Chris Columbus has signed on to write, direct and produce Blumhouse’s long-gestured screen adaptation of Scott Cawthon’s popular video game Five Nights at Freddy’s, which centers around a security guard battling animatronic robots that come to life in a Chuck E. Cheese-like venue, reports Deadline.
Blumhouse landed Five Nights at Freddy’s last March when the movie rights to the video game were put in turnaround by New Line.
Cawthon will produce alongside Columbus and Blumhouse’s Jason Blum. Cawthon launched the original game in 2014 and it became an immediate online sensation, ultimately generating billions of views on YouTube. Five Nights at Freddy‘s spans six different games. Each of the games that were released as mobile apps ranked at the top of Android and iOS app stores upon release. To date, the franchise includes a series of best-selling novels and top-performing retail merchandise lines.
Columbus has a long streak with haunted classics going back to his screenwriting days on Gremlins, The Goonies and Young Sherlock Holmes. As the director of such landmark tentpoles as Home Alone, Mrs. Doubtfire, and the first two Harry Potter titles, Columbus’ credits count over $4.1 billion at the global box office. His producing credits include Night at the Museum and The Help, the latter of which he was nominated for a best picture Oscar.
Gil Kenan, who had directed MGM’s recent iteration of Poltergeist, was the last filmmaker to take a crack at Five Nights at Freddy‘s as director and co-scribe when the brand was set up at Warner Bros./New Line.