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Paramount buys DreamWorks for $1.6b
From Gary Gentile
WASHINGTON—Paramount
film studios, part of Viacom, has purchased DreamWorks, makers of
“Shrek” and “Madagascar” for 1.6 billion dollars in cash, the company
said. DreamWorks SKG, which created successful computer animated
features such as “Shrek,” was also sought after by NBC Universal, a unit
of General Electric.
“In nine months we were never able to get an agreement GE,” said David
Geffen, one of the founders of DreamWorks, during a telephone conference
call. The final deal gives Paramount access to 59 films in DreamWorks’
library, including “Gladiator,” “American Beauty,” “War of the Worlds,”
“Saving Private Ryan,” and “Catch Me if You Can.”
Paramount plans to sell off the catalogue, according to the company, for
somewhere between 850 million dollars and one billion dollars, said Brad
Grey, without revealing the names of possible buyers. DreamWorks
Animation receives 75 million dollars to pay off debt. No details of the
full amount of debt were revealed, but Wall Street last week put the
amount at some 500 million dollars.
“We were never able to produce enough films to make it economically
sound,” Geffen said. “Now we’ll be able to produce films at much less
costs,” he said. Geffen said that with few exceptions the approximately
500 employees of DreamWorks will stay on the job or will take similar
jobs with Paramount. Paramount takes over all of DreamWorks’ current
projects and creates an ongoing partnership with Steven Spielberg, who
has directed some of DreamWorks’ most successful films.
Spielberg and Geffen are to produce four to six live-action films per
year of the 14-16 films Paramount said it expects to make next year.
DreamWorks Animation also announced that it had struck a seven-year deal
to distribute its films in theatres, television and home DVD and video
players worldwide.
The agreement was conditioned on Paramount’s purchase of DreamWorks. “We
are pleased with the benefits this new relationship provides DreamWorks
Animation,” stated Jeffrey Katzenberg, chief executive of DreamWorks
Animation and formerly of Walt Disney studios.
DreamWorks Animation will also be able to collaborate on new television
programming owned by Paramount’s parent company, Viacom, including
Nickelodeon, MTV, Nick at Nite, VH1, BET, TV Land, and Comedy Central.
“Over the past decade, DreamWorks Animation has produced some of the
industry’s most successful movies,” said Brad Grey, chief executive of
Paramount Pictures Group. The deal will be completed in the first
quarter of 2006, Greffen said. DreamWorks SKG carries the initial of its
founders: Spielberg, Katzenberg, and Geffen, who made his fortune in the
recording industry by producing the band Nirvana. |