New Details Emerge About Guy Ritchie’s King Arthur Project

by     Posted 3 years, 98 days ago

Guy Ritchie.jpgLast week, we reported that Guy Ritchie had signed on to direct Excalibur, which was based on a treatment by Warren Ellis (author of must-read comic series Transmetropolitan and Planetary among others).  Now, Variety is reporting that screenwriter John Hodge (Trainspotting) is working with Ritchie on a script for the film which will be “a re-imagining of the legend of Arthur,” and use Sir Thomas Mallory’s Le Morte d’Arthur as a primary source.

However, Ellis said that his treatment, “differs from the prior 751 King Arthur movies in many ways, but perhaps most obviously in that it is very specifically about the gathering of the Knights.”  Variety also never calls the project, “Excalibur” but I think it’s safe to assume that Ritchie hasn’t signed on to two different King Arthur projects at the same studio.

King Arthur’s profile has been getting raised recently as we also reported last week that director Sylvain White (The Losers) was in negotiations to direct the Knights of the Round Table flick Pendragon.  There’s also Bryan Singer’s separate Excalibur project which would be a remake of John Boorman’s 1981 film.

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Comments:
  • aaronsullivan

    Sherlock sequel first, please?
    I felt the original was just shy of great and I’d like to see a sequel really create a franchise because there is a lot to love in this take on the character.

    I do like this more commercially viable direction for Ritchie, strangely. His other stuff was just going nowhere for me after Snatch. I like stuff that’s out there and I like auteur directors but his style seems to have benefitted from forcing himself to be interesting to more people.

  • aaronsullivan

    Sherlock sequel first, please?
    I felt the original was just shy of great and I’d like to see a sequel really create a franchise because there is a lot to love in this take on the character.

    I do like this more commercially viable direction for Ritchie, strangely. His other stuff was just going nowhere for me after Snatch. I like stuff that’s out there and I like auteur directors but his style seems to have benefitted from forcing himself to be interesting to more people.

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