Los Angeles Times

Back in Marvel’s f ilm universe

Sony Pictures lends the keys for its lucrative film franchise to a rival

- By Ryan Faughnder

Sony’s upcoming “Spider-Man” movie marks a rare collaborat­ion between rival studios.

Sony Pictures Entertainm­ent was running out of options for its most valuable film franchise, Spider-Man. After 15 years and five movies of web-slinging, the studio was struggling to give the character a much-needed reset.

So in early 2015, Sony’s top two executives, Michael Lynton and Amy Pascal, f lew to the Palm Beach, Fla., home of Marvel Entertainm­ent Chief Executive Isaac Perlmutter, who’d spent months lobbying Sony to let his company, owned by rival Walt Disney Co., reboot the popular hero.

It was an extraordin­ary propositio­n for Sony — to lend the keys to its lucrative property to a rival. But Sony was finally willing to swallow its pride to get a SpiderMan movie made by the most successful superhero producer ever, Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige. Over lunch at Perlmutter’s swanky oceanfront residence, the executives hashed out budgets, sequel possibilit­ies and how Spider-Man would interact with other Marvel characters.

The results of that deal will be tested when “Spider-Man: Homecoming” hits theaters July 7. “Homecoming” is the first Spider-Man movie to exist in Marvel’s broad “cinematic universe” of interwoven superhero movies, something fans of the comics have desired for years.

Marvel has long wanted to bring Spider-Man into the fold through its movies, because the character is one of the most famous from the comic books. His youth, cheeky attitude and unique abilities have earned him a cherished place in the Marvel canon.

“I never thought we’d be able to make a Spider-Man movie set in our universe, and here we are,” Feige told The Times. “It truly was a dream-come-true scenario.”

And exceedingl­y rare. Rival film companies typically don’t team up on production­s, except in unusual circumstan­ces. In a famous example, Fox turned to Paramount to help finance James Cameron’s “Titanic” when the 1997 movie went over budget.

Studios tend to hoard credit for their high-profile projects. But if Sony and

Marvel’s gamble works, it will pay off handsomely for both.

Early signs are encouragin­g. The $175-million “Spider-Man: Homecoming,” starring Tom Holland as the title character, is expected to gross up to $100 million from the U.S. and Canada in its opening weekend, making it a bona fide hit, according to people who have reviewed audience surveys.

Sony, which financed the project, will reap the profits and keep its most important piece of intellectu­al property alive at a time when it could really use a box-office hit. The studio has weathered a series of misfires that triggered management shakeups.

Sony also hopes to use Spider-Man’s popularity for spinoffs, including “Venom” and “Silver & Black,” about female characters Silver Sable and Black Cat.

Disney-owned Marvel stands to benefit because it owns the lucrative merchandis­ing rights to Spider-Man, which it acquired in 2011. It also gets to use Spider-Man in its own popular superhero movies, including last year’s “Captain America: Civil War,” which amassed $1.15 billion at the box office.

“This was a way to get the new incarnatio­n of SpiderMan on the right track,” said Jason E. Squire, a film business professor at USC.

Redoing Spider-Man was always going to be risky. “Homecoming” is the third Spider-Man reboot since 2002, and audiences have already rejected several would-be franchise revivals at the multiplex this summer, including “Alien: Covenant” and “The Mummy.”

“With a property like Spider-Man, you have such a huge responsibi­lity to the audience to do it right,” said Sanford Panitch, president of Columbia Pictures, the Sony unit releasing the new movie. “Allowing Marvel to bring him into their Marvel cinematic universe and bring back Peter Parker to his essence is delivering on that responsibi­lity.”

Lynton and Pascal, who left their leadership roles at Sony amid the box-office struggles, declined to comment. Pascal stepped down after the massive 2014 cyberattac­k on the studio, which was blamed on North Korea. Shortly after announcing her departure, Sony said Pascal would produce the Spider-Man movie alongside Feige. Tom Rothman now runs the movie unit.

Lynton exited this year to join Snapchat maker Snap Inc. He was replaced by former Fox television executive Tony Vinciquerr­a this month.

The Sony-Marvel deal was unusual because little money changed hands. Sony paid Marvel an undisclose­d producers fee, but Marvel won’t receive any of the profits. Instead, the companies are sharing their most popular characters.

For “Homecoming,” Sony is getting a boost from Robert Downey Jr. as Iron Man (a.k.a. Tony Stark), who has a major presence in the film and marketing materials. Marvel and Disney got to use Holland as SpiderMan in last year’s “Captain America: Civil War” and in the upcoming Avengers movie, “Infinity War.”

“It’s a real accomplish­ment for Marvel Studios to bring Spider-Man back into the fold without owning the intellectu­al property,” Squire said.

Sony acquired the film rights for Spider-Man in 1999, and released the first movie, directed by Sam Raimi and starring Tobey Maguire, in 2002. Sony produced two successful “Spider-Man” sequels, one in 2004 and the other in 2007. Disney bought Marvel Entertainm­ent in 2009 for $4 billion, giving it access to a host of superheroe­s, but not Spider-Man. Then Sony rebooted the property in 2012 with “The Amazing SpiderMan,” starring Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone. That film and its 2014 sequel delivered diminishin­g returns at the box office.

“The Amazing Spider Man 2” received mediocre reviews and took in $202 million domestical­ly, half the haul of the first Raimi version. Globally, it was the lowest-grossing movie in the series, with $709 million. That left Sony’s leadership in a pickle.

After $4 billion in global box-office revenue, the studio was considerin­g multiple ways to keep the property afloat, according to Sony insiders. It could try again with “The Amazing SpiderMan 3” or develop a brandnew standalone Spider-Man series. Another intriguing idea was to reintroduc­e Spider-Man through the studio’s planned production of “Sinister Six,” about a group of super-villains. But most of those ideas felt too convoluted, knowledgea­ble people said.

Meanwhile, Marvel had shaken up the superhero business since it launched the first “Iron Man” in 2008. Over the next decade, Feige and his producing team built a successful series of interconne­cted superhero films featuring the likes of Iron Man, Captain America and the Incredible Hulk, along with more obscure characters such as Doctor Strange and Ant-Man. The company’s 15 movies to date have hauled in $11.8 billion in global receipts.

“I don’t think [Sony] had a choice but to do this, because they had nowhere else to go with this brand,” said Bruce Nash, a movie business analyst with Nash Informatio­n Services. “They have to keep making SpiderMan films. That’s the truth of the matter.”

The idea to bring in Marvel had been in the works long before there was a deal. Feige first pitched Pascal in 2014, during a lunch meeting on her office patio overlookin­g Culver City, to let him make the next Spider-Man movie.

Though Pascal was reluctant at first, the two executives continued to discuss the matter at her office and home, working out what a Marvel Studios “SpiderMan” movie would look like, said people familiar with the discussion­s but not authorized to comment.

Feige wanted to bring Spider-Man and Peter Parker back to his essence: a teenager fighting crime alongside Avengers and dealing with grown-up themes, who also has to get to class on time. Finally, Pascal was convinced.

“We’ve been able to create this cinematic universe that now provides that backdrop onto which you can put Peter Parker and have that dynamic he was always meant to have,” Feige said. “To Amy’s credit and to Michael Lynton’s credit, they realized this was the best thing for the character.”

While Feige oversaw the creative direction, Pascal was instrument­al in key decisions, including the casting of Holland, the developmen­t of the script, and the hiring of director Jon Watts, whose previous feature was the 2015 Kevin Bacon thriller “Cop Car.” Pascal was also key in the developmen­t of Michael Keaton’s character, Vulture, a powerful nemesis with working-class roots. The film was shot in Atlanta and was edited and scored on the Sony lot in Culver City.

“Because we were united in what we were trying to accomplish, it made for a very easy process,” Panitch said. “We’re getting a superhero movie produced by the greatest superhero movie producer in the world.”

‘It’s a real accomplish­ment for Marvel Studios to bring Spider-Man back into the fold without owning the intellectu­al property.’ — Jason E. Squire, a film business professor at USC

 ?? Chuck Zlotnick Columbia Pictures ?? TOM HOLLAND has the title role in “Spider-Man: Homecoming,” which hits theaters July 7. Its early box-office signs are encouragin­g.
Chuck Zlotnick Columbia Pictures TOM HOLLAND has the title role in “Spider-Man: Homecoming,” which hits theaters July 7. Its early box-office signs are encouragin­g.
 ?? Evan Agostini Getty Images ?? SONY’S Michael Lynton and Amy Pascal f lew to Florida in 2015 to pitch a Spider-Man deal to Marvel.
Evan Agostini Getty Images SONY’S Michael Lynton and Amy Pascal f lew to Florida in 2015 to pitch a Spider-Man deal to Marvel.
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 ?? Marvel Studios / TNS ?? MARVEL and Disney also used Tom Holland as Spider-Man in last year’s “Captain America: Civil War.”
Marvel Studios / TNS MARVEL and Disney also used Tom Holland as Spider-Man in last year’s “Captain America: Civil War.”

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