WONDER WOMAN RETURNS TO DIRECT WONDER WOMAN
First JJ Abrams , now Patty Jenkins. This returning director thing is turning into a hot new trend. Granted, Jenkins didn’t take a break from her freshly-minted franchise to go off and, like, reboot another franchise, but all roads lead to Rome, eventually. Or Paradise Island, anyway.
The Hollywood Reporter has the scoop:
After an unusually lengthy and tough negotiation, the director has closed a deal with Warner Bros. to helm, co-write and produce the sequel to the movie sensation of the summer. The deal is precedent-setting, making Jenkins the highest-paid female filmmaker in history, though getting to this point was âchallenging,â according to one source.
Jenkins came on to Wonder Woman as a replacement for director Michelle McLaren, who left the project over creative differences. But she became an indispensable figure and, along with star Gal Gadot, the face of the movie in the months before its June opening.
WONDER-ING IF IT WAS DOABLE
But Jenkins only had a deal for one movie.
When the film became an immediate hit, lassoing over $103 million in its opening weekend, Jenkins and her camp found themselves in a very enviable position. Negotiations began for her return after that first weekend but dragged on even as the movie showed remarkable staying power, becoming a true (and rare for summer 2017) phenomenon. The pic grossed over $402 million domestically and has topped the $800 million mark worldwide.
Sources say Jenkins will receive directing and writing fees in the high seven figures (think somewhere in the $7 million to $9 million range) on Wonder Woman 2 but, more significantly, will have a considerable backend. (At her peak, filmmaker Nancy Meyers earned in the $5 million range, according to sources.) The deal is a superheroic leap for Jenkins, who was paid $1 million for directing the initial Wonder Woman but was looking to get something more on the level of Zack Snyder’s pay after he helmed Man of Steel, according to sources. Just as Wonder Woman broke barriers for superhero movies, Jenkins’ deal breaks a glass ceiling for women directors.
Gadot already is attached to the follow-up, which Warner Bros. has dated for Dec. 13, 2019.
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We’re getting the hero (Hera?) we deserve and want. This is great news for superhero fans. We can’t wait for the next iteration of WW kicking ass.