How Ryan Coogler is rewriting Hollywood's ownership playbook
Source: Axios · Bias: Center Left
Summary
"Sinners" isn't just a commercial success, it's the latest disruptor to a film industry that covets intellectual property. Why it matters: Director Ryan Coogler, who secured a rare agreement with Warner Bros. that grants him ownership of the film in 2050, could become the first Black person to win Best Director at the Academy Awards, which airs March 15. He made history Sunday as the first person to direct two Actor Awards best ensemble winners for "Sinners" and "Black Panther." The vampire thriller secured 16 Oscar nominations, breaking a long-standing record for the most-nominated film of all time and made almost $370 million worldwide, more than four times its $90 million budget.The big picture: "Sinners" signals a decisive power shift in Hollywood — from distributor back to creator.Major studio executives are seeing other directors demand the same terms, making talent relationships difficult to manage, Vulture reports.State of play: Coogler, 39, told Business Insider he was motivated by the movie's narrative—centering on two brothers fighting for their juke joint in the Jim Crow South. The filmmaker will directly receive royalties from streaming, broadcasts, licensing and merchandising that would normally go to the studio.He says he will not seek ownership of future films. A publicist for Coogler could not make him available for an interview for this story.Chart: Axios VisualsThe other side: On a recent episode of "The Town with Matthew Belloni," Sony Film CEO Tom Rothman explained that he turned the film down because he didn't want to "institutionalize" the type of deal Coogler wanted. "You can never ruin your business for one movie...the profitability that underlines a movie studio is its library."Rothman claimed that the ownership deal Quentin Tarantino got from Sony for 2019's "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood" was "grandfathered in" from his earlier days making movies for Miramax.Zoom in: Coogler's reputation of directing box office and critically-acclaimed successes like "Black Panther" and "Creed" preceded him when Warner Bros. execs green-lit "Sinners."What they're saying: Ana-Christina Ramón, director of the Entertainment and Media Research Initiative at UCLA, says it's difficult to know how many similar deals exist since those particulars are not usually made public."The one thing that I found interesting is the fact that [the details] were leaked for an African American filmmaker."Go deeper: Vampire thriller "Sinners" breaks Oscar nomination record
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