The tech giants stormed Hollywood this past week: Amazon.com Inc. announced its plan to buy the storied MGM studio for nearly $8.5 billion, including debt.
The story of outsiders trying to take on Hollywood is one with many sequels. Since the mid-20th century, companies in sectors as far-flung as soft drinks and oil fields have come to Los Angeles hoping to strike it rich in the film business. Long-gone players have included Coca-Cola Co., Gulf & Western and General Electric Co.
Nearly all the outsiders have ended up slinking out of town, defeated. There’s a reason producers often refer to outside financing as “dumb money.”
Look at the owners of studios through time, though, and larger corporate trends emerge, from the postwar supersizing of industrial conglomerates to the rise of Japanese players in the 1980s and ’90s. When Sony Group Corp. bought Columbia Pictures in 1989, the cover of Newsweek declared JAPAN INVADES HOLLYWOOD.” Very little at what is now Sony Pictures changed, outside of the installation of a sushi bar, but similar concerns were raised when Chinese investment started flooding into Hollywood around 2015.
In the past 20 years, cable giants and telecom companies have plowed billions into the business, in an effort to capitalize on the shift to smaller screens and establish themselves as creative forces of their own. Few have succeeded. Earlier this month, AT&T became the latest to step back from the business, unwinding much of the foray it had made into entertainment with its $80 billion-plus acquisition of WarnerMedia in 2018. The move lowers AT&T’s debt load and returns the company’s focus to its core telecom business.
It’s a movie we’ve seen before. At one point during Gulf & Western’s ownership of Paramount Pictures, the company considered selling the studio’s back lot on Melrose Avenue to a developer who planned to turn it into a cemetery. Paramount survived, though, and is today nested within its own conglomerate, ViacomCBS Inc.
It remains to be seen if the world’s biggest online retailer will succeed where other business titans have failed. But in the long-running love story between Hollywood and corporate America, the acquisition doesn’t seem like a shocking twist.
Major acquisitions of film studios since 1960
Type of owner:
Conglomerate
Individual
WALT DISNEY
WARNER BROS.
TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX
PARAMOUNT PICTURES
COLUMBIA PICTURES
UNIVERSAL PICTURES
Gulf & Western
Edgar Bronfman Sr.
The Jungle Book
Kinney National
Kirk Kerkorian
Star Trek: The Motion Picture
Marvin Davis
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial
Turner Broadcasting purchases MGM, quickly sells it back to Kerkorian
Tri-Star Pictures
Time Inc. acquires studio parent Warner Communications
Sony buys Columbia/Tri-Star, creates Sony Pictures
Home Alone
Matsushita
Crédit Lyonnais takes control after Pathé’s owners default on loan payments
SONY PICTURES
Jurassic Park
Kerkorian returns
Men In Black
The Matrix
America Online
The Fast and the Furious
SONY PICTURES
General Electric
Comcast makes unsuccessful takeover attempt
Sony-led investor group
Viacom spins off television operations into CBS Corp., retains Paramount
The Dark Knight
MGM files for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection; creditors led by hedge fund Anchorage Capital take control
SONY PICTURES
Disney acquires Fox entertainment assets, later renames movie studio Twentieth Century Pictures
Viacom and CBS re-merge
Amazon to buy MGM
AT&T spins off media assets, including Warner Bros., into venture with Discovery
Type of owner:
Conglomerate
Individual
UNIVERSAL PICTURES
COLUMBIA PICTURES
WARNER BROS.
TWENTIETH
CENTURY FOX
WALT DISNEY
PARAMOUNT
PICTURES
Gulf & Western
Edgar Bronfman Sr.
Kirk Kerkorian
Kinney National
Marvin Davis
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial
Turner Broadcasting purchases MGM, quickly sells it back to Kerkorian
Tri-Star
Pictures
Time Inc. acquires studio parent Warner Communications
Matsushita
Sony buys
Columbia/
Tri-Star, creates Sony Pictures
SONY PICT.
Crédit Lyonnais takes control after Pathé’s owners default on loan payments
Jurassic
Park
Kerkorian returns
Men In Black
The Matrix
America Online
SONY PICTURES
Comcast makes unsuccessful takeover attempt
General Electric
Sony-led investor group
Viacom spins off
television operations into CBS Corp.,
retains Paramount
MGM files for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection; creditors led by hedge fund Anchorage Capital take control
SONY PICTURES
Viacom and CBS re-merge
Disney acquires Fox entertainment assets, later renames movie studio Twentieth Century Pictures
Amazon to buy MGM
AT&T spins off media assets, including Warner Bros., into venture with Discovery
Type of owner:
Conglomerate
Individual
UNIVERSAL PICTURES
COLUMBIA PICTURES
WARNER BROS.
TWENTIETH
CENTURY FOX
WALT DISNEY
PARAMOUNT
PICTURES
Gulf & Western
Edgar Bronfman Sr.
Kirk Kerkorian
Kinney National
Marvin Davis
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial
Turner Broadcasting purchases MGM, quickly sells it back to Kerkorian
Tri-Star
Pictures
Time Inc. acquires studio parent Warner Communications
Matsushita
Sony buys
Columbia/
Tri-Star, creates Sony Pictures
SONY PICT.
Crédit Lyonnais takes control after Pathé’s owners default on loan payments
Jurassic
Park
Kerkorian returns
Men In Black
The Matrix
America Online
SONY PICTURES
Comcast makes unsuccessful takeover attempt
General Electric
Sony-led investor group
Viacom spins off
television operations into CBS Corp.,
retains Paramount
MGM files for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection; creditors led by hedge fund Anchorage Capital take control
SONY PICTURES
Viacom and CBS re-merge
Disney acquires Fox entertainment assets, later renames movie studio Twentieth Century Pictures
Amazon to buy MGM
AT&T spins off media assets, including Warner Bros., into venture with Discovery
Write to Inti Pacheco at inti.pacheco@wsj.com and Erich Schwartzel at erich.schwartzel@wsj.com
Copyright ©2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
Appeared in the May 29, 2021, print edition.
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