A producer of the original 1990 "It" TV miniseries, Larry Sanitsky, has sued Warner Bros, alleging the studio breached his contract by making the films -- "It" and the upcoming "It Chapter Two" -- without his involvement.
Sanitsky along with Frank Konigsberg ran a Telepictures in the early 1980s when they acquired the rights to the Stephen King novel and created a miniseries for ABC, and stayed on through pre-production.
They quit the company after it merged with Lorimar, and were given a company credit on the miniseries, which aired in 1990.
According to Variety, the duo locked a deal with Lorimar that made them "non exclusive executive producers," with back end participation and rights to involvement in any sequel, spin-off or remake of the show.
The lawsuit claims that Warner Bros stopped giving profit statements in 1995, and never consulted either producer about the film adaptations -- "It" (2017), which minted USD 700 million worldwide, and "It: Chapter Two" that is due out in September.
The suit also alleges that they are entitled to 10 per cent of net profits of any remake.
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Konigsberg died in 2016 and Sanitsky, 67, is pursuing the case through the partners' corporate entities.
Warner Bros. has not yet commented on the lawsuit.
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