Los Angeles Times

U.S. to review antitrust rules for film studios

Justice Department to scrutinize Paramount decrees, which govern movie distributi­ons.

- By Ryan Faughnder

In a surprise move that could have major implicatio­ns for Hollywood, the U.S. Department of Justice is scrutinizi­ng antitrust rules that for decades have governed the way movie studios do business with theaters.

The Justice Department on Thursday said it has opened a review of the socalled Paramount consent decrees, which have regulated the ways studios distribute films to theaters for the last 70 years.

The decrees, a series of settlement­s entered between 1948 and 1952, fundamenta­lly altered the way the movie industry worked by forcing studios to end their ownership of theater chains, thereby breaking up Hollywood’s monopoly on production, distributi­on and exhibition.

Those settlement­s followed a landmark Supreme Court case in which the justices found the studios had illegally conspired to fix prices and monopolize the distributi­on and theatrical markets.

The decrees banned multiple studio practices that were found to be anti-competitiv­e. Those included “block booking,” in which studios leveraged their most popular movies to boost the box-office receipts for their worst films, and the setting of minimum prices for movie tickets.

The review, the department said, is part of a broader deregulati­on initiative to kill old antitrust judgments it says are outdated.

“The Paramount Decrees have been on the books with no sunset provisions since 1949,” Justice Department antitrust chief Makan Delrahim said in a statement. “Much has changed in the motion picture industry since that time. It is high time that these and other legacy judgments are examined to determine whether they still serve to protect competitio­n.”

The Justice Department cited numerous changes in the motion picture business.

Long gone are the days when movie theaters had a single screen that could be dominated by one studio in a particular area. Today, the DOJ noted, cities have multiple competing cineplexes with many screens populated by movies from every studio. Additional­ly, the department said, consumers now have more choices when it comes to entertainm­ent.

Still, deregulati­ng the business could make it more difficult for smaller players to compete, especially as companies such as AMC Theatres and Walt Disney Co. get bigger. Disney is buying Fox assets in order to compete with Netf lix. AT&T just bought Time Warner in a move to control both content and distributi­on.

“The relationsh­ip between studios and theaters is under pressure,” said Jason E. Squire, a movie business professor at USC. “If anything should change, it should be in favor of the exhibitor. I don’t see how returning to block booking is going to help theaters.”

The move marks a reversal from just a few years ago, when the government moved to aggressive­ly enforce restrictio­ns on “clearances,” the controvers­ial practice of granting exclusive rights to show a movie within a certain radius. Small theater chains have argued that the practice has allowed larger companies to squeeze them out.

The history of studios owning theaters is long and complicate­d. Several studios — namely Warner Bros., 20th Century Fox and MGM — were barred from reentering the theater business without court approval, though others were not.

Yet the majors still avoided getting back into the business of owning theaters until the early 1980s, when Columbia Pictures acquired a stake in Walter Reade Organizati­on. Today, none of the studios bound by the Paramount decrees owns a significan­t number of theaters, the DOJ noted.

The review also comes as growing digital players blur the traditiona­lly drawn lines between production, distributi­on and exhibition. Netflix briefly considered buying a theater chain, The Times reported earlier this year, which would help it bypass the usual distributi­on business. However, the streaming giant ultimately cooled on the idea.

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