Netflix, Paramount battle for Warner Bros. intensifies
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Netflix, Spending Spree
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The business of Hollywood was in trouble long before the earth-rattling news that Netflix had inked a $72 billion takeover of Warner Bros. And while the deal is widely seen as a coup by Netflix, once a scrappy startup that had to fight to be taken seriously,
If the deal goes through, an algorithm-powered streaming titan would gobble up a 102-year-old movie studio synonymous with the romance of old Hollywood.
The streamer is rolling out a fresh batch of Christmas movies this December, including three world premieres. From the Kate Winslet-directed Goodbye June to the ridiculous My Secret Santa, these holiday (and holiday-adjacent) movies are best enjoyed with a piping-hot cup of cocoa and a few tissues.
With Daniel Craig’s Benoit Blanc back on a new case in “Wake Up Dead Man," here's what to know about the trilogy and how to watch.
Many viewers see streaming services as interchangeable. Would the media merger that may devour HBO change anything?
“Everybody hates Netflix,” she said to a visitor from overseas who inquired about the streamer. And it’s true. Even though lots of people in Hollywood depend on Netflix for their livelihoods, they hate the company and what it has done to a century-old, once-thriving business. But up to now, almost nobody has said it out loud.
Netflix is trying to set up its future as an unbeatable Hollywood studio by buying Warner Bros., but Ted Sarandos is going to have to fight for it.
We now know roughly when David Fincher's intriguing new movie, The Adventures of Cliff Booth, a sequel to Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, may be hitting theaters. Brad Pitt will return to his Oscar-winning role of stuntman Cliff Booth ...
In this week's episode of The Envelope podcast, Tonatiuh discusses 'Kiss of the Spider Woman' and Kate Hudson talks 'Song Sung Blue.'
Netflix’s bid to buy Warner Bros. Streaming & Studios for $82.7 billion has become a defining test of power in modern entertainment, pitting a dominant digital platform against a weakening cable-based legacy while regulators,