- Platforms
"Involved in decision making" is not "Has absolute final say in everything." Unless I am mistaken?
Doesn't matter, this is good enough. And TRAs will cry. Delicious.
"Involved in decision making" is not "Has absolute final say in everything." Unless I am mistaken?
"Involved in decision making" is not "Has absolute final say in everything." Unless I am mistaken?
Cursed Child and Secrets of Dumbledore were both greenlit. Both of which are franchise killer levels of shit (Fantastic Beasts movies are currently canned, and Cursed Child will need to be retconned if the timeframe post HP series is ever explored without alienating the fanbase as Game of Thrones and Star Wars managed.)Actually, she absolutely does. She famously has one of the most impressively water tight contracts in regards to creative control out there.
Doesn’t mean she won’t let a bunch of leftists make DEI changes ‘for the greater good’, or that she’ll care enough to check about every minor detail, but she absolutely has to sign off on anything before it can get made, and is very protective of her IP and what is allowed to have the official Wizarding World seal of approval.
Cursed Child and Secrets of Dumbledore were both greenlit. Both of which are franchise killer levels of shit (Fantastic Beasts movies are currently canned, and Cursed Child will need to be retconned if the timeframe post HP series is ever explored without alienating the fanbase as Game of Thrones and Star Wars managed.)
Still JK Rowling having final say gives me a bit of hope for the new TV series, just a bit.
For many franchises an entry as bad as one of those two would be the end however Harry Potter is not most franchises or IP.How could both be franchise killer levels of shit if neither killed the franchise?
She wrote those Fantastic Beasts films right? And I seem to recall that she was quite involved in the Cursed Child process. Like @Stilton Disco said she's always been very hands-on with what's done with that world. Even when they were making the first film, when she had a lot less leverage than she does now, she laid out certain criteria that they had to meet, like the cast all be British. That's why they had to turn down Robin Williams' offer to play Hagrid. I believe she's also talked about turning down a bunch of merchandise ideas she didn't want to be made, like toilet seats.