Related: Another Pre-Cannes Deal: EOne Closing In On David Cronenberg’s ‘Cosmopolis’
LOS ANGELES/TORONTO/LONDON – MAY 3, 2012 – Entertainment One (“eOne”) is pleased to announce that it has acquired the US and UK distribution rights to COSMOPOLIS in all media, from Paris-based Kinology. As previously announced, eOne will also handle the theatrical release of the film in Canada.
Based on award-winning writer Don DeLillo’s novella of the same name, Cosmopolis is a contemporary thriller about a hedge fund trader who is stalked while his fortune evaporates under the weight of his cynical bets against the survival of the global economy.
Directed by the highly-esteemed and multi-award winning David Cronenberg, the film stars Robert Pattinson, Juliette Binoche and Paul Giamatti. Cosmopolis is a presentation of Paulo Branco and Martin Katz. The film is produced by Paulo Branco of Alfama Films and Martin Katz of Prospero Pictures and is co-produced by Grégoire Melin of Kinology.
“Cosmopolis is a thought-provoking thriller with the perfect blend of dark humour and irony. It’s a highly-compelling film with an all-star cast. This is certainly an exciting film for the US as we continue to grow our theatrical business, and a great addition to the Canadian and UK slates alike,” said David Reckziegel, President, eOne Films North America. “David Cronenberg’s innovative work continues to blow audiences away. We’re thrilled to have this standout film for three of eOne’s core territories,” added Alex Hamilton, Director, eOne Films UK.
The deal was negotiated by Reckziegel and Hamilton for eOne and Grégoire Melin for Kinology.
Cosmopolis is expected to be in theatres in Canada, the US and this UK later this summer. eOne is looking forward to the Cannes Film Festival and announcing more acquisitions in the coming weeks.



An earlier article on this site wrote that the distribution rights are being sold for 2 million.
I’m assuming the movie cost more than $2 million to produce yet the distribution rights are being sold for that price.
I’m not too familiar with the workings of the film industry but could someone explain to me how the original production company recovers cost? Does it still get a cut of the box office revenue even though the rights have been sold?
most investors/producers don’t recoup in the indy market, anymore
anchor bay bought 100mm worth of films (production cost) for 12mm 2 years ago. That’s a steep discount.
it’s been bottom feeding for quite some time, now. all but gone are the days when you’d make a movie for a million and sell is for two or three million. now you make a movie for a million and sell it for 25, 50, sometimes a whopping 100k and hope and pray to god that you get overages from dvd sales….maybe some international.
2 million dollar budgeted films are averaging sales of $100,000-$200,000 at distribs.
this is the new math.
-RnsW