DreamWorks Studios,
the film company headed by director Steven Spielberg, will get around
$200 million from its partner Reliance Entertainment to continue making
films, according to a person with knowledge of the transaction.
The
financing deal was first reported by The New York Times on its website,
but no details on financial terms were included. DreamWorks had no
comment. Reliance representatives could not be reached for comment.
The financing is the second part of a 2009 agreement to finance
the studio. In that agreement, Reliance Entertainment, a unit of
Reliance ADA Group, provided the partnership with $325 million of
capital for an undisclosed stake.
Reliance's
2009 investment came after months of negotiation with DreamWorks that
reduced the Indian company's investment from a planned $650 million, as
large-scale financing from banks became more difficult to secure. At the
time, the two companies said in a press release that the investment was
the first stage.
The Walt Disney
Co distributes and markets DreamWorks films under a five-year
distribution agreement for "approximately" six films a year.
Reliance
will retain its rights to distribute DreamWorks-produced films in
India, the person familiar with the new transaction said.
DreamWorks
is producing Spielberg's "Lincoln," scheduled to be released in
December, with News Corp's Fox studio, according to the movie
information website, IMDB.com. The film will be released by Disney in
the U.S. and by Fox in Japan.
The
studio, which made Spielberg's "War Horse" and "The Help" last year,
will produce between three and five films a year, a reduction from the
four to six that it initially announced, said the person.
Reliance
has been active in financing films in recent years, and said at the
time of the 2009 announcement that it had invested more than $1 billion
to produce films in English, Hindi and other Indian languages.
It
also had development deals with several producers, including George
Clooney's Smokehouse Productions and Tom Hanks' Playtone Productions and
last year released the Indian film "Bodyguard" in the U.S.
The
bankers for the joint venture, led by J.P. Morgan, did not change, the
person said. The group provided senior debt of $325 million at the time.
(Reporting By Ronald Grover; Editing by Carol Bishopric)
source : routers.com