Hollywood is broken. The king of low-budget horror has the fix
Fortune US|October - November 2023
THE HOLLYWOOD LEGEND OF JASON BLUM has been told so many times by now that he could sell the IP: how as a struggling young producer he turned Paranormal Activity, the $15,000 found-footage thriller from 2009 that everyone told him was worthless, into a $890 million global theatrical franchise.
DEVIN GORDON
Hollywood is broken. The king of low-budget horror has the fix

How he used the spoils to build his production company, Blumhouse, into a horror hit factory that has since made nearly 200 movies and grossed $5.7 billion at the box office. How even as Hollywood's giants have seen a 90% drop in profits over the last decade, even as streaming platforms have watched their subscriber bases plateau, even as the entire theatrical business-the very idea of going out to see a movie-has become deeply imperiled, Blumhouse's hits keep coming and coming and coming. Like a serial killer with a machete in one of his movies. There's your log line.

But there's another version of Jason Blum's origin story-more of a prequel, really and it takes place in 1962, seven years before he was born. It's a story about Jason's father, an ascendant young L.A. art dealer named Irving Blum, and it opens with the day he visited the small Upper East Side Manhattan apartment of a kooky weirdo who was painting a ludicrously extensive series of Campbell's soup cans. Thirty-two of them. No one in the New York art scene liked Andy Warhol. Soup cans? Was this some kind of joke?

On the spot, Blum offered Warhol his first solo show in Los Angeles, but just for the soup cans. All 32 of them, and nothing else.

The Warhol show at Blum's Ferus Gallery was a big happening in the protean L.A. art scene, and he sold five of the paintings, for $200 each. The actor Dennis Hopper bought one. But before the canvases shipped out, Blum decided he couldn't bear the thought of the soup cans being split up. Warhol agreed, so Blum set about buying back the canvases. Then once he'd reunited them, he bought all 32 soup cans from Warhol for $1,000, which he paid in $100 increments over 10 months.

This story is from the October - November 2023 edition of Fortune US.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the October - November 2023 edition of Fortune US.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM FORTUNE USView All
AI Isn't Coming for Your Job At Least Not Yet
Fortune US

AI Isn't Coming for Your Job At Least Not Yet

So far, the technology has replaced only a small number of workers. But the future risks many more.

time-read
5 mins  |
April - May 2024
THE TRUTH EVEN HE CAN'T DUCK
Fortune US

THE TRUTH EVEN HE CAN'T DUCK

Aflac's DAN AMOS has spent his 34 years as CEO selling insurance against illness and death. Now he has to confront his aging customers' mortality and his own.

time-read
10+ mins  |
April - May 2024
THE NEW HOLLYWOOD POWER PARADIGM
Fortune US

THE NEW HOLLYWOOD POWER PARADIGM

Inside the sisterhood of stars changing the narrative.

time-read
10 mins  |
April - May 2024
SAUDI ARABIA'S POWER PIPELINE
Fortune US

SAUDI ARABIA'S POWER PIPELINE

The oil earnings flowing from the most profitable company in history are helping the Saudi kingdom shake up the global economyand the old geopolitical order.

time-read
10+ mins  |
April - May 2024
THE [FOREVER] FOUNDER
Fortune US

THE [FOREVER] FOUNDER

Michael Dell turned his dorm-room PC company into the go-to hardware provider for 99% of the Fortune 500. Now the longest-standing founder-CEO in tech has a chance to cash in on the AI bbom—and make himself and his company bigger than ever.

time-read
10+ mins  |
April - May 2024
HOW BOEING BROKE DOWN
Fortune US

HOW BOEING BROKE DOWN

Boeing's strategy sent the stock soaring more than 1,000% over 20 years. But it contained dangerous flaws that are only now coming into view amid a drumbeat of terrible news.

time-read
10+ mins  |
April - May 2024
The Art of Banking
Fortune US

The Art of Banking

To appeal to the ultrawealthy, banks like UBS keep fine art-and art expertsclose at hand.

time-read
1 min  |
April - May 2024
Is the Bitcoin Bull Market Safe to Buy?
Fortune US

Is the Bitcoin Bull Market Safe to Buy?

ETFs have made Bitcoin investing easier than ever. But they may be adding air to a bubble.

time-read
5 mins  |
April - May 2024
Goodbye, Tough Guy
Fortune US

Goodbye, Tough Guy

More executives are going on all-male retreats to open up, feel less lonely, and build empathy.

time-read
4 mins  |
April - May 2024
Memo to Silicon Valley: Bring It On
Fortune US

Memo to Silicon Valley: Bring It On

New York City's Runway was the pioneering leader in Al-generated video for years. Now ChatGPT maker OpenAl is coming for it.

time-read
6 mins  |
April - May 2024