There has been pressure for Sony to either sell or spin-off its entertainment division for quite some time.The second part of your post is very interesting, I knew there were rumors of Sony trying to sell off its film division obviously, but this is the first I'm hearing of separating the film division and then having an IPO.
My thoughts exactly.Would Disney even want to touch Sony outside of Spidey though?
Men in Black, Ghostbusters, the Smurfs, Hotel Transylvania, the Robert Langdon series, Jump Street, etc. While Sony's attempts at blockbusters has been rather pathetic, they have had some big successes with smaller films like Captain Philips, American Hustle, the Social Network, Zero Dark Thirty, Moneyball, etc.They have their own studios and distribution companies and outside of Spidey and shared 007 rights, Sony has no other franchises to their own,
Their studio is actually profitable.their studio is near bankrupt,
How Amy Pascal and Michael Lynton have jobs at this point I just don't get.and their executive office is a mess right now (Granted, a lot of this is based on Nikki Finke's writings).
It's the other way around, Sony Corp would own 80% of Sony Entertainment while 20% of the company would have been sold to the public.Plus, with a 20% IPO the wouldn't have anywhere near a controlling interest in the studio even if they bought all of it.
Spider-Man would be making money if they kept the budget under control or if they made an actually good Spider-Man movie.The first part of your post is the sad part of all this. Disney doesn't need to do anything really at all. They will continue to make Spidey toys and cartoons and they'll continue to sell regardless of how bad the movies are failing, so Disney is making their money without any risk. Sony is the one who needs the handout, because Spidey isn't making them anymore money. Sure it made them money in the past, but Hollywood is the epitome of 'What have you done lately' business and lately Spidey hasn't done squat for Sony.
Clooney didn't make Loeb stand down, Kaz Hirai and the entirely almost Japanese Sony Board of Directors made him step down. If anything the leadership of Sony Pictures will change, won't be surprised to see Sony get people like Jeff Robinov, Tom Rothman, or Michael De Luca to replace Pascal and Lynton.EDIT Just to touch on a few more points, Dan Loeb was pretty much skewered by George Clooney in public, which forced him to back off is stance last year. Since then, he's been pretty quiet, although he was right, and Monuments Men tanked, so Clooney looks like even more of a *****e-nozzle than usual.

Men in Black, Ghostbusters, the Smurfs, Hotel Transylvania, the Robert Langdon series, Jump Street, etc. While Sony's attempts at blockbusters has been rather pathetic, they have had some big successes with smaller films like Captain Philips, American Hustle, the Social Network, Zero Dark Thirty, Moneyball, etc.
It's the other way around, Sony Corp would own 80% of Sony Entertainment while 20% of the company would have been sold to the public.
Clooney didn't make Loeb stand down, Kaz Hirai and the entirely almost Japanese Sony Board of Directors made him step down. If anything the leadership of Sony Pictures will change, won't be surprised to see Sony get people like Jeff Robinov, Tom Rothman, or Michael De Luca to replace Pascal and Lynton.
If there's one thing Spider-Man (Webbiverse) has been lacking, it's a great villain. On the other hand, the MCU hasn't exactly had the greatest lineup either... Loki, The Winter Soldier... I can't really think of any other strong MCU villains.More importantly they (Marvel) wouldn't screw his villians up.
If there's one thing Spider-Man (Webbiverse) has been lacking, it's a great villain. On the other hand, the MCU hasn't exactly had the greatest lineup either... Loki, The Winter Soldier... I can't really think of any other strong MCU villains.
Consistent criticism with the first film falls heavily into the lack of development as far as Dr. Connors goes. He wasn't interesting, IMO. They didn't show his wife, Billy or any other important background info. It was Saturday morning cartoony how he wanted to turn the world into Lizards, and convenient that there just happened to be a device at Oscorp already made which allows him to do so.Great is pretty subjective but at least their villains have received some good development and are actually interesting characters. Maybe that's subjective too, but that's how I see it.
I don't think Sony would give him up for 1B, they're going to throw out some huge overpriced number and hope for the best and hope that Disney is desperate for Spidey, which they certainly are not. They took a franchise nobody knew existed 4 years ago and made it their 3rd biggest movie yet. The MCU turns everything they touch into gold. Sony has to be careful, turning down whatever Disney potentially might offer might come back to haunt them if they choose to do so. How many other companies are going to come in with 1B + and buy out your declining franchise.Honestly 1b would be a pretty damn good deal for Spider-Man.
Spider-Man is THE Marvel character, without him the MCU will never reach its potential.
Spidey>Wolverine>all other Marvel heroes combined
Continue with TASM universe definitely.
I don't think Spidey's movie property returning to Marvel is the ONLY way we can get a solid film franchise
If there's one thing Spider-Man (Webbiverse) has been lacking, it's a great villain. On the other hand, the MCU hasn't exactly had the greatest lineup either... Loki, The Winter Soldier... I can't really think of any other strong MCU villains.
Spidey>Wolverine>all other Marvel heroes combined
Worth noting that the movie that proceeded X-Men First Class (IMHO the best X-Men ever made) was X-Men 3 and Wolverine Origins. To say Spider-Man can't claw his way back from the brink is just wrong. You just need the right material and right people behind the camera. Get Matthew Vaughn to direct the next Spider-Man movie and Jane Goldman to write it.
Ya know I didn't give much thought to this but those Civil War rumors changed everything. I so desperately want Spider-man to be part of it I voted for Reboot and join MCU. Also my reasons why reboot is actually needed at this point:
- 'Special spider blood' kinda kills that everyman aspect of Spider-man. You shouldn't need some super special dna to get spider powers. No matter who you are, if you're bitten by radio-active/genetically modified spider, you get spider powers. Period.
- "Did you try magnetizing it"? Ugh possibly the worst part of all Spider-man movies(even worse than Andrew's TASM2 hair and Tobey's crying face). Never ever insult Peter's intelligence.
- Every supervillain comes from Oscorp. I don't have to explain this. Just nope.
There is a saying, 'careful what you wish for, you may get it'.
Suppose Spider-Man 'did' appear in Marvel Civil War and they story line plays out exactly how it does in the comics. Spider-Man is unmasked and the whole world learns his identity. Good luck writing Spider-Man after dropping 'that' bombshell.
Ya know I didn't give much thought to this but those Civil War rumors changed everything. I so desperately want Spider-man to be part of it I voted for Reboot and join MCU. Also my reasons why reboot is actually needed at this point:
- 'Special spider blood' kinda kills that everyman aspect of Spider-man. You shouldn't need some super special dna to get spider powers. No matter who you are, if you're bitten by radio-active/genetically modified spider, you get spider powers. Period.
- "Did you try magnetizing it"? Ugh possibly the worst part of all Spider-man movies(even worse than Andrew's TASM2 hair and Tobey's crying face). Never ever insult Peter's intelligence.
- Every supervillain comes from Oscorp. I don't have to explain this. Just nope.
I doubt his identity would be revealed... Civil War is almost certainly not going to be about identities
So it will be about registration? What is the point of that if the identity isn't revealed? The whole point of Civil War was transparency for the general public and authorities. Civil War as an event was so so, one of the main take away from that crossover was the Spider-Man reveal. That is why they put him in the classic red and blues.
If Spider-Man were in the cinematic Civil War and DIDN'T reveal his identity that would be a massive cop out. That would be like putting him in the cinematic Secret Wars and not putting him in the black suit.
Think the critical success of Sinister Six will ultimately decide whether Spider-Man joins the Avengers. By that I mean if Sinister Six gets rave reviews then Sony can press on with ASM 3 and take their chances this generates an upturn in fortune like First Class for the X-men. But if Sinester Six flops critically and commercially then they need to go begging to Marvel because they will need the Avengers to restore some of Spider-Man's lustre.