Originally published Tuesday, November 24, 2009 at 12:19 AM
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Disney's new movie chief recasting studio
Seeking to recast the studio for the digital era, Rich Ross and Bob Iger have set in motion a plan to challenge entrenched practices, potentially pitting Disney against theater owners, retailers and other business partners.
Los Angeles Times
HOLLYWOOD —
If you thought President Obama moved quickly, that's nothing compared with the first 50 days of the Ross administration.
In less than eight weeks, Rich Ross has stamped his imprimatur on Walt Disney Studios. The novice movie chairman and his boss, Walt Disney Co. CEO Bob Iger, want to create a new business model for Hollywood to address the sweeping changes roiling the entertainment industry, including slumping DVD sales and the growing role the Internet plays in movie marketing.
Seeking to recast the studio for the digital era, Ross and Iger have set in motion a plan to challenge entrenched practices, potentially pitting Disney against theater owners, retailers and other business partners. The gambit, if it works, could be emulated by other studios.
If it backfires, it could undermine what historically has been the creative heart of Disney.
In meetings with producers, filmmakers and agents, Ross attacked the industry custom of spending $40 million on TV advertising two weeks before a film's opening, rather than enlisting more targeted campaigns that harness social networks and the broader Web.
And he again has raised the touchy subject advanced by Iger that people want movies for home viewing sooner after release in theaters than has been the case.
Hollywood might finally be absorbing the message.
"Any of us that are sitting around protecting old business models unfortunately are destined to have a hard time succeeding in the coming years," said Sam Gores, chairman of talent agency Paradigm. "We have to maximize our existing models and, more importantly, build new ones."
It's too soon to know whether Ross, a seasoned TV executive, can pull off his ambitious plan as well as transition to the movie side of the business — the track record in Hollywood is mixed. Ross declined to be interviewed.
In September, Iger stunned the industry when he ousted Disney movie Chairman Dick Cook, a 38-year veteran who began as a Monorail operator at Disneyland.
By installing Ross, who built the Disney Channel into a global juggernaut, Iger gains more control over a key division he believed had long operated too independently.
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Since Ross took over in October, he has dismissed several top executives and begun restructuring operations. In the process, some say, the executive displays flashes of brusqueness and impatience.
The upheaval has created anxiety and even disrupted business dealings.
A meeting with director Tim Burton and producer Joe Roth to discuss marketing plans for the March release of their film "Alice in Wonderland," for example, was abruptly canceled pending an executive shake-up, leaving the filmmakers flummoxed.
Since then, Disney watchers have needed a scorecard to track the comings and goings.
Last month, Ross flew to New York to fire Daniel Battsek, the head of Disney's struggling specialty-movie label who, despite the unit's recent poor track record, was caught off guard.
A week later, he pushed out another veteran, Mark Zoradi, president of Walt Disney Motion Pictures Group, in a prelude to his overhaul of the marketing and distribution operations.
Ross next let go marketing President Jim Gallagher and elevated former home-video chief Bob Chapek to an expanded role that encompasses all aspects of film distribution from movie theaters to home and digital delivery, breaking with the conventional role of booking movies into theaters.
In the coming weeks, Ross plans to hire a new marketing chief who will have an equally broad mandate to handle the promotion of films from multiplexes to living rooms.
Beyond organizational changes, Ross' vision for the types of movies that ultimately will define Disney is beginning to emerge. His main focus will be developing family-friendly movies under the Disney label.
Iger's overarching strategy is to amass a stable of recognizable entertainment brands — Pixar Animation Studios and the pending acquisition of Marvel Entertainment — and exploit the films across its TV, theme parks, consumer products and game divisions.
"It's brand over everything else," said Roth, who once ran Disney's studio. It's a strategy, he notes, that while designed to reduce risk is not without a downside. "What may get lost in the shuffle are non-branded original ideas that have no pre-awareness."
One of the challenges Ross faces is how to navigate the release dates for Disney's event movies, including those from high-powered producers Jerry Bruckheimer and Bob Zemeckis.
"It's very difficult because there are only X-number of really key release dates and a lot of filmmakers who make big movies," said Bruckheimer, responsible for Disney's "Pirates of the Caribbean" franchise.
Ross, to a great degree, is doing what every new studio chief does: comb through the list of existing projects to decide those that live and those that die. Last week, he torpedoed the planned $150 million production of "Captain Nemo: 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea," which had been envisioned as a new franchise.
One of the things he's told agents is he's looking to make more movies that appeal to women. In meetings, Ross cited the studio's upcoming release "Old Dogs," a comedy starring Robin Williams and John Travolta, as a missed opportunity to develop the female characters that would widen the movie's appeal.
"He seems to be open to broadening what it means to be a Disney movie," said United Talent Agency partner Jeremy Zimmer, "And to have more diversity and stronger execution of movies."
A few weeks ago, Ross and Iger visited Burton and Roth, who showed them a 10-minute 3-D clip of "Alice In Wonderland." Ross, who at Disney Channel was known for nurturing talent, apparently hit it off with the eccentric Burton.
"Rich was very good with Tim, really enthusiastic," Roth said.
Now, Ross will have to work his magic on the studio's biggest star, Johnny Depp, who plays The Mad Hatter in "Alice in Wonderland" and Jack Sparrow in the "Pirates of the Caribbean" series. Depp was shaken over the dismissal of Cook and said at the time the former studio chief embodied the quality he valued most.
"You generally don't meet people at the studios you trust," Depp said.
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