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Wanda acquires Legendary Pictures for 3 billion

All those jokes about China owning us will be brought to fruition.
 
They should offer their money to Lionsgate, Weinstein Company and ORF films.
 
If China takes over any studio, expect movies to be watered down to cater to the Chinese government and public.
 
Donald Trump Presidency: What Does This Mean For China And Hollywood?
Nancy Tartaglione and Anita Busch said:
One exec said today that those in the Chinese industry actually “like Trump since he is business focused. The sentiment is that Hillary Clinton is a war hawk and very aggressive about China’s position in the South China Sea.” But he added: “Trump will definitely clamp down on Wanda and others investing in Hollywood. That is for sure.”
 
The world will belong to China in no time.
And we all can thank human greed and stupidity.
 
So...no more movies involving the supernatural?
 
Legendary CEO Thomas Tull, Who Pushed for ‘Pacific Rim’ and ‘Godzilla’, Resigns

STATEMENT FROM WANDA CULTURAL INDUSTRY GROUP AND LEGENDARY ENTERTAINMENT​

Thomas Tull has resigned from Legendary Entertainment and effective immediately will assume the role of Founding Chairman of the company he established and led as Chairman and CEO since 2005. Wanda Cultural Industry Group has named Dr. Jack Gao, Group Senior VP & CEO, International Investments and Operations, Wanda Cultural Industry Group as Interim CEO, Legendary Entertainment while the Company pursues the identification of a full-time CEO.

Wanda acquired Legendary in January 2016 and in a year’s time has built a solid platform and business to expand the release of the studio’s tentpole films into China and beyond. Wanda will also continue to fully support Mary Parent and her creative team with the resources needed to develop and produce its existing and future film slate.

“We are thankful to Thomas for his founding vision of Legendary as well as his commitment, leadership and partnership this past year. He will forever be part of the Company’s already rich legacy and powerful DNA,” said Gao. “As we move forward, Wanda aims to transform Legendary into a next generation studio of the future with a far-reaching creative and global platform. We look forward to working with the creative team to manage our already viable film slate with more to come in the near future.”

Stated Tull: “Building Legendary has been one of the most fulfilling experiences of my life. I have had the unique opportunity to be at the forefront of where the business is going and lead an incredible group of people as we innovated the way we thought about the film and television business, and the possibilities of collaboration between the west and the east. After a year of transition, I know that the Company is stable with great leadership, so at this point I am able to leave and pursue the new interests and endeavors I have been planning.”

Under his stewardship, Thomas Tull built Legendary Entertainment into a leading media company with film, television, and digital and publishing businesses. During his time, in aggregate, Legendary’s associated productions realized grosses of more than $13 billion worldwide with films such as Godzilla, 300: Rise of an Empire, Pacific Rim, Man of Steel, the Dark Knight trilogy and the Jackie Robinson biopic 42.

Tull plans to focus time on his Tull Investment Group which invests in life science, media and technology companies such as Magic Leap, Oculus Rift, Pinterest, Heal and Zoox. Tull serves on the Board of Directors of Hamilton College, his alma mater, and Carnegie Mellon University. He also sits on the boards of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, the National Football Foundation, the San Diego Zoo, the Smithsonian Institution and is part of the six-time Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh Steelers ownership group, where he also holds a board seat.

Tull will retain the title of Founding Chairman and remain a stakeholder in Legendary; he will remain involved as a producer on the Monsterverse movies and Legendary projects based on Dune.
 
Interesting and I wonder what this means for the future of Legendary.
 
Variety:
Thomas Tull’s Departure Puts Pressure on Wanda to Prove Legendary’s Value
Patrick Frater said:
Almost from the moment it was announced a year ago, Wanda’s $3.5-billion acquisition of Legendary Entertainment drew criticism that the deal was too expensive, the company was still loss-making, and the best assets walked out of the building each night.

The exit with immediate effect of Legendary founder Thomas Tull now serves to emphasize the “risk” side of the high-risk, high-reward company responsible for “Inception” and “Pacific Rim” as Jack Gao, the senior Wanda executive who was instrumental in acquiring Legendary, takes over as interim CEO.

Gao’s twin challenges will be to prove that his acquisition strategy is still intact and to find a replacement for Tull who combines Tull’s fanboy instincts with the sensitivities needed to stay tuned in to the fast-evolving Chinese audience. It may be a narrow field.

Tull, who shuns Hollywood socializing, has had an eye on China since Legendary was founded. He sought finance from Chinese sources in the company’s early days. And his gamer, high-concept instincts may have given the company an edge in connecting with Chinese tastes.

But that did not necessarily make Legendary profitable. Although Wanda does not break out Legendary’s revenues or profits and losses, it emerged in a regulatory filing last year that the company lost hundreds of millions of dollars in 2015. Its 2016 performance is likely to be better, given the substantial box office scores from “Warcraft” and “The Great Wall.”

A $150-million experiment in U.S.-Chinese co-production, “The Great Wall” has grossed $160 million to date in China and $39 million in other territories, such as Turkey, Thailand and Romania, where it topped the box office. Its overall success remains to be seen, however, with the crucial Universal-handled North American release set for Feb. 17.

Still, Tull and Wanda can take some pride in their performance in China. Legendary/Universal is the only Hollywood player aside from Disney to have two movies that crossed the $100-million mark at the Chinese box office last year. (DreamWorks Animation had one, with Chinese co-production “Kung Fu Panda 3.” Fox, Warner Bros., Paramount, and Sony had none.)

Tull’s China-friendly attitude also did not necessarily make him want to remain a long-term employee at a company known for its top-down, almost military-like operations. Tull has recently expressed growing interest in Legendary’s analytics business and in managing his Tull Investment Fund, which has stakes in gadgets and enterprises including Oculus Rift, Magic Leap, and Pinterest. Looking after Legendary can be somebody else’s problem.

Gao, the interim CEO, is a polished executive with lengthy stints at both Microsoft and News Corp. and with plenty of time in the boardroom. But he has relatively little hands-on experience of production. Whether that poses a problem will depend on how long it takes to find a successor to Tull.

Mary Parent, Legendary’s celebrated head of production, has 11 feature movies in various stages of development and a further seven TV series which all have network, cable channel or streaming video partners attached.

The movie slate includes: “Kong: Skull Island” (releasing in March); now in production “Pacific Rim Uprising”; “Dune”; “Bad Blood,” starring Jennifer Lawrence; and “Skyscraper,” starring Dwayne Johnson. Wanda sources suggest that these are all greenlit and fully supported by the parent group. There is no urgent need to greenlight further titles until the arrival of a new CEO.

Gao currently sees his role as situated at the intersection of all Wanda’s international business and all its efforts to expand beyond its old core business of property development. That has kept Legendary firmly within his bailiwick, and it will see him champion the unit within the giant conglomerate.

Last year, Wanda sought to refinance Legendary and merge it into a Wanda Cultural division that included over a dozen outside shareholders and would likely head for an IPO. (Wanda Cinema Line and AMC already have their own separate share quotes.)

The process was halted by Chinese financial regulators who were unsettled by the uncertainty of the new unit’s finances and the steep 2015 losses at Legendary. The setback did little to dent Wanda’s finances – last week it revealed an asset value of $115 billion – or Wanda chairman Wang Jianlin’s enthusiasm for the entertainment-sports-tourism sector.

Revenue from Wanda’s movie group last year grew by 31% to $5.68 billion (RMB39.2 billion,) boosted by contributions from Legendary and by the addition of 677 cinemas globally. In China alone, it opened 154 new cinemas with 1,391 screens. At the end of 2016, Wanda owned 1,352 cinemas in the world, totaling 14,347 screens, or about 12% of the global total.

Wang recently reiterated his plan to reach a cinema ownership target of 20% of global screens and sees that exhibition base as giving Wanda the power to rival the six Hollywood studios, with their worldwide global distribution networks. “Only when Chinese film companies establish [a] strong overseas distribution pipeline, there is a chance that Chinese films will be able to go global,” Wang wrote on the company’s website this week.

For the current year – with Legendary, Carmike, Dick Clark Productions and Odeon-UCI included for full 12-month periods – Wanda is forecasting its overall film revenue to rise a further 50%, hitting $8.53 billion (RMB 58.9 billion.)
 
Deadline:
Jim G In Play: Legendary, Sony, Warner Bros.?
Anita Busch said:
Fox Filmed Entertainment Group Chairman and CEO Jim Gianopulos is said to be helping his old friend at Wanda Jack Gao behind the scenes on figuring out what to do with Legendary in the wake of the surprise exit of the production company’s CEO Thomas Tull. The relationship between Gianopulos may blossom into something more permanent as we’ve confirmed that Wanda has been heavily courting him. Does that mean that he will take the reins at Legendary? It’s not certain as the former executive’s name is also being bandied about for other top spots around town, including to replace Michael Lynton at Sony and also to take over Warner Bros.

Gianapulos and Gao’s relationship goes back many years when the latter was a top executive at New Corp.

The word of this comes only two days after Tull said he was exiting Legendary, the company he founded 11 years ago after clashing with Wanda owners. With no one to hand the reins to, Gao stepped in as interim CEO. Gao is the trusted right hand man to Dalian Wanda Group‘s chairman Wang Jianlin and has great business relationships in Hollywood. He currently serves as SVP & CEO of International Investments and Operations at Wanda Cultural Industry Group. The hiring of Gianopulos would be a coup for Wanda and Legendary.

Gianopulos has years of experience in distribution and production. In fact, he rose out of the international distribution ranks to eventually head Fox. He left the studio early last year. Stay tuned. Gianopulos could not be reached for comment.

Variety August 23, 2016:
Fox Film Chief Jim Gianopulos to Exit Early (EXCLUSIVE)
 
Variety:
Wanda Says Thomas Tull Exit Reflects Restructuring, Not Flops
Patrick Frater said:
Legendary Entertainment’s Chinese owner, Dalian Wanda, said Friday that the abrupt exit of founder Thomas Tull is part of its larger restructuring plans for growth but that the change at the top did not reflect dissatisfaction with Tull or the recent release of “The Great Wall,” which some have described as disappointing.

“Legend’s personnel adjustments are due to Wanda Pictures’ overall structure” and are part of Wanda Chairman Wang Jianlin’s previously announced expansion plans, a statement from the Chinese conglomerate said.

“‘The Great Wall’ has just begun its worldwide release, and it has not yet been released in the North American region,” the statement added. “Its so-called failure is a fiction.”

The Zhang Yimou-directed action film, which reportedly cost $150 million to make, has generated slightly more than $200 million at the box office, most of that in China, since its December release. How it performs in the U.S. after it hits theaters there next month will be closely watched.

Tull announced his resignation as CEO on Tuesday in the U.S., with Jack Gao, senior VP of Wanda’s Cultural Industries group, taking over as interim leader. Sources say that Wanda has held preliminary talks with Jim Gianopulos, former head of distribution at Fox, as a possible replacement.

Wanda had remained silent on Tull’s departure but issued a three-paragraph statement in Chinese to Variety on Friday. In addition to its terse explanation of Tull’s exit, Wanda said it would “release big news concerning the film industry soon.”

Wanda bought Legendary in early 2016 for up to $3.5 billion, a price tag that baffled many in the industry. Concerns that it had overpaid appeared to be confirmed when a regulatory filing showed that Legendary lost hundreds of millions of dollars in 2015.

In his annual work report a week ago, Wanda chairman Wang noted his company’s ambition to control 20% of the global cinema market, which he believes would give it ample bargaining power when negotiating with the six major Hollywood studios. Speaking this week in Davos at the World Economic Forum, Wang said that Wanda is planning $5 billion to $10 billion of overseas deals this year, with the major focus on entertainment and sports.

Wang has made no secret of his desire to buy a Hollywood studio. But recently he said talks were not making progress, for lack of willing sellers.

Legendary’s performance over the past couple of years has been mixed. In 2016, its two film releases in China both scored big box-office numbers. “Warcraft” was at its most successful in China with $221 million, compared with $47.3 million in North America.

Since its December release, “The Great Wall” has earned close to $166 million (RMB1.14 billion), making it one of the biggest films of 2016 in the Middle Kingdom. That figure was below some projections, though the overall slowdown at the Chinese box office last year makes comparisons tricky.

With its big production budget, “The Great Wall” still needs to score well in other territories. To date, it has grossed more than $40 million in ongoing theatrical release in Asia and Europe. Its North American outing, handled by co-financier Universal Pictures, is set for Feb. 17.

Wanda previously attempted a restructuring of its film businesses in the months shortly after the Legendary acquisition. That corporate reshuffle was to have seen some 20 outside companies provide investment for Wanda Pictures. However, the deals were halted by regulators, who expressed concern over the financial viability of the maneuvers.

That is a pattern that has played out previously. Two years earlier, regulators halted the IPO of film exhibition unit Wanda Cinema Line, only for Wanda to present new accounts and list the company on the Shenzhen stock exchange in January 2015.

Despite a dramatic retreat in the value of Chinese stocks in 2016, Wanda Cinema Line is valued at $6.8 billion (RMB46.9 billion) compared with the $3.45-billion market capitalization of AMC Entertainment, the U.S. theatrical market leader which Wanda also controls.



Wanda Denies Legendary's Thomas Tull Was Fired Over 'The Great Wall'
Wanda appears to have set its sights on expanding Legendary instead. And Tull, for one, is not their man for the job.
 
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It was bound to happen anyway. I think he wanted to leave for a while and just become a producer of sorts.
 

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