More recently, however, it’s been rumoured that the budget has risen again, following delays and set damage caused by dust storms – these setbacks have, according to The Hollywood Reporter’s sources, put the budget back up to $250 million. To cut down the effects budget, that screenplay has since been reworked by Justin Haythe, who ditched its spookier undertones, including some ghostly coyotes and a demon that turned victims into cannibals. One early version of the script, written by Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio, also had supernatural undertones to it. With this in mind, The Lone Ranger’s makers agreed to trim some action scenes and reduce their upfront fees in order to reduce the budget to $215 million.
#THE ORIGINAL LONE RANGER MOVIE MOVIE#
Last August, the movie was briefly shelved, partly due to disagreements over how much it was costing to produce. The Lone Ranger, however, is rumoured to have a budget of around $250 million – a figure which would place it somewhere fairly high in the top 10 list of the most expensive movies ever made.ĭisney had attempted to reign in the film’s budget in the past.
Now admittedly, a movie with a cast like that won’t necessarily be cheap to make, and if the script has lots of epic battle sequences written into it, those would push the budget up, too.
#THE ORIGINAL LONE RANGER MOVIE SERIES#
The Lone Ranger’s popularity continued to endure after the series ended, and various spin-off movies have appeared sporadically since, culminating in Disney’s forthcoming revival, which after years in development hell, is due out next year with director Gore Verbinski at the helm.
He was joined in his efforts by a native American named Tonto, most memorably played by Jay Silverheels. In it, a masked Texas ranger (played by Clayton Moore on the television) rode around on a horse named Silver and maintained order in the Old West. The Lone Ranger began as a radio show in the 1930s, and was then a hit TV show that lasted from 1949 to 1957. But so far, I’ve yet to discover the answer to a small yet nagging mystery: why is this adaptation of an old cowboy show costing Disney such an extraordinary amount of money to make? If my printer hadn’t run out of ink, I probably would have printed them out and held them up to the light.
By now, I’ve looked at each one closely, and at length. Yesterday, some new pictures from the set of Disney’s The Lone Ranger appeared, which you can find dotted around this very page.