(Keep refreshing for latest news on this breaking story… Updates at bottom)
EXCLUSIVE DETAILS: What I forecast Monday about Paula Wagner and her future at United Artists has come to pass. I’m told that it’s all over except for the final last bit of negotiating. Sources tell me that Wagner has been bargaining the terms of her exit as United Artists’s CEO. MGM can’t fire her even though they’d like to because she was, and will remain, a co-owner. I’ve also been told that Wagner’s leaving will not affect Tom Cruise’s relationship to UA where he, too, remains a co-owner. “He’s staying on, but he has never been day to day,” an insider explains to me. ”This was very hard for Tom. Everyone recognized that Paula has been a disaster. But to his credit, he wanted her to have an exit with honor.”
The behind-the-scenes rupture of any reasonable relationship between UA and MGM really became evident this week. That’s because no one outside of those two companies knew that Wagner’s inability to pull the trigger on projects is now threatening to kill part of the $500 million financing from Merrill Lynch. I’m told specified start dates and release dates haven’t been met, so UA could lose a goodly portion of that credit line. The only solution is now for MGM to step in and immediately greenlight two UA motion pictures by the trigger dates. But Wagner’s camp is trying to spin this as MGM usurping UA’s independent authority so that MGM boss Harry Sloan can finally get his hands on UA’s money since he hasn’t been able to score financing of his own.
When I wrote that post highly critical of Wagner’s CEO performance at UA on Monday (“Will the last person to leave United Artists turn out the lights?”), sources within the UA camp blamed MGM for the badmouthing. (Not so!) And now insiders claim to me that pushing out Paula is part and parcel of Sloan’s doing. ”Harry assumed UA would just rollover and let him have the $500 million. That’s what this is all about. But it didn’t work out that way. So MGM has made it impossible for UA. But once Paula steps aside, Harry will still need Tom’s cooperation.” Today, the Wall Street Journal fell hook, line and sinker for this explanation. But there’s much more to this money angle.
Look, the fact is that every financing deal works a little differently because of the bars set, but basic requirements need to be met: a certain number of movies must be in production by a certain time, etc. But UA under Wagner was way behind on the timetable dictated by its financing, I’m told. ”Paula wasn’t greenlighting movies, so she was about to lose a lot of the money. Her camp is trying to say MGM screwed up. They didn’t, she did. Now MGM can get UA moving on at least two movies, and make sure they’re released by a certain date, to keep the financing intact,” an insider confided to me.
On Monday, veteran studio executive and film/TV producer Jeff Kleeman left his position as EVP of production at UA after only 11 months, joining the departure of prez of worldwide marketing and publicity Dennis Rice in mid-July. That meant UA was now populated by only Cruise, Wagner, Don Granger and a few junior execs. Tom and Paula together own about 30% of the studio; MGM owns the remainder. But UA never established itself as anything other than a vanity deal for Cruise with Wagner at the helm — which is exactly what I said this would be when it was announced back on November 2nd, 2006. Their UA made just two films, both starring Tom — Lions For Lambs, which bombed, and Valkyrie, whose release was delayed amid bad buzz.
So lately the studio was virtually moribund, heartbreaking considering that big fat credit line UA had in these impossibly tightfisted times. As a source told me, “There’s frustration inside and outside UA that, in an economy where it’s so difficult to come by money, what’s there is just not being spent. Do the UA people even know how to develop in an appropriate or effective manner?” MGM and even people inside UA certainly thought that answer was no.
But even UA sources told me the problem at the studio was Wagner, not Cruise. She wasn’t pulling the trigger on projects. As I suggested, just look at her history: Paula had unlimited ability to develop projects under C/W’s longterm deal at Paramount and still produced only half a dozen movies that didn’t involve Tom, most of them bombs. She squandered an incredible opportunity then and now. As one source explained to me, the only future for UA was if ”Paula calls it a day, or the company implodes on its own, or a gun is put to Wagner’s head by financiers and she greenlights things and then trusts in luck…”
How true those predictions were. That said, I hear Wagner wants to go back to producing movies, but this time around she’ll do it on her own. Her longtime production company with Cruise, C/W, which had its heyday at Paramount, is dormant and there are no plans to start it up again. Especially since there’ve been a series of rifts between Wagner and Cruise. It looks clear that Paula will go do her thing, and Cruise will do his.
UPDATE #1: MGM came out with this press release: “Paula Wagner, Chief Executive Officer of UA, has decided to leave her day-to-day responsibilities and return to her first love, which is producing films. As such, MGM and UA confirmed today that Ms. Wagner will transition to the role of a producer under her own independent production shingle and be attached to UA’s most exciting film properties. In November 2006, United Artists was reborn under a partnership formed between Tom Cruise, Ms. Wagner and MGM. Ms. Wagner will continue to be a part owner of UA and hold a significant stake in UA’s future success. Nothing will change in regard to Mr. Cruise’s involvement with UA and he continues to have a substantial ownership interest in the company. Furthermore, Mr. Cruise and Ms. Wagner will continue to work on film projects together.
UPDATE #2: Paula Wagner’s statement through a publicist: “I’ve truly relished working with my longtime partner Tom Cruise to revitalize United Artists, and I am proud of all that we’ve accomplished in the past two years, reinvigorating the brand and developing such a strong slate of films. But I always tell my sons, ‘Follow your passion’ – and I’ve got to follow that advice myself. As much as I’ve enjoyed my time as an executive, I have longed to return to my true love, which is making movies, so that’s what I’ve decided to do. I still believe in our vision for UA, and I am confident that Harry Sloan and our colleagues at MGM will see that vision through to reality.”
UPDATE #3: UA announced today that the long delayed Valkyrie has a new release date. Originally scheduled for 2008, then pushed back to February 2009, it’s now back on for this December 26th.
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Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.






Indecision can be deadly, especially when you’re running a relatively small company like United Artists.
But what surprises me was that they didn’t go into the deal with a slate of projects already in mind. Every producer/filmmaker/wannabe has a wish list of projects they’d do if they had the green-light power of a studio boss, where was Paula Wagner’s?
Paula and many many studio exec’s suffer from a malady known as Analysis Paralysis.
In some cases it can be fatal to your job.
I think we should get Furious D the job of running United Artists.
That way he wouldn’t have time to post.
It sounds like this UA deal turned into a “Vanity Deal” to both Paula and to MGM. This deal may have started with Harry Sloan’s High Hopes– but sounds like Paula’s hands were tied by Harry or by Tom, so the enterprise never really got it’s sea legs.
You won’t find a more reviled exec in Hollywood.
I wish her the worst in her future endeavors.
Why is Hollywood worse then GM and Ford combined when it comes to these things?
First Paula is from Youngstown OH which is a nice city to visit. Secondly, she and Cruise according to a Variety article from 2007 grossed more than 3 billion dollars in their movie making ventures.
Caution, well, she could have released some N. Night movies, winning, well she could have redone a Misfits, or another King Kong film. But in the end like GM and Ford its always about the money.
United Artist, Paula and Tom will still make money, Paula will still make movies and some will be hits.
As for Tom he should remember where he started. Today on Belle Isle in Detroit, MI I saw more movie trucks shooting on location then I ever saw in LA or Toronto. Its time for our Midwest heroes to come home, take stock and make more money. Make what you want, when you want and show Hollywood and the world that WE ALWAYS HAVE TALENT, STYLE AND GRACE.
Variety reports that Valkyrie’s release date has been moved up to Dec. 26, 2008 instead of Feb. 2009.
SG
Last paragraph, heyda”y” and “t”old.
Just FYI. Good Day Ms. Finke.
Isn’t his 2 mins of fame up already?
So “Valkyrie” is now set to open on Friday, Dec. 26?
What else is opening that weekend?
I would guess that the thinking at MGM/UA is a hope that some people will go see it when their first, second, third, fourth, fifth & sixth choices are sold out at the multiplex, so a few fools will go see it out of ‘what the Hell, it’s a Tom Cruise movie’, but mostly because they’re hoping that something that weekend will be a huge hit & bury any “Valkyrie” news to the tenth paragraph.
So Paula is out as CEO of UA, and her husband has now left his successful agency gig to get in bed with Morgan Creek. I suspect that there will not be a lot of Christmas gifts coming out of that household this year.
I swear if any other industry conducted itself as Hollywood does…nothing would get done in the rest of the country, either. I mean who makes a big deal out of taking over a studio only to leave a year later? If I owned UA and knew she’d want to leave I paid her to go and wash my hands of the situation. But this industry is filled with scared little boys and girls who can’t run a business.
Wagner was quoted in a WSJ article after Lions for Lambs bombed:
Ms. Wagner adds that UA is evaluating what kind of movies audiences want to see. “There is a learning curve and a process when you’re starting out,” she says.
This from someone who spent many years in the Biz. She should of been fired at that moment.
Boy, Nikki sure called this right — 2 years ago.
Wasn’t the ascension of Cruise/Wagner at UA a PR stunt anyway? Something to shore up their flagging careers? I know we’re all suckers for this kind of drama, but seeing as UA is a micro-studio and Cruise’s career has been flopping around on the dock for years now, isn’t this just no big deal?
PS check out Variety’s talk of an “auspicious rebirth” at UA when the Cruise/Wagner deal was announced LOL…
Michelle Manning former head of Paramount and executive to Cruise-Wagner has been consulting with the company for the past months…could she be waiting in the wings?
So the next time anyone asks, “How do these films get made?” Now you know. Better to greenlight questionable material than possibly miss deadlines while waiting for good films.
Also, I love that MGM people have the gall to question anyone development skills. That studio is an absolute disaster.
I’m not saying Paula Wagner is free of blame but if MGM and Tom Cruise are telling you your making bad choices, maybe that isn’t such a bad thing.
The writing on the wall was when Nicita got the boot. Wouldn’t want to be at that dinner table tonight.
She never had any sort of development operation, and everyone knew it. If your main supplier is Hwy 61, you’re going to have trouble.
Another angle you may wish to explore is that Merrill Lynch is not in any condition to be making loans these days, what with the collapse of biblical proportions in the real-estate market.. These banks and investment houses are all trying to raise capital in order to shore up their balance sheets, and there’s only so much Uncle Sucker money to spread around (and most of that is earmarked to HUD’s buttchildren Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac).
IIRC didn’t UBS or some other big bank break off loan talks with Paramount recently? That’s right, $450m from Deutsche Bank…
We all know Paula has never had any inclination to produce. She and Tommy Boy got ousted from Paramount because they’d rather collect the $10 million in “development fees” each year than actually, you know, produce a movie. All Paula has done is wallow in the background of Tommy Boy, happy that she gets a little light thrown her way.
Great reporting, Nikki.
the Right Coast -
Wow man. You should check out how the top spots at the biggest Fortune 500 companies rotate. Over the last 10-15 years a year’s tenure has been a long time at a lot of these places. It ain’t just Hollywood – it’s the nature of every huge-profile huge-money business where everybody wants your job and thinks they can do it better than you. Unfortunately for these people the reality is that there are very few real difference-makers and any one executive is more or less as good as any other.
“As much as I’ve enjoyed my time as an executive, I have longed to return to my true love, which is making movies, so that’s what I’ve decided to do.”
Uh, isn’t that what the head of a studio does – make movies? What was she doing? Gardening? Selling hot dogs?
Shit, I’m underemployed. Hire my ass. I’ll churn out as many movies as the money people want AND make a profit. It’s not brainsurgery.
Her “tell all” book will be an instant bestseller.
I know for a fact that Paula passed on several big international film franchise opportunities that were brought to UA in the last 12 months because they had no people to develop them or she couldn’t see the vision in the big tent poles without the talent already attached.
“My prediction is Paula, Tom and UA will make movies after bulking up with a few choice properties and producers to do the development work of non-development executives. Comment by reelbusy — August 11, 2008 @ 9:49 pm”
Boy was I wrong and my advice was about 12 months too late.