Amazon MGM is moving ahead with a live-action FernGully film, handing the project to Marielle Heller in one of the studio’s clearest signals yet that it wants recognizable theatrical brands in its pipeline. The new film, announced Friday, revives the 1992 animated story of fairies, loggers and an ancient pollution force, with Heller set to write and direct. Stacey Sher, Susan Ursitti-Sheinberg, Jon Sheinberg and Matt Feige are producing, with Leah Holzer and Moonli Singha also attached. No cast or release date has been announced.
The project lands at a moment when Amazon MGM is widening its big-screen ambitions. At CinemaCon this week, the studio said it plans to release at least 15 theatrical films a year, a sharp expansion that puts added weight on familiar titles with built-in audience recognition.
FernGully fits that push, even if it sits well outside the action-heavy and franchise-driven fare that has dominated recent studio presentations. Heller’s hiring also gives the film a filmmaker known for character-led work rather than effects spectacle, which may shape how the studio handles a property remembered for its environmental message and musical identity.
This remake did not appear out of nowhere. The rights changed hands in 2023, when Machine Media Advisors acquired the original film and related rights and began exploring new screen projects tied to the property. Friday’s announcement makes Amazon MGM the first studio to put a major live-action feature into active development from that effort. Producers said they want to protect the film’s legacy while expanding it into areas such as music, publishing and gaming, which suggests a wider brand play, not a one-off remake.
That creates both opportunity and risk. The original film earned modest box office returns in 1992, then grew into a cult favorite with an outsized afterlife among viewers who connected with its anti-pollution message. Its makers described it at the time as openly environmental, though designed first as entertainment. That history gives the new version a strong hook in an era shaped by climate anxiety, while setting a high bar for a studio trying to turn a hand-drawn ecological fantasy into live action without flattening what made it stick in the first place.





















































