Tolkien's son trying to halt production of THE HOBBIT, McKellen and Serkis to reprise roles
 Not everybody is excited to see THE HOBBIT go into production soon. 83-year-old Christopher Tolkien, son of J.R.R. Tolkien, is heading into court next week to try and stop the production.
It is also being reported that Sir Ian McKellen is returning as Gandalf and Andy Serkis will play Gollum again.
Christopher Tolkien, 83, is calling for "one last crusade" in a long-running court battle against the producers of The Lord of the Rings only weeks before carpenters are due to begin work in New Zealand on the sets for the latest Middle-earth epic.
He claims the Tolkien family is owed £80m by New Line Cinema under a deal for a 7.5% share of profits that was signed in 1969, when his father reluctantly sold film rights to pay a tax bill.
Today the film-makers will confirm that Sir Ian McKellen is returning to his role as the wizard Gandalf in The Hobbit and that Andy Serkis will reprise his role as the murderous creature Gollum.
Sir Ian Holm, who played the hobbit Bilbo Baggins in The Lord of the Rings, is expected to narrate. Viggo Mortensen has unexpectedly been asked to return as Aragorn, a character who does not appear in the original Hobbit story, published in 1937.
Peter Jackson, who directed the Rings trilogy, is to produce the Hobbit films. The director will be Guillermo del Toro, the Mexican whose grim fantasy Pan's Labyrinth won three Oscars last year.
However, at a hearing on June 6 Christopher Tolkien will ask a Californian judge to back his claim that he can "terminate" film rights to The Hobbit. He is said to be furious with the New Line studio, which earned £3 billion from the Rings trilogy. Tolkien's lawyers accuse New Line of "accounting chicanery". Warner Bros, owner of New Line, declined to comment.
Source: Times Online
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