval before releasing the show, the producers said.

Representatives for the parties did not immediately respond Thursday to requests for comment.

Red Eagle is represented by Jonathan D. Freund and Stephen P. Crump of Freund & Brackey LLP.

Counsel information for the defendants was not immediately available.

The case is Red Eagle Entertainment LLC et al. v. Bandersnatch Group Inc. et al., case number 2:15-cv-01038, in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California.




What Harriet McDougal actually said:
"This morning brought startling news. A “pilot” for a Wheel of Time series, the "pilot" being called Winter Dragon, had appeared at 1:30 in the morning, East Coast time, on FXX TV, a channel somewhere in the 700s (founded to concentrate on comedy, according to the Washington Post).

It was made without my knowledge or cooperation. I never saw the script. No one associated with Bandersnatch Group, the successor-in-interest to James O. Rigney, was aware of this.

Bandersnatch has an existing contract with Universal Pictures that grants television rights to them until this Wednesday, February 11 – at which point these rights revert to Bandersnatch.

I see no mention of Universal in the “pilot”. Nor, I repeat, was Bandersnatch, or Robert Jordan’s estate, informed of this in any way.

I am dumbfounded by this occurrence, and am taking steps to prevent its reoccurrence."

Wow.

Some interesting points to extract from this:

Red Eagle's 2004 deal was for The Eye of the World alone, not the entire series. The later extension to $595,000 does not state if the entire series was included in the deal, especially interesting given that at the time only ten (of fifteen) novels were available. $600,000 seems a rather low price to pay for a series that by then had already chalked up three #1 New York Times bestsellers and had already sold over 40 million copies in the United States alone, which suggests that the rights may not have been for the full series (or Robert Jordan was feeling extremely generous). If Red Eagle only own the rights for the first book, or even the first few, then the chances of them getting the whole series made would seem to be very slim given that Bandersnatch are (especially after the events of this week) highly unlikely to ever sell them the remainder.

This revelation does confirm that Red Eagle made at least a $405,000 profit by re-selling the rights to Universal. They did this in 2008 for a reported "seven figure" deal. If that deal was for a few million, then Red Eagle's profit would have been substantially greater.

The news does also confirm that Sony Pictures were interested in taking on the project. Given that Sony's best-known recent TV project was Breaking Bad, which they exerted considerable influence over and reportedly protected from the kind of executive meddling at AMC that had caused problems on its other dramas, this at least shows that Red Eagle was dealing with the big leagues. There are no indications if Sony remain interested in the project.

Monday, 9 February 2015

WHEEL OF TIME gets a TV pilot out of nowhere

There was quite a big surprise last night for Wheel of Time fans watching the FXX channel in the United States. Out of nowhere, they were treated to a 30-minute TV "pilot" for a possible TV series based on the books, entitled Winter Dragon. Behold:




The "pilot" was apparently made on almost zero money in just a few days a couple of weeks ago.

"But how?" you may ask, possibly after only a moment's pause to reflect on the gloriously demented decision to cast Billy Zane as Ishamael, the Betrayer of Hope.

Robert Jordan sold the film and TV rights to Wheel of Time back in the mid-2000s to Red Eagle Entertainment, a rights-handling company set up specifically to get the franchise expanded into TV, film comic books and video games. To say they failed spectacularly is an understatement. The Wheel of Time comic book was delayed multiple times and left incomplete. Red Eagle tried to crowdfund a mobile Wheel of Time game but asked for an obscene amount of money and then failed to publicise it anywhere, resulting in an unmitigated disaster. Red Eagle then won back some respect by commissioning Obsidian Entertainment, one of the best video games companies in the business, to work on a single-player RPG. However, they then failed to produce any money to fund the game. They somehow managed to sign a deal with Electronic Arts in which EA agreed to release the game but not fund it, one of the most inexplicably baffling failures of corporate dealing I've ever encountered.

Of course, the real money was in a film/TV adaptation. Red Eagle's initial attempts to produce a film script based on The Eye of the World were not successful, with a few people who managed to read the script declaring it unbelievably awful. With the company running out of money, Red Eagle re-sold the film and TV rights to Universal Pictures in 2008 in return for Red Eagle retaining a production credit.

Those rights were not forever, and on Wednesday 11 February 2015 (that's this Wednesday, people) the rights would have reverted to the Bandersnatch Group, aka the Jordan Estate, overseen by Robert Jordan's widow Harriet McDougal. During the last few months of his life Robert Jordan had become very irritated with Red Eagle's handling of the Wheel of Time project and one of his very last blog posts was spent castigating them. Fan appreciation for Red Eagle's efforts cooled noticeably at that point. At Worldcon this past August, I moderated a Wheel of Time convention panel with Harriet in attendance and she explained that a number of other Hollywood studios were very interested in the property. With Game of Thrones a huge hit, other networks were looking for a fantasy project and as the biggest-selling post-Tolkien epic fantasy series, WoT was clearly the #1 desired property. With less-successful works like Shannara and The Kingkiller Chronicle getting optioned, it's very likely that WoT would be snatched up by another (probably far more competent) company in short order.



This "pilot" appears to have been made specifically to forestall such a move. With this "pilot" made, Red Eagle (Universal's involvement is highly unclear at the moment) may try to argue that they have succeeded in getting the series made and thus can retain the film rights so they can, er, sit on them for a few more years and prevent a series getting made by actually competent personnel. That sound you can hear right now is that of several hundred lawyers reaching for their pencil sharpeners.

Harriet McDougal's response to all of this:

"This morning brought startling news. A “pilot” for a Wheel of Time series, the "pilot" being called Winter Dragon, had appeared at 1:30 in the morning, East Coast time, on FXX TV, a channel somewhere in the 700s (founded to concentrate on comedy, according to the Washington Post).

It was made without my knowledge or cooperation. I never saw the script. No one associated with Bandersnatch Group, the successor-in-interest to James O. Rigney, was aware of this.

Bandersnatch has an existing contract with Universal Pictures that grants television rights to them until this Wednesday, February 11 – at which point these rights revert to Bandersnatch.

I see no mention of Universal in the “pilot”. Nor, I repeat, was Bandersnatch, or Robert Jordan’s estate, informed of this in any way.

I am dumbfounded by this occurrence, and am taking steps to prevent its reoccurrence."
More news as I get it.

Update: The director of the "pilot", Seda James, passed away just a few days ago. Condolences to his friends and family.

Update #2: Red Eagle have commented on the "pilot", confirming that they indeed made it to avoid losing the screen rights. They also confirm that they are pushing ahead with a plan to make a big-budget TV show, apparently because Game of Thrones is a big hit. No further word is given on if a reputable network is interested, or how they may proceed without known producers or writers on board.

Wednesday, 7 January 2015

Cover art for THE WHEEL OF TIME COMPANION and some more info

It's still ten months away, but Tor Books have revealed the cover art for the forthcoming Wheel of Time Companion, along with some more detailed information (in addition to my previous article) on what the book will contain.



The book has been written by Robert Jordan's widow, Harriet McDougall, with his writing assistants Alan Romanczuk and Maria Simons providing assistance. The book draws on the hundreds of thousands of words of notes Robert Jordan wrote during his writing of the series, detailing many aspects of the world and its cultures which never appeared in the books themselves.

The book will feature an entry for each named character, which with well over 2,000 named characters in the book series alone is quite some feat. Even Bela (Egwene's much put-upon horse) gets her own entry. There will also be an extensive dictionary of terms in the Old Tongue, featuring at least 1,000 words and their usage. There will be new portraits for most of the characters, and information on the histories and customs of the major nations. This is likely to be expanded upon the already extensive information presented in The World of Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time (1997). There will also be information on the flora and fauna of the world, likely partially drawn from an article Robert Jordan wrote for Dragon Magazine back in 2001. Most intriguing is the presentation of a list of channellers and details on their respective strength/power levels relative to one another, something hardcore fans have been asking to see for years.

The book will be published in November 2015.

Saturday, 23 August 2014

Details on THE WHEEL OF TIME COMPANION

 
At Worldcon I had the pleasure of moderating a panel featuring Harriet McDougal (Robert Jordan's widow), Maria Simons (one of his assistants) and fantasy authors Wesley Chu and Peter Brett, who spoke about the influence of Wheel of Time on their works. However, there was a fair amount of discussion by Harriet about the new companion volume to the series. This can be summed up as follows:
  • The Wheel of Time Encyclopedia is dead! Long live The Wheel of Time Companion as it will now officially be called.
  • The book will be 350,000 words long (comparable to several of the novels in the series; the longest, The Shadow Rising, is 389,000 words).
  • The book will feature a lot of new artwork, arranged by Irene Gallo at Tor.
  • Publication date likely to be November 2015.
  • The book will feature all of the already-published maps and also some new ones, including one of Thakan'dar.
  • The book will have a large vocabulary of the Old Tongue, with a minimum of 1,000 words.
  • The book will feature character profiles and sketches for almost every character in the series. Even Bela has her own entry.
  • The book will be written from a post-AMoL POV. It will have spoilers for the entire series.
In addition to info on the world book, Harriet revealed some more details generally about the series:
  • The series is finished and done. Tor offered a lot of money and tried to persuade Harriet into doing more, but Harriet put her foot down and said no. The Wheel of Time ends with A Memory of Light and the companion volume.
  • There were several unfulfilled contracts when Robert Jordan passed away, including for the Seanchan trilogy. Apparently the money involved was massive, worth many times the value of Harriet's house. Tor worked with the estate to re-write the contracts to substitute the companion book instead.
  • Robert Jordan wrote one line about the planned Seanchan trilogy: Mat Cauthon playing dice in a grubby alleyway in Ebou Dar (not verbatim). That was it.
  • Harriet named about 75% of the chapters in the series.
  • Harriet vocally re-enacted Bela's death-whinny from AMoL.
  • The panel spent an intense five minutes arguing about Bela's death. When I tried to suggest that we talk about the human characters who died, no-one was really interested. It was all about the horse.
  • Jordan tried to protect Maria from spoilers in the work he had her do for him. She eventually persuaded him she could handle them. Almost the first thing he then gave her was Verin's full backstory. This was somewhere around the time Path of Daggers came out.
  • The oddest research request was Jordan asking how babies feel when they are born. This was eventually used in the bonding scene in Winter's Heart.
  • The movie/TV rights situation is beginning to become clearer. Red Eagle sold the film rights on to Universal and it now looks like the rights could return to the Jordan Estate at some point. There is apparently interest from other companies in the rights given the success of other fantasy projects on TV and in film at the moment.
All in all, a good panel and some interesting stuff came out of it.