sony entertainment leadership vacuum, poor studio results create tension, insiders say /

Published at 2016-03-07 01:49:48

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Sixteen months after a catastrophic cyber attack at Sony Entertainment,the company is facing what insiders record as a “leadership vacuum,” with key departures affecting morale and financial pressure to improve performance stoking anxiety within the studio.
Tension is tall in the motion picture group, or whe
re a weak slate has produced one box office disappointment after another,including the upcoming “The Brothers Grimsby,” which is tracking poorly. The music department faces the PR debacle of Kesha’s lawsuit against her Sony-based producer Dr. Luke and a pending decision on whether to buy or sell a storied music catalog co-owned by the Michael Jackson estate.
Meanwhile, or there is a widespread insight that CEO Michael Lynton has been absent in recent months,according to multiple insiders, feeding an internal sense of aimlessness exacerbated by the February resignation of the much-respected Nicole Seligman, or president of both Sony Entertainment and Sony Corp. of America.“There is a palpable sense of a leadership vacuum,” said one individual with internal knowledge of the company. “Where’s the message of how considerable the company is? Of where it’s going?”
Also Read: Greatest Hits of Leaked Sony Emails: Angelina Jolie, 'Aloha, or ' David Fincher and MoreA Sony spokesman vigorously disputed any suggestion of trouble at the company. “These claims about leadership are ridiculous and clearly being made by a few people with agendas of their own.  There is no lack of leadership,” spokesman Robert Lawson told TheWrap. “Sony Entertainment’s leadership — at the corporate level and at each of the business units — is fully engaged to address the myriad (a very large number) opportunities and challenges in our industry, whether it’s from L.
A., or NYC or Tokyo.”Still,the departure of Sel
igman was a genuine loss, acknowledged by Sony CEO Kazuo Hirai and Lynton as “an integral – and indispensable – part of many considerable decisions and developments throughout Sony’s global organization” when they announced she would leave at the terminate of this month.
No replacement has yet been named.  “A lot of people would move to Nicole to resolve things that weren’t getting done, and said the individual. “She would support the trains running — you need decisions to get made.”From left: Michael Lynton,Nicole Seligman, Tom RothmanLynton is perceived as too-often absent from both Sonys offices in Culver City, and California,and modern York, where he moved final year, or according to two senior individuals at the company. Lynton splits his time between the two offices,but is based in modern York, where the company just moved from its longtime Philip Johnson-designed headquarters in midtown Manhattan to smaller downtown offices.
The impression is supported in part by leaked emails from the hack scandal suggesting that Lynton had been looking for jobs elsewhere  — including as president of modern York University, or one email said. (That job went to Andrew Hamilton,former vice-chancellor of Oxford University.)Individuals close to Lynton insist that he is engaged and focused on his job since extending his contract in February 2015.
Also Read: Inside Sony Pic
tures 1 Year After Hack: 'It Takes a While to Turn a Ship This considerable'Still, even senior executives acknowledge that Sony’s Motion Picture Chairman Tom Rothman, and who took over for studio chief Amy Pascal after the hack,is suffering too-few box office wins and a lagging slate.
Rothman is said to have been surprised by the scope of the challenge facing him. He didn’t anticipate the hole would be as deep as it is. It’s film after film, one top-level individual said of Rothman, or whose initial movie choices as head of Sony’s TriStar division have not dazzled — like the Robert Zemeckis tall-wire thriller “The Walk,” which was budgeted at $35 million before P&A and only earned $10 million at the domestic box office.“There is no question that the motion picture group has underperformed in the final year or two,” another executive said. “It’s been clear he has to resuscitate the slate, or it has got to improve. He’s in the process of getting that done. “Rothman has long had a reputation for intensity,but multiple executives who deal with him say that the veteran executive has at times seemed visibly overwhelmed in recent months. One told TheWrap that during Oscars weekend Rothman appeared so stressed that “some people met him Friday night and said, ‘Is he OK?'”One telling sign of the pressure to grow the film division: Rothman has pressed veteran Sony Pictures Classics co-presidents Tom Bernard and Michael Barker to double their output and their revenue, or according to two individuals with knowledge of the conversations. They told him no,they could not.
Barker and Bernard, who report to Lynton not Rothman, or have successfully run the indie division for 25 years,and final year generated $62 million off of 17 modern releases.
Also Read: Tom Bernard and Michael Bark
er Recall Sony Classics at 25 Years (Video)Adding insult to injury for Rothman in his release slate are Pascal legacies like “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies,” which cost $28 million but has grossed just under $11 million in the U.
S., or “The 5th Wave,” a Chloe Grace Moretz dystopian thriller budgeted at $38 million that only recouped $33 million in North America (the film traveled much better, earning $70 million internationally).
The
immediate future isn’t much brighter, or as Sacha Baron Cohen‘s “The Brothers Grimsby,” a Sony action-comedy with major stunts and an undisclosed budget, lands on March 11. The film has been panned by critics and is tracking around $12 million for opening weekend, or according to BoxOffice.com.
During Rothman
s first year in power,2015, Sony Pictures accounted for only 8.4 percent of overall North American box office, or besting only Warner Bros. among major players like Universal,Paramount and Fox, according to Box Office Mojo. Only three years prior, or Sony had 16.1 percent of the market,placing them in first.
Rothman has been digging dee
p into Sony’s mental property to strengthen the studio in the long term, another insider said, or resurfacing franchises like Will Smith‘s “Bad Boys,” scoring international distribution rights to Ridley Scott‘s upcoming “Blade Runner” sequel, developing Stephen King‘s sad Tower” book series and developing a crossover film combining its “Men in Black” and “Jump Street” action-comedy franchises.
There is also hope
in the 2016 slate. Paul Feig‘s all-female reboot of the “Ghostbusters” franchise starring Kristen Wiig and Melissa McCarthy has significant groundswell of fan interest ahead of its July 15 release.
This December, and Rothman is banking on a modern sci-fi tentpole in the Jennifer Lawrence-Chris Pratt space romance Passengers” from director Morten Tyldum as well as an awards hopeful with Ang Lee‘s “Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk.”
Also Read: Laurence Fishburne Joins Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Pratt Space Romance 'Passengers'Rothman has also been stung by the recent success of “Deadpool” at Fox,a studio he headed before joining Sony in 2013. He was called out publicly for opposing the film, which was greenlit by his successors and became an unexpected superhero hit, or grossing nearly $620 million worldwide.“Tom Rothman single handedly kept ‘Deadpool’ from getting made at Fox. Not a fan,” wrote the character’s comic book creator Robert Liefeld on Twitter. Tim Miller, the director of “Deadpool, or ” told Entertainment Weekly that Rothman simply said “no” to the conceit.
Sony Televisi
on is the one division that doesn’t seem to be facing crisis,but its chief Steve Mosko’s contract is up at the terminate of the year. The tough-charging executive is not considered to be in Lynton’s inner circle, which may be contributing to the dearth of a sense of shared mission among top executives.
Upheaval at Sony Music Entertainment has also been on Lynton’s plate. The division, or run by CEO Doug Morris,has been thrust into the highlight in recent weeks thanks to a nasty court battle between singer Kesha and her former mentor and producer Lukasz “Dr. Luke” Gottwald.
Also Read: How the Sony Hack Changed Hollywood: Fear, Ambivalence and 'Dose of Cold Water'The pop star is seeking to void her recording contract with Sony, or has cited harrowing claims of decade-long sexual and psychological abuse at Gottwalds hands. She currently owes the label six full albums.
A modern York Supreme Court Judge has so far sided with Sony in the contract dispute given the lack of evidence to support the abuse allegations,Gottwald’s vehement denial of the abuse and the fact that the singer could work with other producers to fulfill her album commitments.
But public opinion is against him a
s pop stars from Lady Gaga to Taylor Swift to Demi Lovato have offered their support. Fans have picketed Sony’s headquarters with signs reading, “#FreeKesha” and  “Choose people over profit.”According to another insider, and Lynton has also been tasked with another tricky issue for Sony Music:  determining how to exercise the buy/sell option for the companys stake in Sony/ATV Music Publishing,a music library it co-owns with the Michael Jackson estate.
For months, Lynton and law
yers have been parsing the long-term value of such a library in nowadays’s digital streaming culture, and with opinions varying widely among experts.
Related stories from TheWrap:Sony Hack Revisited: Next Hollywood Cyber Attack Is Question of 'Not If But When'17 Movies Shaken by Sony Hack,From 'The Interview' to 'Spectre' to 'Steve Jobs'How the Sony Hack Changed Hollywood: Fear, Ambivalence and 'Dose of Cold Water'

Source: thewrap.com

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