Every time I turn around, I feel like I'm reading something
about how Bob and Harvey Weinstein have no money. From their parting ways with
Miramax (the company that made them indie icons) to the floundering of their latest
venture, The Weinstein Company, it feels as if every story about the brothers
lately might have been written on the reverse side of a cardboard sign that
says, "Will Work for Independent Financing."
And yet the scuttling of their glory days - coming in the
form of Disney's auctioning off of the famous Miramax label - has the brothers
in money-raising mode to buy back their old Hollywood stomping grounds. And for two brothers with widely
reported financial woes, apparently they've generated a $600 million bid.
According to The Hollywood Reporter:
Miramax founders
Harvey and Bob Weinstein had been building enough financial muscle to put
together an offer of $600 million or thereabouts, seeking to top bids from such
rival suitors as businessmen Alec and Tom Gores and a more controversial one
from Hollywood wheeler-dealer David Bergstein.
Harvey and Bob Weinstein have been kibitzing with billionaire financier Ron
Burkle throughout the auction process. In addition to Burkle's Yucaipa group,
the duo's backers include hedge funds Fortress and Colbeck Capital. In effect,
Burkle and friends would be the official buyers, but the Weinsteins effectively
would run the operation.
Certainly the Weinsteins were instrumental in developing the
early-90's independent movie scene, and the pair was never as good as when they
were tag-teaming quirky, indie dramas with mainstream, Dimension-made horror
fare. That said, while things have
changed in this business, we'd certainly love to see the brothers once again
control the label that brought them such success nearly twenty years ago.
The Weinsteins Take Back Miramax?
Indie icons putting together a winning bid for their former label.
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April 16, 2010
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