The Wall Street Journal reports Ice Cube and Warner Bros are in the midst of a bitter back-and-forth over Last Friday, the fourth movie in the franchise. The movie has been in development for just under a decade now.
We might not be getting a new Friday movie…ever.
The movie isn’t even close to being done, and both Cube and Warner Bros. officials have been exchanging “heated letters” about the movie’s fate for weeks.
It seems like Ice Cube wants to break free from the Dubba Dubba WB.
According to the correspondence reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, Ice Cube wants Warner Bros., owned by AT&T Inc., to surrender its rights to the Friday property and to two other movies he made there—All About the Benjamins and The Players Club.
IndieWire reports that Cube’s lawyer wrote in a letter that Warner Bros. was “excessive” in-studio notes on the script and is a “poor steward” of the franchise. All three Friday movies were distributed through Warner Bros. New Line Cinema label and earned well over $20 million in box office revenue.
According to IndieWire, Ice Cube originally set the first draft of “Last Friday” in prison, but he claims “the studio told him prison isn’t funny.”
Studio executives said, “they felt the fans of the franchise wanted to see the characters in their familiar settings instead of behind bars for much of the movie.”
Ice Cube wrote a second script but then got feedback he felt was “off the mark.”
The actor said, “he viewed the entire editing process as a way to delay getting cameras rolling.”
Meanwhile, Warner Bros. told the WSJ that Cube’s demand to release the rights of his movies was “extortionate,” and that the studio won’t give in to it. The studio went on to call Cube’s claims “revisionist history” and blamed him for the movie’s delays because he and his team are unwilling to engage with them.
Related Story: Eazy E’s Daughter Disses Ice Cube For Not Taking Part In Her Father’s Documentary
Cube’s team also floated around the possibility that Warner Bros. might be discriminating against him.
“The possibility of discrimination has also emerged as a flashpoint in the conversations. In one letter, Ice Cube’s representative wrote that movies he has done for the studio ‘are habitually underfunded compared to projects featuring white casts and creative teams.’ The correspondence points to other Ice Cube films he says weren’t well supported.”
Warner Bros. fired back, saying in part to the WSJ that Cube’s sentiments were “grounded in a libelous set of knowing falsehoods” and that they have and will continue to “support diverse voices and storytellers.”
Unless Cube and Warner Bros. find common ground or the studio decides to give up the rights to the franchise, it sounds like the movie isn’t going to happen.