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Hollywood Beef Erupts: 'Road House' Director Clashes With Amazon Over Disconnected Sequel

Published 4 hours ago3 minute read
Precious Eseaye
Precious Eseaye
Hollywood Beef Erupts: 'Road House' Director Clashes With Amazon Over Disconnected Sequel

A major Hollywood rift is unfolding around the future of the iconic Road House franchise, with acclaimed director Doug Liman and original writer R. Lance Hill facing off against Amazon MGM Studios. The dispute centers on the development of two competing sequels—one led by Amazon and the other by Liman and Hill each claiming creative and legal authority over the property.

Liman, who directed the 2024 Road House reboot starring Jake Gyllenhaal, has voiced deep frustration with Amazon’s choice to skip a theatrical release despite strong test screenings. The studio instead premiered the film exclusively on Prime Video, where it drew more than 50 million viewers in two weeks. In response to what he called a “disservice to the art of filmmaking,” Liman has cut ties with Amazon’s sequel and launched his own competing project.

His independent film, titled Road House: Dylan, will act as a direct sequel to the 1989 Patrick Swayze classic, diverging entirely from Amazon’s reboot continuity. The project is based on a script by R. Lance Hill, the original screenwriter of Road House, whose script Liman has officially optioned. While plot details remain secret, the film is being positioned as a return to the gritty, character-driven roots that defined the original.

Complicating matters further, Hill is currently embroiled in a legal battle over copyright ownership of the Road House screenplay. He argues that under Section 203 of the U.S. Copyright Act, rights to the script should have reverted to him after 35 years, as it was written as a spec script not owned by a studio at the time. Hill contends this reversion became valid in November 2023, effectively restoring his control over the material.

However, Amazon MGM disputes this claim, asserting that the script was produced under a “work-for-hire” agreement through Hill’s loan-out corporation, meaning the rights remain with the studio. Liman has publicly aligned with Hill’s stance, making Road House: Dylan not only a creative venture but a symbolic stand against corporate control in Hollywood.

Meanwhile, Amazon continues to advance its own sequel, Road House 2, following the commercial success of the 2024 reboot. The project has undergone multiple changes in direction — initially set to be helmed by Guy Ritchie before his departure, with Ilya Naishuller (Nobody) now taking over as director. The sequel will see Jake Gyllenhaal reprising his role as ex-UFC fighter Dalton, with Dave Bautista cast as his new nemesis. Leila George and Aldis Hodge are also confirmed to join the ensemble, as filming progresses under tight secrecy.

The result is an unprecedented cinematic and legal standoff: two Road House sequels, two creative visions, and two competing claims to the franchise’s legacy. As lawsuits proceed and production ramps up on both sides, the battle over who truly owns Road House could redefine not only its future but also the broader conversation around creative ownership in the streaming era.

For now, fans can revisit both the 1989 classic and the 2024 reboot on Prime Video — while Hollywood watches closely to see which Road House sequel lands the final punch.

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