*
Village Roadshow has a $365 million bid for its film
library
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Film library includes over 100 films, like The Matrix,
Ocean's
Eleven
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Warner Bros dispute, writer blacklist drove bankruptcy
filing
By Dietrich Knauth
NEW YORK, March 18 (Reuters) - U.S. film producer
Village Roadshow Entertainment Group is "open to all bids" for a
film library that includes rights to well-known movies like The
Matrix, Ocean's Eleven, and The Joker, a company attorney said
on Tuesday at a court hearing a day after filing for bankruptcy.
Los Angeles-based Village Roadshow filed for Chapter 11 with
a tentative agreement to sell its film library to investment
firm Content Partners for $365 million. But the agreement is
subject to overbids, and Village Roadshow hopes to hold an
auction in May before seeking court approval of a sale, the
company's attorney Justin Bernbrock told U.S. Bankruptcy Judge
Thomas Horan in Delaware, who is overseeing the case.
Village Roadshow entered bankruptcy with $393 million in
secured debt.
The company's film library, which generates $50 million in
annual revenue, is its most valuable asset in bankruptcy. It
includes the rights to 108 films including the Joker, The Matrix
trilogy, Ocean's series, The Lego Movie, and The Great Gatsby.
The films generated $19 billion in total box office receipts and
have won 19 Academy Awards, according to Village Roadshow's
court filings.
An attorney for Alcon Entertainment said Tuesday that his
client was a potential bidder for the film library. Bernbrock
said that Warner Bros could also bid for Village
Roadshow's film rights.
Most of Village Roadshow's films were co-produced with
Warner Bros, and the breakdown of that partnership was one of
the factors that pushed the company to seek bankruptcy
protection, according to court filings.
Village Roadshow sued Warner Bros in 2022 over the studio's
move to release "The Matrix Resurrections" simultaneously in
theaters and on HBO Max, alleging that Warner Bros breached a
co-production agreement to attract more subscribers to its
streaming platform.
The litigation has soured the companies' working
relationship, caused Village Roadshow to rack up $18 million in
unpaid legal bills, and risks an adverse ruling that could
"flatten" Village Roadshow's balance sheet, according to court
filings.
Warner Bros' attorney Steven Warren said Tuesday an
arbitrator had already sided with Warner Bros in the dispute
over the Matrix Resurrections' release. Warner Bros was the
"creative spark" in all of the movies that the two companies
co-produced, while Village Roadshow provided financing in
exchange for a portion of the film revenues, Warren said.
Village Roadshow faced other challenges besides its dispute
with Warner Bros, including a challenging market for movie
theaters after the COVID-19 pandemic and an unprofitable effort
to produce its own films and television shows after a private
equity buyout in 2017.
Village Roadshow's studio business has significant unpaid
debts to writers, which damaged its reputation and caused the
Writers' Guild to blacklist the company in December 2024.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and
Marguerita Choy)
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