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  Nickelodeon Acquires Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Franchise
by Chris Remo [PC, Console/PC]
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October 21, 2009
 
Nickelodeon Acquires Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Franchise

Cable television network Nickelodeon has acquired the full Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles franchise, including worldwide rights to television, film, and video games -- and although not mentioned in the official statement, likely also the property's original medium of comics.

Nickelodeon -- a subsidiary of Viacom's MTV Networks, which also owns video game publisher MTV Games -- bought the Turtles for $60 million from the Mirage Group, which had owned the franchise rights since 1984, and 4Kids Entertainment, which had served as the franchise's licensor for eight years on behalf of Mirage.

There have been over 20 games based on the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles over the past two decades. Most were published by Konami, but more recently Ubisoft has had the license, releasing games based on the 2007 film and, this year, a downloadable remake of the Konami classic Turtles in Time, as well as the team-based Wii brawler Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Smash-Up.

"Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles shares a comedic sensibility with the Nickelodeon DNA, with added layers of action and fantasy that have kept this property an evergreen favorite with multiple generations of audiences," said Nickelodeon Kids and Family Group president Cyma Zarghami. "We are extremely happy to have the opportunity to be able to focus on this property and creatively re-introduce it to a new generation of kids."

Moving forward, it is possible that MTV Games or another Viacom subsidiary will look to take publishing of the games in-house, particularly with MTV Games seeing considerable success in the game sector thanks to subsidiary Harmonix's ongoing Rock Band series.

The group has been consolidating game properties recently, and next year Nickelodeon's existing licensing agreement with THQ, which has THQ publish numerous properties owned by the network, will expire, giving Viacom the chance to reevaluate its licensing strategy.
 
   
 
Comments

Samuel Fiunte Matarredona
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Not a good day for the TNMT fans, one of whom I am, they didnt even mentioned the comics? reintroduce it to a new generation of kids? I love the cartoons but the original comics were more adult-oriented (first as a satire of daredevil that only more grown up readers can get and then with a really dark and strong tome in the stories) and that should be the direction to move here, 20 years looking to the cartoon version are enough. I hope that future products move more in that way (like the next live action movie and future games); and by the way the rights should have remained in the hands of Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird.

Rob Schatz
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Get ready for iCarly meets TMNT. Or Blues Clues as the new Splinter. Oy....

Luke Keith
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I actually think this can be a good move if Paramount takes it seriously. The next TMNT live action movie can absolutely NOT be made for a target audience of 5-7yr olds, it must be made for an older audience while not excluding the 10-14yr kids.

My team and I have been developing a vision for a live action TMNT movie since summer of 2005, we completed our vision last fall and have been developing our marketing materials ever since. Now that the power has shifted, we can only pray Paramount will hear what we have to say. Check out our Ninja Turtles movie project at

www.turtlesthemovie.com

We would love to hear all of you Ninja Turtles fans out there!


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