the Netflix-Warner Bros. Deal Changes Hollywood
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At the dawn of this century, Al Pacino starred in "S1m0ne," a satire about a down-on-his-luck director who creates a computer-generated "star" that conquers Hollywood. Fast forward nearly 25 years, and it appears that real life has caught up with the movies, with the introduction of an AI-generated actress named Tilly Norwood.
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,
After another wild year for the industry, the women making the biggest impact across film and television reveal their predictions for Hollywood 2026, discuss the perks and pains of AI and even pitch their dream storylines for The Studio.
Sydney Sweeney revealed the key advice she'd give to young actors trying to make it in Hollywood in an exclusive interview with PEOPLE. The actress made a name for herself in the entertainment industry in the late 2010s,
Ted Sarandos, co-CEO of Netflix, was once seen as an underdog in Hollywood. Now, the former Arizona video store manager has emerged as one of the biggest Hollywood moguls yet.
The actor starred in Kenneth Branagh’s 1994 film ‘Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein,’ Hollywood’s first adaptation of the classic in decades.
A number of studios had passed on the film. The reviews made them think they might be missing an opportunity, Alissa said, and created a “trickle-down effect.” Over the next few years, studios produced “Soul,” the latest “Knives Out” and the Oscar-winning “Conclave.”
A-listers and dealmakers headed to the kingdom's coastal city of Jeddah for the Red Sea Film Festival this week.