China’s latest Hollywood move: Pumping $1B into Paramount movies

CNN

Paramount Pictures has announced a $1 billion financing deal with two Chinese firms, strengthening the U.S. studio’s ties with a lucrative but difficult market.

Huahua Media and Shanghai Film Group will put money into all Paramount’s films over the next three years, the companies said in a statement. The Chinese firms will even set up an office on the Paramount lot later this year.  

It’s not Paramount’s first link to China’s growing interest in Hollywood.

China’s richest man, Wang Jianlin, was reported to have been in talks with Paramount’s parent company, Viacom (VIA), to buy a minority stake in the studio. The deal never happened and Wang later told CNNMoney that he was only interested in a majority stake in one of the big U.S. studios.

Paramount has enjoyed success with Huahua in the past. The two companies partnered in 2014 on the marketing for “Transformers: Age of Extinction,” which became the first movie to top $300 million at the Chinese box office.

It remains to be seen whether this new deal can replicate that kind of success. China’s red hot box office cooled off significantly in 2016. Sales increased just 3.7%, a dramatic plunge from 2015’s 48% growth, according to official figures.

China is still expected to overtake the U.S. as the world’s biggest cinema market in the coming years. And Chinese companies are eager to tap into Hollywood’s ability to produce global blockbusters.

Billionaire Jack Ma’s company Alibaba Pictures acquired a minority stake in Steven Spielberg’s Ambiln Partners last year.

Wang, China’s richest man, owns Legendary Entertainment, whose hits include “Jurassic World” and “Pacific Rim.” His company, Dalian Wanda Group, also struck a financing deal with Sony Pictures last year.

But owning a major studio remains elusive. Wang complained this week that none of Hollywood’s “Big Six” are in “a selling mood.”

The increased Chinese appetite for Hollywood deals has unnerved some U.S. lawmakers and prompted calls for tougher government scrutiny.

Paramount’s new deal will help it navigate the difficulties foreign studios face in distributing and marketing movies in China. Beijing caps the number of imported films to 34, a restriction that is scheduled to be reviewed this year.

Huahua partnered with Paramount on a couple films last year that were approved for China, “Allied,” and “Star Trek Beyond.”

The promotion for “Allied” marked the first time Brad Pitt had appeared in China to promote his work in nearly 20 years. The actor was reportedly banned from the country after his starring role in the 1997 film “Seven Years in Tibet”

http://money.cnn.com/2017/01/20/media/paramount-movies-studio-china-finance-deal/

2 thoughts on “China’s latest Hollywood move: Pumping $1B into Paramount movies

  1. That’s funny that this article came up, seeing as how I just watched Paramount’s latest movie, “The Arrival”. Apparently, the moral of the story is that China controls the nations of the world and must follow them. Just watch it, especially the very end. I guess we are no longer #1 in the world.

    Just look at the movies and shows that have come out now and you’ll find how they just happen to find a way to unnecessarily slip a small Chinese group or the “We must follow the Chinese” line in there just to get people brainwashed and used to the idea. It’s so obvious, it’s ridiculous.

    I just love how the Commies are slowly inoculating the Americans into believing that China is #1 and we have to follow them in all of our movies now. (sarcasm)

    Let’s see, Transformers, Independence Day: Resurgence, The Arrival, XXX: Return of Xander Cage, and that’s just to name a few off of the top of my head.

    I don’t know why it hasn’t pissed off more Americans yet. Are they that OK with it? I guess so, since they are OK with the corporate government giving everything we have to the illegals, the Chinese, the Russians, the Syrians, the Jews and everyone else but us.

    What a world we are living in. We had everything and we just handed it over to other countries without firing a single shot.

  2. “Wang, China’s richest man,…”

    Seriously doubt that.

    My mammon would be on the Li family for that distinction.

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