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Landmark / Charles Cohen loses control of Curzon (UK arthouse theatre chain)

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  • Landmark / Charles Cohen loses control of Curzon (UK arthouse theatre chain)

    Telegraph

    Billionaire real estate magnate loses control of historic UK cinema chain

    Majestic Wine owner snaps up Curzon as Charles Cohen faces escalating legal battle over debts


    James Warrington
    Senior Business Reporter
    12 November 2024, 1.42pm GMT​

    The US billionaire real estate magnate Charles Cohen has lost control of his upmarket UK cinema chain after an escalating legal battle over unpaid debts.

    Curzon, the historic arthouse chain that has 16 venues across the UK, has been snapped up by the US private equity firm Fortress Investment Group.

    Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but Fortress reportedly offered $5m (£3.9m) for the cinema group.

    Curzon, which is one of the oldest cinema chains in Britain, was put up for auction earlier this year after its previous owner, Cohen Media Group, was ordered by a New York judge to sell off some of its assets.

    Fortress, which owns Majestic Wine and Poundstretcher, sued Mr Cohen’s business empire after it defaulted on a $534m loan, with the tycoon also on the hook for more than $187m in personal guarantees.

    The Curzon auction included the cinema group’s distribution arm, Artificial Eye, as well as its home streaming service.

    Mr Cohen’s US cinema group, Landmark Theaters, has also been put up for auction, while he has already lost control of an office tower in New York’s Midtown.

    But the legal dispute has escalated in recent weeks after Fortress accused Mr Cohen of trying to shield his assets from the court order.

    In a filing in the New York Supreme Court, Fortress alleged that Mr Cohen transferred $70m worth of assets to new owners. This included moving a $20m mansion in Greenwich, New York, into his wife’s name, and transferring ownership of at least four luxury yachts worth $50m.

    Mr Cohen is appealing the judge’s ruling and for the $187m liability to be reversed in full. Cohen Media Group has been contacted for comment.

    Mr Cohen bought Curzon in 2019, a year after buying Landmark Theaters in the US. The cinema chains were used as collateral on the Fortress loan, alongside the Manhattan tower, a design centre and a Florida hotel.

    The acquisitions came shortly before lockdown forced widespread cinema closures and pushed the sector into crisis. Cinemas are also struggling with the shift to streaming, as attendance continues to fall short of pre-Covid levels.

    Curzon was set up in 1934 by Harold Wingate, who opened his first cinema in Mayfair. It became known for introducing audiences to international cinema by importing and screening some of the first foreign language films in the UK.

    Artificial Eye, which was founded in 1976, has been behind major hits including 2019 South Korean blockbuster Parasite. Curzon was also ahead of the curve on streaming, launching its home cinema streaming service in 2010.

    In recent years, the chain has opened new cinemas in locations including Hoxton, Camden, Kingston upon Thames and Canterbury.

    Fortress, which also owns Punch Pubs, said its acquisition secured the jobs of more than 350 employees.

    Allison Swayze, managing director at Fortress, said: “Curzon is an iconic film company, with global recognition for its long legacy of releasing and connecting independent and critically acclaimed films to UK audiences.

    “We’re pleased to acquire Curzon, and bring our support to the company’s dedicated team. Curzon has exciting near-term plans which include expanding its cinema footprint, and delivering awards and release plans for an exciting slate of films.”​
    Ironically, there is a Curzon and a Majestic Wine Warehouse within a couple of hundred yards of each other, near my mother's house in Wimbledon. I wonder if they'll be doing tie-in offers: buy a £150 bottle of Chateau Wanquer '89 and get free tickets to see the latest esoteric French art movie? The demographic would likely work.

  • #2
    Thanks Leo for the information. Landmark Cohen Media leases out our local art deco cinema Theatre DelMar in Santa Cruz CA from the city of Santa Cruz that owns this classic local treasure.

    Mr Cohen does not bother to keep the DelMar up. The front neon marquee is barely working and they don't bother to close the nice waterfall curtains and now all the deco wall lights are not working. I don't think they even turn on the heater. Landmark won't maintain the large trees outside blocking the neon marquee, the city of Santa Cruz won't spend a dime on the theatre.

    The local students hardly show up. When Landmark leaves like they did another cinema in town 'The Nickelodeon' or can't pay the rent Its time for the city of Santa Cruz to find a better operator to take over the lease and bring the cinema back to Its glory days. Take out the two small loge auditoriums upstairs and make the building one large entertainment place for the downtown area to enjoy. Show both art movies and other live music type events. Drafthouse Sony Alamo Theatres I think would do very well in this tourist college town with a mix of programing plus food with drinks added.

    Landmark Theatres is under foreclosure up for auction and bankrupt. For some odd reason the DelMar runs the same movies that the Syufy/Westwind SC 9 Cinema shows just a few blocks away .

    Mr Cohen has all this money but he does not know how to keep his theatres in good shape and make money by offering different types of events.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Terry Monohan View Post

      Landmark Theatres is under foreclosure up for auction and bankrupt.
      It was up for auction. Nobody wanted it. For-profit arthouses have always been a tough business, and now even more so.You've got to have the revenue from other sources coming in to keep going. Alamo has Sony, Angelika has Reading, IFC has AMC Networks. I think Laemmle is on OK footing, but even they were trying to sell as late as 2019.

      I'm not even sure the term "arthouse" means anything anymore, the ArtHouse Convergence notwithstanding. From what I see many theaters that at one time were full on art/alternative/foreign/indie/revival are now getting by booking in at least some mainstream pictures.

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      • #4
        It seemed to do pretty good when Mark Cuban, and Todd Wagner owned it. They ran it from 2003 to 2018... The four or five locations I visited were also spotlessly clean. What did Cohen mess up?

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        • #5
          A lot of it was the pandemic closures and the strikes, and some of it is that he's a bad cinema operator. When he lost the lease on the Landmark Westside on Pico Blvd. in LA it was seen as an industry wide tragedy rivaling the closing of the ArcLight Hollywood (if you never had the pleasure, the Landmark Westside was a GREAT theatre). The Landmark on West 57th St. in NYC was in a terrible location and just a horrible and expensive place to see a movie, and they folded it quickly. I go to the Landmark in Boston once in a while, but it looks like there's no investment or upkeep. Plus, he's on the hook for something like $500 million in loans that he can't pay off.

          Comment


          • #6
            When you're that far in the hole I guess it's just like being stuck in quick sand... I wonder if Cuban & Wagner saw something coming??

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