According to industry rag The Hollywood Reporter, HBO's turn-of-the-millenium drama Rome may be heading to the big screen.
Series producer Bruno Heller sold the Reporter: "There is talk of doing a movie version...It's moving along. It's not there until it is there. I would love to round that show off."
Rome ran for two seasons before getting the axe.
Says the Reporter:
The lavish period drama ran for two seasons on HBO, which co-produced the series with the BBC. With the final season of "The Sopranos" as its lead-in, the first season was solidly rated, but high production costs presented the network with a tough call on the pickup. HBO opted for a second season to help get more value from its initial investment but not a third, effectively canceling the show in summer 2006 before the second season debuted the following January. The "Rome" sets were destroyed, and the actors were released from their contracts, making the decision all but irreversible.
Season 2 of "Rome" was a surprise. Although slightly lower rated than the first, the show did remarkably well without a "Sopranos" lead-in. The first season received four Emmy Awards, and another seven Emmys were heaped upon the final season.
http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/theampersand/archive/2008/12/01/hbo-s-rome-to-the-big-screen.aspx