Sixty-Two Thousand Dollars
// 1969–2009 — a gross-participation deal, not a net one, and the fee that measured the entire distance between a contract's promise and its payment
The rights chain behind this case runs back further than the films themselves. Tolkien signed a film agreement with United Artists in 1969. Producer Saul Zaentz eventually acquired those rights, made an animated adaptation in 1978, and later licensed the live-action rights to New Line Cinema, which released the trilogy between 2001 and 2003. Buried in that chain of licenses was a term entitling the Tolkien Trust — the UK charity that administers the author's estate — to 7.5 percent of the films' gross receipts.
That detail is the reason this post exists in the series at all. Every case so far has hinged on how "net profits" gets defined, redefined, and recalculated until it disappears. This contract didn't use that word. It used "gross" — the plainer, harder-to-manipulate figure, the kind of deal Post I described as the actual defense against the net-profit trap. And for years, per the trustees, the studio paid against it exactly once: a $62,500 upfront sequel fee, sent before a single frame of the trilogy had been shot.
A gross-receipts deal is supposed to be immune to the mechanics documented in Posts I through III — there is no distribution fee, no overhead allocation, no self-charged interest standing between the box office and the participant's percentage. The Tolkien Trust's complaint describes a different conduit entirely: roughly $100 million in settlement payments made to Zaentz and Miramax, in separate disputes over the same trilogy, were themselves booked as costs of the films — reducing the very base that the 7.5 percent was supposed to be calculated against. The complaint separately alleged underreported home-video revenue and the destruction of relevant financial documents.
Layered onto that was a simpler mechanism still: the studio's outright refusal to let the trustees audit the receipts of the second and third films. Where Posts I through III describe formulas that produce zero by design, this case describes something more direct — a studio narrowing the participant's ability to even check the studio's math, on a contract that, unlike the others in this series, didn't leave much math to argue about in the first place.
The conversion here isn't a formula turning a hit into a paper loss — it's the distance between two numbers that were never in dispute. The trilogy's box office alone ran to nearly $3 billion worldwide; the trustees' own complaint put total revenue, including home video and merchandise, at close to $6 billion. Against either figure, 7.5 percent is not a small number. What the Tolkien Trust says it actually received was $62,500 — not 7.5 percent of anything, but a flat fee paid before the films existed at all, with nothing more following in the years afterward. The suit didn't just ask for money. It asked the court to let the trustees terminate New Line's further rights to Tolkien's work entirely, including the planned Hobbit films — a demand serious enough that it put the sequel's future genuinely at risk.
New Line has not paid the plaintiffs even one penny of its contractual share.
Steven Maier, UK counsel for the Tolkien trustees · February 2008Warner Bros. absorbed New Line in March 2008, a month after the suit was filed, and inherited the litigation along with it. The case settled roughly eighteen months later, in September 2009, in a deal the Hollywood Reporter described as one of the largest profit-participation settlements in the industry's history — reported at more than $100 million, against a claim that had grown to $220 million. The terms were never filed with the court and were described at the time as confidential. As with Buchwald's vacated finding in Post III, the resolution that ended the dispute is also the reason the public has no binding standard to point to the next time a studio's gross-receipts accounting gets challenged.
The pattern context matters as much as the settlement itself. Jackson and Zaentz had already extracted more than $20 million apiece from the same studio over the same trilogy, after what reporting at the time described as a public feud with New Line's own leadership. Three separate profit participants, on three separate contracts, tied to the same three films, all needed to sue — or credibly threaten to — before the studio paid anything close to what its own agreements described. That is not evidence of one dispute. It is evidence of a studio's standing posture toward anyone with a percentage claim on this trilogy, regardless of whether their contract said "net" or "gross."
All three conditions fire in Post IV, and the first one fires on a mechanism this series hasn't documented until now.
Interpretive Capital — fires, but not through the word "profit." Here the studio is reported to have diluted the gross-receipts base itself, by booking roughly $100 million in unrelated settlement payments as costs of the films — narrowing the very number the 7.5 percent was supposed to apply to, without ever having to redefine "gross" on paper.
Enforcement Asymmetry — fires. Three separate participants — a director, a producer, and an author's estate — all had to sue the same studio over the same trilogy before receiving anything close to their contractual share. Whether any of them ever got paid depended entirely on their capacity to litigate, not on the clarity of what their contracts said.
Temporal Capital — fires. The trustees spent years attempting to negotiate directly with New Line before filing suit in 2008 — itself five to seven years after the first film's 2001 release — and the case then took a further eighteen months to resolve. The total gap between the trilogy's earliest revenue and any payment beyond the original $62,500 runs the better part of a decade.
The lawsuit's filing date, the $62,500 upfront fee, the 7.5 percent gross-receipts term, and Steven Maier's on-record statements are drawn from France24's February 12, 2008 report, treated as Tier 1 contemporaneous reporting. The itemized allegations — underreported home-video revenue, the roughly $100 million in Zaentz and Miramax settlement payments booked as costs, document destruction, and the refusal to permit an audit of the final two films — along with the initial $150 million damages figure and the 1969 United Artists rights history via Saul Zaentz, are drawn from Variety's February 11, 2008 report, treated as Tier 1. The eventual settlement, the $220 million revised claim, the "more than $100 million" settlement estimate, and the parallel Jackson and Zaentz settlements of more than $20 million each are drawn from The Hollywood Reporter's 2009 report, treated as Tier 1. The Associated Press account of the settlement's announcement, Christopher Tolkien's and Bonnie Eskenazi's statements, and the confidentiality of the settlement terms are drawn from AP wire coverage as distributed via Today.com, the Seattle Times, and the Deseret News, treated as Tier 2.
Series note: this is Post IV of The Paper Loss. Post V asks why a gross deal and a net deal, pursued through entirely different mechanisms, both end the same way — a confidential settlement that resolves the dispute without ever setting a public standard for the next contract.



