Los Angeles Times

Another v ideo serv ice in works

- By Ryan Faughnder ryan.faughnder@latimes.com

Movie studio Lionsgate and Comic-Con Internatio­nal are set to launch a streaming video service this year, as viewing habits continue to move online, especially among the young.

The Santa Monica minimajor studio behind the blockbuste­r “Hunger Games” films began discussing the service with Comic-Con nearly two years ago. The offering will be subscripti­on-based, though the companies did not say what they would charge viewers for access.

The online channel will feature original short videos, Comic-Con archive footage, and movies and TV shows from Lionsgate and other studios, the companies said. Specific titles were not mentioned.

It’s the latest move into streaming by Lionsgate, which last year teamed with China’s Alibaba Group on a video service for Alibaba’s set-top boxes.

In October, Lionsgate also partnered with Tribeca Enterprise­s, which runs the Tribeca Film Festival, for a service targeting movie aficionado­s called Tribeca Short List. That service, planned to debut this summer, will be run from New York.

Other big media companies have been busy chasing viewers who prefer watching their movies and TV programmin­g online. Time Warner Inc.’s pay-TV channel HBO just made its HBO Now on-demand service available through Apple TV for people who don’t pay for a cable package. HBO Now costs $15 a month.

CBS Corp.’s new service, dubbed CBS All Access, charges $6 a month.

The popularity of ComicCon’s annual San Diego convention has grown as comicbook-themed and otherwise geek-oriented entertainm­ent has increasing­ly driven pop culture — and the box-office. Last year, 17 of the top 20 domestic film releases “had a presence” at the Comic-Con event, Lionsgate and Comic-Con said.

On the TV side, shows such as “The Walking Dead,” “Game of Thrones” and “American Horror Story” have made their mark with the Comic-Con crowd.

For its part, Lionsgate used the 2014 Comic-Con to launch its first trailer for “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay — Part 1,” the third installmen­t in the blockbuste­r franchise starring Jennifer Lawrence.

The convention drew 130,000 attendees last year, and passes for July’s event at the San Diego Convention Center sold out in an hour.

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