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Netflix acquires Millarworld

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Press Release: http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/netflix-acquires-millarworld-300497072.html

HOLLYWOOD, Calif., Aug. 7, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Netflix Inc. announced today it acquired Millarworld, the comic book publishing powerhouse founded by Mark Millar, the legendary creator of such iconic characters and stories as Kick-Ass, Kingsman, and Old Man Logan, and one of the most important voices in comics.

Together, Netflix and Millar will bring Millarworld's portfolio of critically and fan-acclaimed character franchises to life through films, series and kids' shows available exclusively to Netflix members globally. Millarworld will also continue to create and publish new stories and character franchises under the Netflix label.

The acquisition, the first ever by Netflix, is a natural progression in the company's effort to work directly with prolific and skilled creators and to acquire intellectual property and ownership of stories featuring compelling characters and timeless, interwoven fictional worlds. Terms of the transaction weren't disclosed.

"As creator and re-inventor of some of the most memorable stories and characters in recent history, ranging from Marvel's The Avengers to Millarworld's Kick-Ass, Kingsman, Wanted and Reborn franchises, Mark is as close as you can get to a modern day Stan Lee," said Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos. "We can't wait to harness the creative power of Millarworld to Netflix and start a new era in global storytelling."

"This is only the third time in history a major comic book company has been purchased at this level," said Millar. "I'm so in love with what Netflix is doing and excited by their plans. Netflix is the future and Millarworld couldn't have a better home."

Millar, who runs Millarworld with his wife Lucy Millar, is one of the most consistent hitmakers in the graphic novel and comics world. In his eight years at Marvel, he developed the comic books and story arcs that inspired the first Avengers movie, Captain America: Civil War, and Logan (Wolverine), which collectively grossed over $3 billion in worldwide box office. Since Millarworld was started, the company and its co-creators have given birth to eighteen published character worlds, of which three, Wanted, Kick-Ass and Kingsman, have yielded theatrical films that together have grossed nearly $1 billion in global box office.

"Mark has created a next-generation comics universe, full of indelible characters living in situations people around the world can identify easily with," added Sarandos. "We look forward to creating new Netflix Originals from several existing franchises as well as new super-hero, anti-hero, fantasy, sci-fi and horror stories Mark and his team will continue to create and publish."

About Netflix
Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX) is the world's leading Internet entertainment platform with 104 million members in over 190 countries enjoying more than 125 million hours of TV shows and movies per day, including original series, documentaries and feature films. Members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on nearly any internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments.

About Mark Millar and Millarworld
Millarworld is an entertainment company run by Mark and Lucy Millar where the company and each of the superstar artists it partnered with owned all of the comic-book characters they created. These projects have achieved huge success as global franchises ranging across publishing, cinema, clothing, video-games and toys over the past fourteen years. In his years at Marvel, Mark wrote some of the biggest-selling books of this generation, massively influencing the Marvel Cinematic Universe. His book, The Ultimates, was named by Time Magazine as Comic Book Of The Decade and his Superman opus, Red Son, remains the best-selling Superman graphic novel of all time.

So I guess Chrononauts will probably be a Netflix movie or series then?
 
Interesting that Netflix just outright bought a comics company.
 
Yeah Netflix does a lot of interesting moves. When are they going to start their own version of Amazon?
 
I don't mean to be rude but I can't think of any millarworld stories I want adapted. All of Millar' best work was early on like the Authority and the Ultimates.

I am quite interested in seeing the story of the gay superhero growing up during the golden age of Hollywood. Jupiters circle? Yes I think that's it
 
I kind of don't want any more comic or super hero movies and franchises, for the love of god man...it got old a long time ago.
 
Give us a KickAss Reboot in Form from a Show netflix
 
Millarworld Aug 7, 2017:
Biggest news ever - Netflix Buys Millarworld!!
Mark Millar said:
Warner Bros bought DC Comics in 1968. Disney bought Marvel in 2009. Today Netflix purchased Millarworld and I’m still blinking. This is only the third time in history a comic-book company purchase on this scale has ever happened.

I started Millarworld as a creator-owned comic-book company nearly 15 years ago, after talking some artist pals into being their own bosses. We’d all had success at DC and Marvel, but this was a chance to control the characters created and reap the rewards from any future movies, TV or merchandise that ever came from those characters and books. Over the years, Millarworld has amassed twenty different franchises working with the world’s greatest artists and now Millarworld has been bought by the hottest, most exciting entertainment company on the planet. To say this is the best thing that ever happened in our professional lives would be an understatement.

The moment Lucy and I walked into Netflix’s headquarters in California last Christmas we knew this was where we wanted to be. It instantly felt like home and the team around that table felt like people who would help us take Millarworld’s characters and turn them into global powerhouses. Netflix is the future and we couldn’t be more thrilled to sell the business to them and buckle up for all the amazing movies and television shows we plan to do together. This feels like joining the Justice League and I can’t wait to start working with them.

I’d like to take this moment to thank all the artists who were caught up in my enthusiasm over the years and who co-created these properties with Millarworld. Artists are often left out of news-stories, but trust me when I say that the only reason these books have looked so beautiful is because Millarworld worked with the greatest draughtsmen of their generation. I’d like to thank Frank Quitely, Stuart Immonen, Goran Parlov, Leinil Francis Yu, Rafael Albuquerque, Peter Gross, Steve McNiven, Greg Capullo, Sean Murphy, JG Jones, Duncan Fegredo, Tony Harris, Dave Gibbons and John Romita Jr for their belief in my crazy plan and their friendship during even the tightest of deadlines. Kingsman and Kick-Ass have unique Hollywood deals elsewhere and aren’t a part of this particular acquisition, but those two fine men are toasting us in spirit from London and California respectively.

In terms of this sale itself, I’d like to offer a huge thanks to Jon Miller, an amazing corporate legend who held our hands through the entire executive process, John Rose who provided invaluable counsel as we were going through this, the gang at Medialink, our accountants at Robertson Craig and our brilliant international legal teams Hughes Hubbard & Reed in the United States and Addleshaw Goddard in England. I’d also like to thank my great friend former Marvel President Bill Jemas for introducing me to Jon almost eighteen months ago. Bill changed my life once when he was running Marvel and he changed it again when he helped facilitate this.

But more than anyone I’d like to thank my wife, Lucy Millar. Everyone involved in this process knows she’s the genuine business brain at our company. She and I had flights from Scotland to LA for sometimes just three hours of meetings during this lengthy negotiation, scrabbling for baby-sitters and jet-lagged to Hell, but still she managed to always be smiling, keeping it all on-track for all our partners and keeping everyone in the loop seemingly 24/7. Nothing dulls my brain like a 96-page legal document, but so many nights ended with me falling asleep as she phone-conferenced with nine lawyers around the world and made this all happen. On behalf of this cross-continental gang of pals who have somehow pulled this off, she has our love and thanks for running this company so brilliantly in recent years and for helping us to make comic-book history today.

So what’s next? Well, we’ve been in these talks for many months and a lot of planning has been going on. We’re flying to LA to strategise the next steps and you’ll be hearing about each fascinating turn when I’m allowed to share it. Jupiter’s Legacy and Reborn both concluded in the last few weeks and I’m going undercover between now and Spring as I stockpile all the new projects we’re putting together, but you’ll hear about them very soon.

Keep an eye on our website, Twitter, Instagram and Facebook pages for details as they happen where Millarworld editor Rachael Fulton will be giving you daily updates. Also look for our news at the end of summer with details of the charitable foundation Lucy and I have started which will revitalize parts of my old hometown in Scotland. This is a five-year charity building project I’ve been quietly making plans for with local government behind the scenes and we can’t wait to go public with the idea. I’ve had an enormous amount of luck in my life - none more than today - and I look forward to explaining how I’m planning to use what this deal brings us to help improve an area I grew up in and owe everything to.

Comics have been my passion my entire life. I started working with them as a teenager and I’ve never been more excited about where we’re going next as Millarworld joins the Netflix team. These guys are going to take Millarworld to the next level and I feel like Richard Dreyfuss, wide-eyed and walking around the mothership at the end of Close Encounters when I see their global plans and it’s crazy-exciting to be a part of it.

This is going to be brilliant.

End of Part One.

To Be Continued.

Your Pal,
Mark Millar
 
Yeah, I'm sure he had no qualms about letting Netflix buy it out.
 
THR AUGUST 23, 2017:
Behind Netflix's Bold Bet on Comics King Mark Millar
Borys Kit & Graeme McMillan said:
The prolific creator shopped his library to studios, but now he’s being counted on to deliver a wave of new titles as the streamer gears up to compete with Disney.

A day before Disney?unveiled plans for a competing streaming service to Netflix, the digital giant made a preemptive strike in what may become a new intellectual property arms race, snapping up Mark?Millar’s “mini-Marvel” imprint Millarworld.

The prolific comic creator, who launched his company in 2004, is said to have approached studios earlier this year offering a deal for his library and future stories. But because some of his marquee properties, such as Kick-Ass, Kingsman and Wanted, already are spoken for, it was difficult to determine the deal’s value, a studio source tells The Hollywood Reporter.

Netflix, however, determined the answer was quite a lot. Terms of the Aug. 7 deal were not disclosed, but two sources pegged it in the $30?million to $50?million range. Complicating things were side deals Millar had to make with his co-creator artists to sew up rights in order to make the ironclad sale to the streamer. Some artists may have walked away with six- or seven-figure payouts, sources say.

Also part of the deal are future works; one source says Millar has been holding back a wave of titles in anticipation of such a deal. “You get whatever he comes up with next, that’s the value here,” says one executive with knowledge of the deal. Additionally, there may even be a component that has Millar act as a story consultant for other Netflix projects.

"Millar has been very successful at creating comic worlds that can stand on their own in other media, and there are very few people that can say that," says Milton Griepp of comic industry analyst ICv2. "The stories resonate, and with his marketing, his comics sell like mid-tier Marvels or DCs in a very tough market in which it’s very rare for comics outside the major universes — Marvel, DC, etc. — to do so. Acquiring Millarworld is one of the very few ways that Netflix could have immediately bought a credible comics universe with proven potential."

Deals with comic book companies are not slam dunks. Universal had a multiyear first-look arrangement with Dark Horse Entertainment that yielded only the 2013 flop R.I.P.D. But owning a publisher, one that continues to generate fresh content, may offer different results. Fox hopes so, too; in July, it acquired a minority stake in comics company Boom! Studios.

Millar is no ordinary comic creator. You would have to go back to Stan Lee and his voluminous output during the golden age of Marvel to find a comic book writer whose work has so often been translated to the screen. Before launching Millarworld, which employs only a handful of staffers, Millar worked at Marvel in the early part of the 2000s, with the ideas and concepts he developed there popping up in Marvel Studios' The Avengers, Captain America: Civil War and Fox's Logan.

There are a number of titles that have already been farmed out to others and will be off the table for Netflix. Millar friend and frequent collaborator Matthew Vaughn owns the rights to Kingsman and Kick-Ass after directing and self-financing bigscreen adaptations of those properties. Fox has the rights to the Flash Gordon-inspired Starlight, as well as superhero series Superior and the kid-focused Kindergarten Heroes. Universal has Wanted, which it adapted as an Angelina Jolie film in 2008, as well as Chrononauts.

“The key to this deal is Millar himself. He’s a bankable creative powerhouse and brand persona whose name above the title can generate interest,” says Rob Salkowitz, author of Comic-Con and the Business of Pop Culture.

Netflix can mine Millar properties like Reborn, a drama that suggests that the afterlife brings?you into a war alongside those you knew when you were alive, and MPH, about speedy teens in rundown Detroit. The crown jewel may be Jupiter’s Legacy — featuring multigenerational hero stories — which could lend itself to cinematic universe?treatment.

"[Netflix] figured out that instead of getting 10 ideas from 10 different people … they go, 'How do we start buying clumps of ideas?'" explains Spawn creator Todd McFarlane, who co-founded Image Comics in 1992, paving the way for some creators of the publisher's books (such as The Walking Dead's Robert Kirkman) to reap millions by retaining rights to their properties.

McFarlane sees Millarworld as being just a first step for Netflix to buy out more creators, adding: "If I were Netflix, I would consider it not to be a whole pie I bought, I would consider it to be a portion of a pie."

As for the future of Millarworld, the September-launching Kingsman: The Red Diamond comic book series, tying into the second Kingsman movie, marks the company’s first comic book without any direct involvement from Millar himself. (Rob Williams, writer of DC's Suicide Squad comic book, steps in to replace him.)

Millar, who has withdrawn from the press and refused interviews since the Netflix deal was revealed, is teasing all-new properties and concepts as part of the next phase of Millarworld. As he wrote about the buyout on Aug. 7, "I’m going undercover between now and spring as I stockpile all the new projects we’re putting together, but you’ll hear about them very soon."

Aaron Couch contributed to this report.
 
Now they can get that Red Son movie on the fast track.
 
Just ordered Jupiter’s Circle and Jupiter’s Legacy from Amazon so I’m excited to finally read those books.
 
So I finished Circle and Legacy and honestly those books are the best original superhero books I’ve read in years. Fantastic art by Quitely and Torres on Legacy and Circle respectively. From the themes to the great action and character development it’s truly amazing. If done right this could be the next great superhero Movie or television franchise for Netflix depending which way they go. I highly recommend this series and I can’t wait for the third book in the trilogy Jupiter's Requiem in 2019. You can definitely feel the Star Wars influence in these books. Do yourself a favor and read this Epic superhero saga.:up: Anyway rant over.

Edit: I forgot to give credit to Mark Millar. Man is the best.
 
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GOING INTO DEVELOPMENT:
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Yeah it’s dope. You should read Jupiter’s Circle if you haven’t already.
 

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