Andy Serkis tells onlytrustedinfo.com the original Fellowship is circling the 2027 film, with McKellen and Wood already signed and Viggo Mortensen in active talks.
Andy Serkis just ended 18 months of speculation: Ian McKellen is officially reprising Gandalf and Elijah Wood has closed his deal to return as Frodo Baggins in The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum, the New Line film Serkis will direct and star in for December 2027.
Speaking exclusively at LAX, Serkis told onlytrustedinfo.com that contracts for McKellen and Wood are “signed and countersigned,” while conversations with Viggo Mortensen (Aragorn) and Orlando Bloom (Legolas) are “very live—everybody wants the band back together.”
Why This Reunion Matters More Than Any Marvel Team-Up
The 2001-03 trilogy grossed $2.9 billion worldwide and swept 17 Oscars. Warner Bros. Discovery needs a theatrical event to anchor its 2027 slate after DCU relaunch delays and the post-Avatar 3 holiday corridor opened up. A full Fellowship return instantly vaults Hunt for Gollum into Avatar-level anticipation territory.
- Window: December 17, 2027—the same weekend Fellowship debuted 26 years earlier.
- Budget: north of $200 million, per New Line insiders.
- Shoot: Spring 2026 in New Zealand with Peter Jackson producing and Wētā FX already storyboarding Gollum’s next motion-capture evolution.
Inside the Secret Negotiations
Sources close to the deal say Wood’s contract includes a backend gross pool identical to the one he had on the original trilogy, a concession New Line rarely grants in the streaming era. McKellen, 86, secured a limited shooting schedule—15 days on soundstages only—with a trailer credit reading “and Ian McKellen as Gandalf the White.”
Mortensen is the last hold-out. His camp wants story approval for Aragorn’s arc, pushing for a narrative that dovetails into Tolkien’s “Tale of Aragorn and Arwen” rather than a mere cameo. Serkis confirmed those talks are “down to the finest script details.”
Fan Demand by the Numbers
Fathom Events’ 25th-anniversary re-release of Fellowship pulled $2.4 million from a single midnight screening in 1,210 theaters last Friday, Box Office Mojo data shows. Twitter sentiment tracker Talkwalker logged 1.3 million #LOTRReunion posts within 24 hours of Serkis’ airport comments.
What the Film Actually Is—And Isn’t
Hunt for Gollum is not a remake. Set between Fellowship and Two Towers, the story tracks Aragorn’s unseen hunt for the creature that once held the Ring. The script—penned by Phoebe Gittins and Arty Papageorgiou from a story by Jackson and Fran Walsh—treats Gollum as both antagonist and tragic protagonist, giving Serkis top billing in a dual performance that bridges mo-cap and live-action.
Franchise Chessboard: 2027 and Beyond
New Line has already green-lit a second Middle-earth film for 2028—rumored to be “The War of the Rohirrim” live-action spin-off—and Amazon’s Rings of Power Season 3 drops summer 2027. Warner’s strategy: turn December into Middle-earth Month, counter-programming Disney’s Star Wars resurrection and Universal’s Fast XI.
Insiders say if Hunt for Gollum crosses $1.5 billion, Jackson will fast-track a “Bridgerton-style” Arwen series for Max, with Mortensen producing and Wood directing two episodes.
The Bottom Line
Twenty-five years after first entering Middle-earth, the original Fellowship is poised to own the 2027 box-office conversation. Serkis’ confirmation locks two legends, and with Mortensen negotiations in the red zone, Warner Bros. is one signature away from the most lucrative cast reunion in modern cinema.
Stay locked to onlytrustedinfo.com for instant casting alerts and the fastest deep-dive analysis on every frame of The Hunt for Gollum as it gears up to shoot this spring.