‘Land of the Lost’ Finds June
When Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince moved from November to July, every other studio studied their release plans for next summer and began getting out of the way.
Yesterday, Universal Studios announced its feature film version of Land of the Lost will vacate its July 17 berth, avoiding opening the same day as the teen wizard. It moved to June 5, a currently empty slot, assuring it a chance at success. It’s only competition at present is the Jack Blake/Michael Cera comedy Year One.
Land of the Lost is a big budget version of the Saturday morning series from the 1970s, starring Will Ferrell and Pushing Daisies’ Anna Friel. It was one of many series created by Sid and Marty Krofft that have been enjoying renewed attention.
At present, the rest of June also has the big screen adaptation of The A Team opening on July 12 along with Universal’s fourth film in its Fast and Furious franchise and the Eddie Murray fantasy comedy Nowhereland.
Then, in time for the July 4 weekend, Michael Bay returns with Transformers 2.

Shawn Christensen, lead singer for stellastarr*, has sold a science fiction screenplay to Warner Bros. in a pre-emptive deal. The studio, according to
Warner Bros. has already scheduled a re-release for The Dark Knight in January, designed specifically to influence Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences voters. Warner is working with Imax to have the film play on several of their screens during the crucial voting period, to remind everyone the summer blockbuster was also a critical darling.
Danny Boyle may switch from zombies to fantasy as his next project may well be an animated adaptation of Terry Pratchett’s Truckers. He will collaborate on the screenplay with Millions scribe Frank Cottrell Boyce.
The Sun
Production began this week on the next Battlestar:Galactica TV movie and fans are rejoicing. However, there is one cast member who is still in shock that his character has survived this long. We talk to him and get a few bits of news on Caprica as well, plus:
Following Universal Studio’s big screen adaptation of Land of the Lost, the company has signed to do the same with another show created by Sid and Marty Krofft: Sigmund and the Sea Monsters.
Marvel Studios Chairman David Maisel told investors at Merrill Lynch that their debut this year was” arguably the most successful" in modern history. He touted facts and figures for the smash success of Iron Man and coupled it with the so-so performance of Incredible Hulk to show their dominance. While claiming Iron Man is the 21st top grossing film in domestic history, adjusted for inflation, it’s actually 113th.

