Sarangel
<font color=red><font color=navy>Rumor has it ...<
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- Jan 18, 2000
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From the Business Times:
Disney hopeful of renewing Pixar ties
By Nic Hopkins
THE Walt Disney Company and Pixar Animation Studios, which fell out spectacularly a year ago, appear ready to renew their lucrative distribution partnership after returning to the negotiating table.
Bob Iger, who will take over as Disney chief executive in October, said that the two sides had recently had really good negotiations about cutting a new distribution deal to replace the current agreement.
The latest effort to revive their relationship comes just over a year after the two film studios announced an end to their partnership, which has produced six consecutive global blockbusters and box office receipts of $2.7 billion (£1.4 billion). The deal is scheduled to end with the release of the film Cars in 18 months time. It has already produced The Incredibles and Finding Nemo. Im not sure I really want to give you odds. Weve had really good discussions, Mr Iger told investors at a Deutsche Bank media conference in New York.
He added that it was too early to tell if a new Pixar agreement would be reached. The fact that we are having a dialogue is a really good thing, and it has been really healthy, Mr Iger said. Wed certainly like to find a way to continue to do business with them, and I think the feeling is mutual.
Disney distributes all of Pixars films in exchange for 12.5 per cent of box office revenue, and the two companies split the profits from spin-offs. Disney also has the right to make sequels to the films made under the existing deal.
Disney said last year that the companies had been unable to agree on terms for a new distribution deal that would be financially viable. But the breakdown of their alliance was also blamed on the brittle relationship between Michael Eisner, Disneys outgoing chief executive, and Steve Jobs, the chief executive of Pixar.
There remain hurdles that could impede a renewal of vows between Pixar and Disney, including the desire among the Hollywood studios to cut a deal with Pixar and Disneys development of its own computer animation unit with a view to making sequels to Pixar hits. But Dick Cook, the head of Disneys Hollywood studios who has played a key role in the negotiations, told The Times this year that it was definitely our desire to strike a new deal with Pixar.