CIC Video
Company type | Label |
---|---|
Founded | 1980 |
Defunct | 1999 |
Fate | Replaced with United International Pictures |
Successors | Paramount Home Entertainment (1999–present) Universal Pictures Home Entertainment (1999–present) DreamWorks Home Entertainment (1999–2010) United International Pictures (1999–present) |
Products | Home video |
Parent | Cinema International Corporation (1980–1981) United International Pictures (1981–1999) |
Divisions | CIC-Taft Home Video |
CIC Video has a been home video distributor, established in 1980, owned by Cinema International Corporation (the forerunner of United International Pictures), and operated in some countries (such as United Kingdom, Australia, Brazil, Japan, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Portugal, Mexico, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Poland, South Korea, Turkey, Argentina, Colombia, Philippines, Chile and Venezuela) by local operators. Outside North America, it distributed films by Universal Pictures (now owned by NBCUniversal/Comcast) and Paramount Pictures (now owned by ViacomCBS, which is owned by National Amusements), CIC's partners. DreamWorks films were added to the company output in 1998, as the fledgling studio had a worldwide video distribution deal with Universal.
History
When the distributor had appointed Karl Oliver from Brooke Bond Batchelors to be its sales and marketing director in 1991, they had wanted him to introduce "classic FMCG disciplines" to its marketing campaign. Oliver responded by reducing video cassette prices to and promote impulse purchasing as part of CIC Video's reformed distribution strategy.[1] After the sudden death of CIC Video's president Roy Featherstone of an asthma attack on 17 July 1992 the distributor underwent restructuring with aid from senior Universal and Paramount employees.[2] In 1994, Viacom had purchased Paramount Pictures, enabling CIC Video to gain international distribution rights to shows from, among other networks, MTV and Nickelodeon, which came into effect in Australia in 1995 and the UK and other countries in early 1996.
In 1999, CIC Video had been dissolved when Universal had purchased PolyGram Filmed Entertainment and had reorganised its video division under the Universal name. Paramount Home Entertainment UK had become CIC Video's successor.[3] The last videos with the CIC label were released in the same year. Meanwhile, the distributor signed sales and distribution contracts with local market producers in Europe to increase profit and the brand name of CIC Video remained in the short term in markets where Paramount Home Entertainment were absent.[4]
CIC Video was operated in Australia (where it was known as CIC-Taft Home Video) by the Taft-Hardie joint venture (now Southern Star Group), and also distributed some Southern Star and Hanna-Barbera product under other labels. The Hanna-Barbera library is now handled usually by Warner Home Video. Its defunct subsidiary had been a distributor called Rigby-CIC Video and CIC-Taft's label manufacturer had been Roadshow Home Video.
CIC Video was operated in Sweden by Esselte Video.
References
- ^ Toor, Mat (18 November 1993). "Head marketer quits CIC Video". Marketing: 6. Retrieved 6 April 2018 – via General OneFile.
- ^ Clark-Meads, Jeff (1 August 1992). "CIC Video refocuses after Chief's death". Billboard. Vol. 104, no. 31. p. 103. Retrieved 6 April 2018 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Paramount to retain CIC Video operations". Screen Digest. 1 March 1999. Archived from the original on 7 April 2018. Retrieved 6 April 2018 – via HighBeam Research.
- ^ Groves, Don (24 January 2000). "CIC Video builds new identity after split". Variety. Vol. 377, no. 10. p. 24. Retrieved 6 April 2018 – via General OneFile.