Monday, January 23, 2012

Westeins, Relativity settle 'The Crow' lawsuit

The lawsuit between The Weinstein Co. and Relativity over "The Crow" remake has been settled and the companies will work together on the production

The companies released the following statement: "The lawsuit between Relativity Media and The Weinstein Company concerning THE CROW has been amicably settled out of court, and the parties will continue to work on the film together as planned. In addition, Relativity Media has dismissed all of its claims against The Weinstein Company for any wrongdoing regarding the release and distribution of NINE, and The Weinstein Company has dismissed all of its claims against Relativity Media."

The original film hit theaters in 1994.
The Weinstein Co. sued Relativity in April, claiming the company broke an existing contract between the two over the exclusive worldwide distribution rights of the film.

According to the suit, the Weinsteins claim that Relativity owner Ryan Kavanaugh "decided that Relativity would not perform that contract and will purport to sell TWC's distribution rights to others here and overseas in willful breach of the contract."

Relativity in turn rejected the suit and claimed the Weinsteins failed to uphold their distribution agreement for 2009's "Nine," which was partially financed by Relativity.

A remake of the 1994 original, "The Crow" will be a "gritty reboot of the gothic iconic character Eric Draven, who returns from the grave as The Crow on a mission to avenge his wife’s murder, so that his soul can finally rest."

"Watchmen" scribe Alex Tse was pegged to write the screenplay. Actor Bradley Cooper was at one pointed attached to play Draven, but has since pulled out of the project. The role was famously played by Brandon Lee, who was killed by an on-set accident.

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