JD Payne, one-half of the Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power showrunner duo, on working on Tolkien's work, the $1 billion price tag and bringing in new folks while submitting their creation to the loyals
Nobody knew that Jeff Bezos was a huge JRR Tolkien fan until 2017 when he went out resources-blazing to bid for the rights of Tolkien's stories to make content for his streaming service Amazon Prime Video. The streaming giant shelled out $270 million for the rights, spent $468 million filming the first eight-episode season, and five years later, on September 2, released the first two episodes of the first season of Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power.
At the helm are showrunners JD Payne and Patrick McKay, known to the Trekkies (Star Trek fans) as the screenwriting duo that punched up the scripts of JJ Abram's Star Trek movie trilogy. This street credit comes in handy for the duo as they recreate Middle Earth for a new generation, for those who jumped on the Lord of the Rings bandwagon after watching extended versions of Peter Jackson's movie trilogy, and also for the purists who love to analyse every single detail of Tolkien’s text (novels, appendices, letters to editors, family, and fans). Pleasing a fandom is not easy. Especially when you are working with the characters of the fourth best-selling book of all time—behind only the Bible, Mao’s Little Red Book, and the Koran—and your creation comes with a $1 billion price tag for five seasons.
For JD Payne, one half of the The Rings of Power showrunner duo, it was never about the price tag. The pressure was about staying true to Tolkien's themes of hope, friendship, and finding light in the darkness. In a conversation with Forbes India, Payne sheds light on creating a condensed version of material that was vast, on the comparison with Peter Jackson's films, and the difficult task of bringing in new folks to Tolkien's work while submitting their creation to the loyals.
Edited excerpts