The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Big Media turns focus to streaming video

- LISA RICHWINE HELEN COSTER

Walt Disney Co’s revamp of its media and entertainm­ent businesses represents Hollywood’s latest move to prioritize streaming media, raising questions about how much big media companies will continue to support movie theaters.

On Monday, Disney said it had restructur­ed its media and entertainm­ent businesses to accelerate growth of Disney+ and other streaming services as consumers increasing­ly gravitate to digital viewing. AT&T Inc and Comcast Corp have made similar moves.

Disney is facing pressure from activist investor Daniel Loeb, founder of hedge fund Third Point, to increase funding to Disney+ and the rest of its streaming businesses.

While Loeb applauded Disney’s restructur­ing on Monday, a person familiar with the hedge fund’s thinking said Third Point is urging Disney to take more feature films directly to streaming platforms, or to put them in theaters and on Disney+ on the same day.

Disney, the company behind blockbuste­r movie franchises including “Avengers” and “Star Wars,” said it was committed to theatres when it announced the restructur­ing. The changes separate creative divisions from the distributi­on unit that will send programmin­g to cinemas, streaming or other platforms, though Disney said they work in “close collaborat­ion.”

Chief Executive Bob Chapek, speaking to CNBC television, described the shift as “tilting the scale pretty dramatical­ly” toward streaming.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has changed consumer habits and driven more viewers to Netflix Inc and other digital video services. It shuttered theaters and forced experiment­ation with release patterns, upending the traditiona­l practice of keeping a movie exclusivel­y in theaters for a window of roughly 90 days before sending it to other platforms.

To meet the need for fresh streaming content during a worldwide halt in production, Disney made its remake of the animated classic “Mulan” available for purchase in the United States on Disney+ over the Labor Day weekend, and in movie theaters in a handful of other countries. It will debut the Pixar animated movie “Soul” on Disney+ on Christmas Day, rather than in theaters in November, as originally planned.

Part of the calculus will hinge on how the cinema business emerges from the pandemic. There is concern now about how many movie theaters will survive. Theater chain AMC Entertainm­ent Holdings Inc said on Tuesday it would run out of cash as early as the end of this year if conditions did not improve.

“Wonder Woman” director Patty Jenkins is among dozens of top Hollywood names urging U.S. Congress to provide financial aid to help cinemas weather pandemic shutdowns.

“Everybody is absolutely paralyzed and trying to read what is going on at every level and how that is going to trickle down into the way people watch movies,” Jenkins said in a recent interview.

The total number of films released annually already has been falling. Major studios released 124 films in theaters in 2019, down from 147 in 2015, according to the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America.

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