Sony Pictures, Mattel and Parkes+MacDonald/Image Nation have partnered to create a live-action movie focused on the iconic doll.
The companies said Wednesday the comedy will be written by Jenny Bicks ("What a Girl Wants") and produced by husband and wife team Walter F. Parkes and Laurie MacDonald ("Men in Black 3").
Executive producers will be Parkes+MacDonald president Marc Resteghini and Julia Pistor for Mattel's Playground Productions.
Sony sees the film as a global franchise and plans to go into production by the end of the year.
It's the second collaboration for Sony and Mattel. The companies are currently developing the film adaptation of "Masters of the Universe," based on Mattel action figures.
Harvey Weinstein, center, appears in criminal court in New York, Sept. 18, 2024. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, Pool, File)
Harvey Weinstein's lawyers filed a legal claim Tuesday against New York City, alleging that he is receiving substandard medical treatment in unhygienic conditions while in custody at the notorious Rikers Island jail complex.
The notice of claim, which is the first step in filing a lawsuit against the city, accuses the facility of failing to manage the former movie mogul's medical conditions, which include chronic myeloid leukemia and diabetes, and negligence ranging from "freezing" conditions to a lack of clean clothes.
The city's law department and Department of Correction did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
"When I last visited him, I found him with blood spatter on his prison garb, possibly from IV's, clothes that had not been washed for weeks, and he had not even been provided clean underwear โ hardly sanitary conditions for someone with severe medical conditions," Weinstein's attorney, Imran H. Ansari, said in a statement, comparing the facility to a "gulag."
Weinstein, 72, has been in city custody since earlier this year, after the New York Court of Appeals overturned his 2020 rape conviction in the state. The case is set to be retried in 2025. Weinstein has denied any wrongdoing.
Weinstein was briefly hospitalized in April and again in July for health problems. His team has said he's been treated for diabetes, high blood pressure, spinal stenosis, COVID-19, and fluid on his heart and lungs.
The legal claim, which seeks $5 million in damages, argues he'd been returned to Rikers each time before he had fully recovered.
Weinstein's film production company went into bankruptcy proceedings after his convictions, setting up a $17 million fund for a sexual misconduct claims fund.