Disney cuts film budget
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Walt Disney Co. President Robert Iger said Wednesday that the company
will scale back its investments in live-action films and instead
focus on films released under the Disney name.
The company has found it gets a better return on Disney-branded
films and it is a better investment overall to allocate money to
strengthen the Disney name, Iger said.
“By investing in a Disney-branded film we have the ability to
leverage or exploit across multiple businesses in the company,
multiple platforms technologically and multiple markets
internationally,” Iger said.
Part of the scaling back will include fewer films released by its
Miramax Film Corp., which under its former chairmen Bob and Harvey
Weinstein had become a full-fledged studio that the company was
spending too much money on, Iger said.
“We are still in the Miramax business but it will be reconstituted
so it basically looks more like the business [the Weinsteins] started
-- independent films and four, five or six low-budget pictures,” Iger
said.
Iger made his comments 10 days before he takes the reins as chief
executive officer of the entertainment giant during a conference call
hosted by Goldman Sachs at its 14th annual Communacopia Conference
Iger and current CEO Michael Eisner have worked together for more
than a decade -- ever since Disney’s 1995 purchase of ABC Television,
where Iger was the network president and chief operating officer.
Iger became Disney president and a member of the company’s board in
January 2000.
That relationship is making for a smooth transition, Iger said.
“He has created incredible shareholder value over the 21 years he
was CEO of the company and built the Walt Disney Co. into the modern
media conglomerate that it is today,” Iger said of Eisner.
During the 50-minute presentation, Iger hit on a number of
subjects including a new partnership with Verizon to carry 12
Disney-owned television channels on the Verizon FiOS high-speed
Internet service; the status of discussions between Disney and Pixar
Animation to continue making films together; the successes of ABC
Television; and the affects of Hurricane Katrina on business at Walt
Disney World in Orlando.
“It was only a weekend disruption,” Iger said of reduced visitors
to the theme park. “The amount of visitation from the areas hardest
hit -- Louisiana and Mississippi -- is very low.”
And dismissing as speculation that ABC Radio was on the selling
block, Iger conceded that changes are coming down the road.
“We feel good about the business and how we’ve run it but we are
taking a good, hard look at the future and best way to drive
shareholder value,” Iger said.
ABC Radio operates 72 stations nationwide.
Iger being named as Eisner’s replacement this spring created
controversy for the company when Roy E. Disney -- whose father and
uncle founded the company -- and Stanley Gold filed a lawsuit
challenging the process used to name Iger as head of Disney.
In July, the Disney and Gold dropped the lawsuit and set aside
their differences with the company over its direction and giving
support to Iger. At the same time, Roy Disney was named as a as
director emeritus and consultant.
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