試す 金 - 無料
Brian Goldner
The Hollywood Reporter
|June 14, 2017
Hasbro’s CEO on the future of Transformers, Disney’s Princess bonanza and why buying a studio is ‘very compelling’ By Tatiana Siegel
In 2002, Brian Goldner, a then-rising executive at Hasbro, was pitching studios the robot-morphing Transformers toys as the next Spider-Man, which had just ushered in the new tentpole movie era. One day, while having lunch in L.A., he ran into Spider-Man producer Avi Arad. “He told me that I shouldn’t embarrass myself because it was going to be impossible to execute,” recalls Goldner, who has been CEO since 2008. He kept pushing, though, and two years later, DreamWorks and Paramount bought film rights to the megafranchise, whose four films have grossed $3.8 billion worldwide. A fifth chapter, and the final one directed by Michael Bay, opens June 21.
Goldner takes a hands-on approach when it comes to the company’s toy-to-film properties, which also have included two G.I. Joe movies ($678 million worldwide) and two Jason Blum-produced micro-budget Ouija films ($186 million). He frequented the Transformers writers room headed up by Akiva Goldsman in 2015 and retained script approval. The company’s first internally hatched film, the animated My Little Pony, will be released by Lionsgate on Oct. 6.
Just as important to Hasbro, whose revenues were $5 billion in 2016, is the screen-to-toy business. In 2014, it signed a lucrative licensing deal with Disney for its Princess and Frozen brands, and it has licensing rights to the Star Wars and Marvel brands through 2020. Goldner, 54, who oversees a staff of 5,400, sat down with THR in his Pawtucket, Rhode Island, office — just north of the posh seaside town of Barrington, where he lives with his wife while his daughter attends Dartmouth, his alma mater.
このストーリーは、The Hollywood Reporter の June 14, 2017 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
The Hollywood Reporter からのその他のストーリー
The Hollywood Reporter
Michael Ovitz, Me And The Truce That Never Was
As a new book puts the focus back on CAA’s origins, Kim Masters recalls how the agent’s fit at The Palm and her follow-up kicked off one of Hollywood’s prickliest pas de deux.
12 mins
September 2-9, 2016 Double Issue
The Hollywood Reporter
Ryan Murphy: American Success Story
The prolific producer opens up about the future of American Horror Story, his plans for more Broadway and the real reason an American Crime Story season centered on Hurricane Katrina won’t be quite as depressing as it sounds.
7 mins
August 2016 Emmy 3
The Hollywood Reporter
Relativity 2.0: The Plan To Save Hollywood's
A year ago, the company’s epic meltdown ended in bankruptcy. Now, in an exclusive interview, Ryan Kavanaugh reveals his relaunch strategy along with his new Oscar-nominated man about town, Dana Brunetti, who asks, ‘What the f— were they thinking?’ as they take stock and promise this time (really!) things will be different.
8 mins
October 7-14, 2016 Double Issue
The Hollywood Reporter
Westworld
HBO’s ambitious series about an unusual theme park is dark, dense and deeply intriguing.
3 mins
October 7-14, 2016 Double Issue
The Hollywood Reporter
Yul Brynner: One Lens, Ten Commandments
As the most expensive film ever made in its day nears its 60th anniversary, the late star’s daughter reveals the images captured on Cecil B. DeMille’s set by the legendary actor.
2 mins
September 30, 2016
the hollywood reporter
i'm the trump of hollywood
jon peters ruled over and rampaged through showbiz in the ’80s: megadeals, megafeuds and millions made (and lost). now, in his first interview in a decade, the former hairdresser who likens himself to (and voted for) the president-elect talks peter guber, barbra streisand, love, his new star is born remake and how he’s still collecting yuuuge paychecks off superman.
13 mins
january 20, 2017
the hollywood reporter
making of o.j.: made in america
what more was there to say about o.j. simpson? but then director ezra edelman discovered in his epic film a whole untold saga about race.
6 mins
january 20, 2017
The Hollywood Reporter
A Short Tribute To Long Movie Titles
These days, films say it all in a word as Hollywood’s top honors over the decades increasingly have beenawarded to the industry’s one-word wonders.
3 mins
January 2017, Awards 1 Special
The Hollywood Reporter
Malibu's Star Realtor and the $15M Flip Gone 'Fishy'
Even in the hands of top broker Chris Cortazzo, Zare and Seda Baghdasarian’s architectural gem in one of the coast’s most coveted enclaves failed to sell — until he offered to buy it. Now, in a bitter lawsuit, they claim the Hollywood broker sabotaged their efforts with an eye on a profitable resale for himself all along.
11 mins
August 19, 2016
The Hollywood Reporter
The Sad Comics Company Disney Bought Pre-Marvel
Mark Alessi’s dream died for many reasons, but he points a (middle) finger at one person in particular: ‘I wouldn’t spit on Spielberg to put out a fire’
4 mins
July 29 - August 5, 2016 Double Issue
Translate
Change font size
