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The judge ruled that Chainmail would have been an infringement had it been made, but in the meantime Sweetpea signed a multimillion dollar deal with Warners to make a new D&D movie this summer. Warners even kicked in around a million dollars for legal fees in the battle with Hasbro, which wants to make a movie with Universal, making this what Deadline called a "proxy war" between Warner Bros. and Universal.
It looked for a while like the two sides were moving toward a settlement (see "'D&D' Trial Set"), but talks apparently broke down and the case was scheduled for trial (see "No Settlement in 'D&D' Suit").
The two sides presented their positions on Tuesday (i.e., Book of Vile Darkness was/was not a film sequel), and in the process got in an exchange about Hasbro/Wizards of the Coast’s plans for the property if it prevailed. Hasbro wants the rights back so it can "sell it to their new best buddy, Universal," Sweetpea’s attorney argued; but "Hasbro has no agreement with Universal," Hasbro’s attorney replied. That’s surprising, given that Hasbro said back in 2013 that it had a D&D movie set up at Universal with Chris Morgan to direct (see "Dueling 'D&D' Movies"). Hasbro does have an umbrella deal with Universal.
Witnesses began testifying today, and the trial will continue through the week.