Posted on 11/04/2009 8:20:12 AM PST by denydenydeny
This has been coming for some time, and after recent shakeups at Disney, is really no great surprise. Now Daniel Battsek, the current president of Miramax, has announced that hell step down at the end of January 2010. At the same time, Disney will relocate the label from New York City to Disneys headquarters in Burbank, CA, where theyll reduce Miramaxs output to just three films a year. The label that launched Steven Soderbergh, Quentin Tarantino and Kevin Smith and was the biggest face of the 90s indie explosion is basically dead.
OK, the real end of the era hit four years ago, when the Weinstein brothers left Miramax, the company they built into an indie juggernaut. The years since then have been an extended coda for Miramax as it soldiered on at Disney. Weve known for some time that Miramax would be cutting back, and that move was seen as part of the death knell of the indie in general. But Battseks exit is a surprise, as Disney had recently said that he would continue to oversee all aspects of creative, development, production and business and legal affairs. Corporate climates change fast.
While Miramax wasnt truly indie since Disney bought into it in 1993,the company the Weinsteins built into the most recognizable face of indie film remained a player post-Weinstein. Gone Baby Gone, No Country For Old Men, The Queen, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly: all Miramax. Now THR reports that Battsek is exiting and that only about 20 jobs will remain. This all comes after a rough year for the company: Adventureland, Extract, Cheri and The Boys Are Back were all underperformers.
Where will the indie culture be in a few years? The big-ticket indie represented by Miramax is almost a dinosaur. While Fox Searchlight, Focus Features and Sony Pictures Classics are still doing well, none of those are actually independent, and theres been a great deal of commentary in the past six months about the death of the American indie. But if it is truly dying, then how did we get Big Fan, Worlds Greatest Dad, Precious, We Live in Public, That Evening Sun, Black Dynamite (bought by Sony Classics, but not made by them) and many other true indies this year? The landscape is changing, and fast, but it isnt dying. This is a changing of the guard, if a difficult one.
Does this mean that we are finally rid of the ultra-Leftist Weinstein brothers?
Good news-but the Weinsteins won’t be missing many meals,
since they screwed everone who worked for them!
Probably not. $hitload of money=ability to impose publicity on the world. So they’ll be back.
The curious thing in something like this is - in a business like filmmaking - why isn’t it true that everything depends on what is on the screen to the extent that this kind of behind the scenes (production company organization) story is irrelevant? I don’t know why anyone should care about how the deck chairs are arranged at a certain production firm.
Not a lot of winners here in this list of titles.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_films_released_by_Miramax_Films
“Indie” = Indiana Jones? LOL!
The Weinsteins left Miramax to set up their own studio, The Weinstein Company. That company is struggling financially although Glorious Bastards might of stayed off execution for awhile.
And to think, Miramax thought Lord of The Rings was not going to be a success, and passed on trying to bring it to the screen.
First off, the latest Moore film wasn't produced by Miramax. It's from Overture Films, which is a division of Liberty Media, part of the John Malone empire.
Second, the film has made $13 million at the box office. I can't find the budget for this one, but his previous films have had budgets in the $6-$8 million range, so this one is probably in the black. And it's still ticking along, making about $750k last week.
So, Hollywood’s hurting along with the rest of the country?
GOOD.
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