Los Angeles Times

Rhythm & Hues gets a lifeline

The ailing visual effects firm needs the money to finish work on current projects.

- By Richard Verrier richard.verrier@latimes.com

A judge approves a $17-million loan from two movie studios to keep the visual effects company running.

A federal judge approved a $17-million loan from two movie studios to keep the lights on at troubled Rhythm & Hues, the award-winning visual effects company that worked on the Oscar-nominated “Life of Pi.”

Rhythm & Hues Inc., based in El Segundo, filed for bankruptcy protection Wednesday under Chapter 11 of the federal Bankruptcy Code after laying off 250 employees.

As part of its plan to avoid liquidatio­n, Rhythm & Hues said it secured a $17million loan from Universal Studios and 20th Century Fox to complete work on current projects, including “R.I.P.D.” and “Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters.”

Warner Bros., which is owed $4.9 million, is not providing any financing, the firm said in court filings.

On Friday a Bankruptcy Court judge approved the loan on an interim basis, giving a financial lifeline to Rhythm & Hues, which experience­d a sharp drop in revenue last year.

The company posted a $22.5-million net loss in 2012 as revenue fell to $95 million, down from $121 million in 2011, court records state.

Rhythm & Hues cited several factors, including a decrease in film production at Fox and Universal — historical­ly two of its largest customers — as well as rising competitio­n from rivals in Canada, Britain, Australia and New Zealand.

The company added that higher labor costs in Los Angeles, such as the requiremen­t to pay overtime, also contribute­d to its financial woes. At the end of 2012, Rhythm & Hues had assets of $27 million and liabilitie­s of $33.8 million.

The visual effects company also was hit Friday with a class-action lawsuit filed on behalf of 250 L.A.based employees who lost their jobs just before the bankruptcy filing.

Thomas Capizzio, a 16year employee, alleged in the lawsuit that he and other workers at the studio were not given proper notice of the layoffs just days before the Wednesday bankruptcy filing. The layoff violates a federal law requiring that employees be given 60 days’ notice before a layoff, the suit alleges.

Founded in 1987, Rhythm & Hues has created effects for such movies as “The Golden Compass,” “Babe,” “Django Unchained,” “Snow White and the Huntsman” and “Life of Pi,” for which it won an award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts.

It also has studios in Canada, India, Malaysia and Taiwan that are not affected by the bankruptcy filing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States