Miramax acquisition
On December 3, 2010, Disney closed the sale of Miramax to Filmyard Holdings.[2] The sale did not include Miramax's genre specialty label Dimension Films, which Bob Weinstein and Harvey Weinstein bought from Disney when they left to form The Weinstein Company in 2005. However, Filmyard did gain control of the pre-October 2005 content library of Dimension, in addition to gaining the entire Miramax library.[5] Regarding the 2010 sale, Tom Barrack of Colony Capital told CNN Business in 2016 "Harvey is probably one of the best independent moviemakers ever, so for a long time Disney was sponsoring Weinstein with Miramax and making independent movies. Iger then decided the Disney brand needed to be clear, clean and unfettered. And so during that period of time, Miramax didn't fit that distribution model. It was different selling a Disney movie than it was selling Shakespeare in Love or Pulp Fiction. And all of those movies were being sold through just that singular distribution method. And Disney had affiliates, since it was part of a family of TV stations. Miramax was left out, Harvey then moved on to build his own firm, they bought Harvey out, and Miramax was sitting in Disney as an orphan."[6] Miramax was Colony Capital's first foray into the film industry.[7] Previous Colony Capital investments included Michael Jackson's Neverland Ranch in 2008, which Jackson abandoned for the Middle East following a 2005 molestation trial, before his eventual death in 2009. In 2010, some in the media compared Colony investing in a Miramax without Harvey Weinstein's leadership as being similar to them investing in a Neverland Ranch without Michael Jackson's star power.[8]
For the 2010 sale, Filmyard investors put in $200 million in capital while raising $400 million in liabilities through Barclays PLC led group of banks.[3] Mike Lang, former business development executive at News Corporation, was selected as the CEO of Miramax,[2] and the sale, estimated around US$663 million, included 700 film titles, as well as 90 book rights, 300 development projects and the "Miramax" name. Additionally, Miramax came with $50 million in cash, $10 million in adjusted fees and two finished films ready for release. Don't Be Afraid of the Dark and The Debt were released in 2011 by FilmDistrict and Focus Features, respectively.