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Alcon Entertainment

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Alcon Entertainment, LLC
Company typePrivate
IndustryFilm
FoundedJanuary 23, 1997
24 years ago[1]
FoundersBroderick Johnson
Andrew Kosove
Headquarters
Key people
Broderick Johnson (CEO)
Andrew Kosove (CEO)
Steven Wegner (VP of development)
Scott Parish (CFO)
Kira Davis (former VP of production & marketing)
Websitewww.alconent.com

Alcon Entertainment, LLC is an American film production company, founded in 1997 by film producers Broderick Johnson and Andrew Kosove. Since its establishment, Alcon Entertainment has developed and financed films that are ultimately distributed – in the United States mostly, and internationally on occasion – by Warner Bros. Pictures, following a ten-year motion picture production agreement.

Company

Alcon Entertainment was established in January 23, 1997,[1] and founded by film producers Broderick Johnson and Andrew Kosove, who are the co-CEOs of the company. The company is headquartered on Santa Monica Boulevard in Los Angeles, California.[2] Both Johnson and Kosove presented FedEx founder and chairman Frederick W. Smith with a proposal suggesting that an independent film company, backed by a capitalized individual or company, and aligned with a major studio for an exclusive distribution arrangement would reap profits on copyrighted assets over a set period of time.[3] On February 18, 1998, Alcon Entertainment set up two greenlight projects, with Warner Bros. distributing a single project.[4] On May 15, 1998, Alcon inked a second deal with Warner Bros. in which Warner was allowed to distribute the film Lost & Found.[5]

Alcon's first major feature film was the 1999 comedy Lost & Found. In March 2000, following the success of its second film My Dog Skip, Alcon entered into a long-term distribution agreement with Warner Bros. The agreement had Warner Bros. in charge of worldwide distribution of a minimum of 10 films produced and financed by Alcon over the next five years. The agreement also allowed Warner Bros. to co-finance certain pictures with Alcon.[6] Alcon and Warner Bros. signed a new agreement in February 2006, continuing their eight-year relationship, under which Warner Bros. would continue to distribute feature films developed and financed by Alcon.[7] WB and Alcon extended the deal in 2015 which ended in 2019.[8] On September 28, 2003, Alcon Entertainment had launched its television arm, with an exclusive co-production agreement at television studio Warner Bros. Television.[9]

In 2011, Alcon Entertainment acquired the entire brand and rights to the Blade Runner franchise, which encompasses movies, series, games and other franchise media such as books.[10][11] On March 8, 2012, Alcon had inked an affiliate production company headed by 2S Films executive Molly Smith, Belle Pictures, to develop film projects.[12]

Filmography

Year Film Title Distributor Notes Budget Box office
1999 Lost & Found Warner Bros. First film $30 million $6,552,255
2000 My Dog Skip $6 million $35,512,760
Dude, Where's My Car? 20th Century Fox $13 million $73,180,723
2001 The Affair of the Necklace Warner Bros. $30 million $471,210
2002 Insomnia Co-produced with Section Eight Productions $46 million $113,714,830
2003 Love Don't Cost a Thing $21 million $21,924,226
2004 Chasing Liberty $23 million $12,313,323
2005 Racing Stripes Co-produced with Summit Entertainment $30 million $90,754,475
The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants $25 million $42,000,000
2006 16 Blocks Co-produced with Millennium Films, Equity Pictures, Nu Image, Emmett/Furla Films, Cheyenne Enterprises and The Donners' Company $55 million $65,664,721
The Wicker Man Co-produced with Millennium Films, Saturn Films, Equity Pictures, Emmett/Furla Films and Nu Image $40 million $38,755,073
2007 P.S. I Love You Co-produced with Grosvenor Park Productions $30 million $156,835,339
2008 One Missed Call Co-produced with Kadokawa Pictures, Equity Pictures and Intermedia $20 million $45,847,751
The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 $27 million $44,352,417
2009 The Blind Side 2009 Academy Award for Best Actress Sandra Bullock $29 million $309,208,309
2010 The Book of Eli Co-produced with Silver Pictures $80 million $157,091,718
Lottery Ticket Co-produced with Cube Vision $17 million $24,719,879
2011 Something Borrowed Co-produced with 2S Films $35 million $60,183,821
Dolphin Tale Co-produced with Arc Productions $37 million $95,404,397
2012 Joyful Noise $25 million $31,158,113
What to Expect When You're Expecting Lionsgate Co-produced with Phoenix Pictures $40 million $41.102.171
Chernobyl Diaries Warner Bros. Co-produced with FilmNation Entertainment and Oren Peli/Brian Witten Productions $1 million $37,157,648
2013 Beautiful Creatures $60 million $60,052,138
Prisoners $46 million $122,126,687
2014 Transcendence Co-produced with DMG Entertainment and Straight Up Films $100 million $103,039,258
Dolphin Tale 2 $36 million $57,824,533
The Good Lie Co-produced with Imagine Entertainment, Black Label Media and Reliance Entertainment $20 million $2,722,209
2015 The 33 Warner Bros.
20th Century Fox
Co-produced with Phoenix Pictures $26 million $24,902,723
Point Break Warner Bros.
Lionsgate
Co-produced with DMG Entertainment, Taylor/Baldecchi/Wimmer Productions and Babelsberg Studio[13] $100 million $131,338,490
2016 No Manches Frida Pantelion Films Co-produced with Constantin Film $12,421,716
2017 Blade Runner 2049 Warner Bros.
Sony Pictures Releasing
As Alcon Media Group; Production with Columbia Pictures, co-produced with Thunderbird Films and Scott Free Productions $150–185 million $259,239,658
Father Figures Warner Bros. Co-produced with The Montecito Picture Company and DMG Entertainment $25 million $25,601,244
2018 12 Strong Warner Bros.
Lionsgate
Co-produced with Black Label Media and Jerry Bruckheimer Films $35 million $62,928,960
2019 No Manches Frida 2 Pantelion Films Co-produced with Constantin Film $26.4 million[14]
2023 No Manches Frida 3
2024 Garfield[15] Sony Pictures Releasing[16] As Alcon Media Group; co-produced with Columbia Pictures, DNEG, Paws, Inc. and TSG Entertainment II

Alcon Television Group

Year Title Network Notes Seasons Episodes
2015–22 The Expanse Syfy (2015–18)
Amazon Prime Video (2019–22)
Co-production with Penguin in a Parka, SeanDanielCo (2015–18), Just So (2019–22), Hivemind (2019–22) and Amazon Studios (2019–22); distributed by Legendary Television Distribution 6 62
2016–18 Ice Audience Co-production with Fuqua Films (2016), Entertainment One, IM Global Television (2016) and Bernero Productions (2018) 2 20
2017–2022 Pete the Cat Amazon Prime Video Co-production with Appian Way Productions, Surfer Jack Productions and disturbed by Cake Entertainment. 14
2021–present Blade Runner: Black Lotus Adult Swim
Crunchyroll
Co-production with Crunchyroll and Williams Street 1 13
TBA Blade Runner 2099 Amazon Prime Video Co-production with Scott Free Productions and Amazon Studios TBA TBA

Music

In 2014, Alcon partnered with Sleeping Giant Media to form ASG Music Group. ASG is a full service music company and record label. In 2017, ASG released the Blade Runner 2049 soundtrack, produced by Grammy nominated producer Michael Hodges, Kayla Morrison and Ashley Culp, with Epic Records. The Album reached No. 1 on the Billboard Soundtrack Sales Charts.[17][18][19][20]

References

  1. ^ a b "Lost and Found". wb-lostandfound.com. Archived from the original on 2011-06-13. Retrieved 2009-08-17.
  2. ^ Alcon Entertainment - Los Angeles, California (CA) | Company Profile
  3. ^ "Class Notes - June 7, 2000". www.princeton.edu.
  4. ^ Cox, Dan; Petrikin, Chris (1998-02-19). "FedEx chair-backed shingle slates pix". Variety. Retrieved 2021-12-23.
  5. ^ Madigan, Nick (1998-05-15). "Alcon's 'Lost' finds distrib deal with WB". Variety. Retrieved 2021-12-23.
  6. ^ "Warner Bros. Pictures and Alcon Entertainment HaveEntered Into an Exclusive Multipicture Worldwide Distribution Deal".
  7. ^ "Warner Bros and Alcon Entertainment sign new agreement".
  8. ^ "Alcon Extends Warner Bros. Deal Through 2019, Gets $200 Million in Financing". Variety.
  9. ^ Schneider, Michael (2003-09-28). "Alcon will grow TV arm". Variety. Retrieved 2021-12-23.
  10. ^ Goldsmith, Jill (2021-07-07). "Alcon Entertainment Pacts With Striker For 'Blade Runner,' 'The Expanse' Consumer Products Push". Deadline. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  11. ^ Anders, Charlie Jane (March 4, 2011). "'Blade Runner' Sequel (or Prequel) in Development Now". io9. Archived from the original on June 15, 2016. Retrieved July 27, 2011.
  12. ^ McNary, Dave (2012-03-09). "Molly Smith forms Belle Pictures with Alcon". Variety. Retrieved 2021-12-23.
  13. ^ Marsh, James (December 3, 2015). "'Point Break': Review". Screen Daily. Retrieved October 28, 2016.
  14. ^ "No Manches Frida 2 (2019) -Financial Information". The Numbers. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
  15. ^ "Happily Ever After Hours with Animator and Filmmaker Mark Dindal". December 19, 2020. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  16. ^ Grobar, Matt (November 1, 2021). "'Garfield': Chris Pratt To Voice Title Character In Alcon Entertainment's Animated Film". Deadline. Retrieved November 2, 2021.
  17. ^ "Alcon, Sleeping Giant Launch ASG Group to Drive Down Music Cue Costs".
  18. ^ "Alcon Partners With Sleeping Giant Media To Form Movie & TV Music Services Company". 15 April 2014.
  19. ^ Morfoot, Addie (15 April 2014). "Alcon Entertainment Launches Music Division".
  20. ^ "Soundtrack Album Sales : Oct 28, 2017 - Billboard Chart Archive". Billboard.