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Michael Crichton’s estate sues Warner Bros., Noah Wyle, others over ‘ER’ reboot

Anthony Edwards, left, and George Clooney star as doctors in the hit TV series "ER."
Anthony Edwards, left, and George Clooney star as doctors in the hit TV series “ER.”
(NBC)
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The estate of mega-selling author Michael Crichton filed suit against Warner Bros. Television, actor Noah Wyle and producer John Wells for breach of contract over the reboot of the blockbuster series “ER.”

According to the complaint filed Tuesday in Los Angeles Superior Court, the Crichton estate spent nearly a year unsuccessfully negotiating with Warner Bros. for the right to reboot the celebrated medical drama that ran on NBC.

The reorganization comes after Warner Bros. Discovery took a $9-billion write-down for its basic cable channel group.

When the parties did not reach an agreement, the studio “simply moved the show from Chicago to Pittsburgh, rebranded it ‘The Pitt,’ and has plowed ahead without any attribution or compensation for Crichton and his heirs,” the lawsuit alleges.

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The move is a “callous disregard for Crichton’s inception of ‘ER,’” a “personal betrayal” of a 30-year friendship between the author and Wells, the original series’ showrunner, and “an effort to rob his heirs of the fruits of one of his greatest creations,” the complaint states.

Wells has been announced as executive producer of “The Pitt” and Wyle is set to both star and serve as an executive producer.

“The lawsuit filed by the Crichton Estate is baseless, as ‘The Pitt’ is a new and original show. Any suggestion otherwise is false, and Warner Bros. Television intends to vigorously defend against these meritless claims,” said a spokesperson for the studio in a statement.

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Spokespersons for Wells and Wyle were not immediately available for comment.

“They can’t go on like this,” Bank of America analyst Jessica Reif Ehrlich said, referring to the lagging stock and string of missteps by Warner Bros. Discovery boss David Zaslav.

Crichton, who died in 2008, was a prolific, bestselling author who wrote 25 novels that sold more than 250 million copies worldwide, 13 of which were made into films including “Jurassic Park.” His novels, films and television series have collectively grossed over $10 billion to date, according to the suit.

In 1974, he wrote the screenplay for what became “ER’s” two-hour pilot, inspired by his own experiences as a medical intern in the emergency room of an urban hospital.

Fifteen years later, Crichton and Steven Spielberg developed his script into the groundbreaking series that ran on NBC for 15 seasons between 1994 and 2009, earning 124 Emmy nominations, winning 23. The show delivered “billions of dollars” to Warner Bros., states the complaint.

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Before entering into an agreement with Warner Bros., Crichton extracted a series of contractual promises, including a “frozen rights” provision that prohibited the studio from making any sequels, remakes, spinoffs, or other productions derived from “ER” without his “express consent,” according to the suit. Further, the author would receive the appropriate credit, while his heirs would “receive compensation commensurate with the ultimate success of ‘ER,’ in connection with any future productions.”

After Crichton died, the lawsuit says that Warner Bros. made a series of moves that “betray[ed] his trust and diminish[ed] — and ultimately erase[d] him from his work, including the HBO remake of “Westworld,” based on the 1973 film that Crichton wrote and directed. Instead of giving Crichton a “created by” credit, he received a ‘’ ‘based upon’ credit buried deep in the end credits.”

Then, in 2020, the suit alleges that Warner Bros. began developing an “ER” reboot to air on its struggling HBO Max service, “without ever shopping the project to ascertain its true value” and without informing the author’s widow, Sherri Crichton, the guardian of the estate that controls her late husband’s “ER” assets for the benefit of his children and in violation of the “frozen rights” provision.

After nearly two years of development, the studio informed Sherri Crichton and the estate of the planned reboot, “pressur[ing] them to consent, without regard for how Crichton would be credited or his heirs would financially benefit from the project,” according to the complaint.

After rocky discussions, the estate was prepared to approve the project in exchange for a “created by” credit given to Crichton and a $5-million nonperformance guarantee.

However, the suit alleges, the studio and Wells then rescinded those terms and demanded that the estate “waive the guarantee,” and proceeded to work on the reboot without its consent, initially in secret.

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In a statement to The Times, a spokesperson for Sherri Crichton called Warner Bros.’ actions a “shameful betrayal.”

“Sixteen years after his death, Warner Bros. is effectively rebooting ‘ER,’ and seeking to boost the more than $3 billion profit it has already earned from his creation, without crediting Crichton and without obtaining consent as they are obligated to do under Crichton’s contract. Changing the show’s name does not change the fact that ‘The Pitt’ — which has exactly the same premise, structure, themes, pace, producers, and star — is ER’ through and through.”

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