THR reports that David Fincher and Sony Pictures are at odds over the director's his aggressive demands for compensation and control of the authorized biopic about late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs according to several sources.
Fincher is said to be asking for a cool $10 million up front in fees,
as well as control over marketing, in negotiations with the studio. Sony
allowed him considerable input into the marketing of the 2011 film The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,
including honoring his request to use the tagline "The feel bad movie
of Christmas" in its campaign. A source says Fincher also had the studio
create metal, razor-blade-shaped one-sheet materials for the film that
cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to produce but were not suitable
for display in theaters.
Sony and Fincher's reps did not comment.
A source with ties to the studio says Fincher potentially could re-enter
negotiations but that the fee he is seeking is “ridiculous,” adding,
“You’re not doing Transformers here. You’re not doing Captain America. This is quality — it’s not screaming commerciality. He should be rewarded in success but not up front.”
"The West Wing" creator and "The Social Network" writer Aaron Sorkin's adapted script of author Walter Isaacson's authorized biography will give the film a unique narrative.
Talking at the Hero Summit he says "this entire movie is going to be three scenes, and three scenes only, that all take place in real time."
All three thirty-minute scenes will be "set right before three major product launches."
Those three products? The original Macintosh computer in 1984, the
NeXT Cube in 1990, and the first generation iPod in 2001. Sorkin
finished the script earlier this year.
Fincher had wanted to have Christian Bale to play Jobs but the star is not attached to the film.
Mark Gordon, Scott Rudin and Guymon Casady will be producing the as yet uncast film being called Steve Jobs for now.
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