While Taylor Sheridan is known for his vast empire of television shows for Paramount+, his output on the film side has been as arid as a Texas drought.
 
That is about to change.
 
Despite the recent headlines of Sheridan decamping the new David Ellison-owned studio for NBCUniversal, the cowboy isn’t done with Paramount just yet. And he is actually in the process of landing one of the highest-profile gigs of this career.
 
Sheridan is in talks to write the adaptation of Call of Duty, one of the biggest video games of all time.
 
The dealmaking comes as Peter Berg, the man’s man director behind such movies as Lone Survivor, Deepwater Horizon and Friday Night Lights, is closing his deal to direct and also write the adaptation.
Sheridan will also produce the feature, as will Berg. David Glasser, who runs 101 Studios, the production company behind Sheridan’s shows, is producing as well.
Call of Duty has been the top-selling game franchise in the U.S. for the past 16 years. A first-person shooter game, the setting spans various eras from World War II and Vietnam to the present day and even decades into the future, with over 500 million copies of its various games sold over the years.
Hollywood was stunned Sunday when news broke that Sheridan would leave Paramount for NBCUniversal, where he has a film deal kicking in next year and a TV deal starting at the end of 2028.
Sheridan and Berg are longtime friends and have collaborated on Hell or High Water, the 2016 Chris Pine-starring crime thriller which received four Oscar nominations, including best picture and best screenplay, and the Jeremy Renner thriller Wind River.
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