| Company type | Subsidiary of Nelson Holdings International, Ltd. |
|---|---|
| Industry | Film home video |
| Predecessor | Galactic Films Spikings Corporation Polygram Video |
| Founded | 1985; 40 years ago (1985) |
| Founders | Barry Spikings Richard Northcott |
| Defunct | 1991; 34 years ago (1991) |
| Fate | Renamed Sultan Entertainment and sold toNew Line Cinema, library later purchased byEpic Productions |
| Successor | Company: New Line Cinema Library: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (throughOrion Pictures) (with some exceptions) |
| Headquarters | Los Angeles,California,United States |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Barry Spikings Richard Northcott |
| Products | Motion pictures VHS Laserdisc |
| Parent | Nelson Holdings International, Ltd. (1986–1991) New Line Cinema (1991) |
| Divisions |
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Nelson Entertainment (also known asNelson Entertainment Group) was aLos Angeles-based film production and home video distribution company, a subsidiary ofNelson Holdings International Ltd., aVancouver, Canada, holding company formed in 1985 by British film producerBarry Spikings and Richard Northcott, a British financier who amassed his fortune from a chain of hardware and furniture stores. In 1991, it was renamed Sultan Entertainment and sold toNew Line Cinema, with its library later purchased byEpic Productions.[1]
The company acquired Galactic Films as well as Spikings Corporation in 1985, then later acquired distribution rights to a majority ofEmbassy titles after purchasing its home video division, which Nelson paid $85 million for, and then signed an agreement withColumbia Pictures which enabled Nelson to finance their films for Columbia.[2] The company would buy out Autovend Technology Corp, which specialized in vending machines holding up to 400 videotapes for sale or rental, in September 1986, with John Lack, a former executive ofWarner-Amex Satellite Entertainment, hired to run the Autovend technology.[3]
On November 26, 1986, Nelson decided to form a foreign sales arm, Nelson International, Inc. Ian Jessel, formerly an executive atCBS Theatrical Films, was named president of the unit.[4]
On March 18, 1987, Nelson Entertainment, through its Embassy Home Entertainment division inked a pact withHemdale Film Corporation, to co-produce 10 pictures in a co-financing agreement between Hemdale and Nelson; Nelson would receive domestic home video rights, while Hemdale retained all other rights to the 10 pictures.[5]
Throughout the summer of 1987, Embassy/Nelson announced more international distribution deals, including West German video distributorNeue Constantin Film andNippon Herald in Japan.[6][7] Elsewhere, Nelson decided to intervene in theHemdale Film Corporation-Vestron Video lawsuit over video rights to a package of 12 Hemdale films; Nelson then subsequently filed for rights to the same 12 pictures under almost identical terms as the arrangement Vestron was trying to have enforced, and the deal added another film to the mix,High Tide.[8]
Sometime in August 1987, Embassy Home Entertainment was renamed Nelson Entertainment,[9] but retained the earlier brand as well as Charter Entertainment for sell-through products.[10] Nelson then financed a deal withCastle Rock Entertainment to co-produce their films, and in addition handle the international distribution rights.[11]
In September 1988,Orion Home Video became Nelson's sales agent; in addition,Orion Pictures would later theatrically distribute a few of Nelson's titles. By February 1989, Orion was the official home video distributor of Nelson product.[12]
In 1991, Nelson Entertainment sold its home video division toNew Line Cinema and it was rebranded asNew Line Home Video.[13] The company was later renamed Sultan Entertainment and was acquired by New Line, who then later took over the video rights to the library.[14] This merger also meant Nelson's video rights changed hands, asRCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video began distributing former Embassy and Nelson videos via their distribution pact with New Line. By 1994, Nelson's catalog had been acquired byEpic Productions and folded into the Alpha Library Company. After Epic's closure,Crédit Lyonnais assumed responsibility of its library. The library was put up for auction by the Consortium de Realisation as the "Epic library". Credit Lyonnais later sold the Epic film library toPolyGram Filmed Entertainment in 1997,[15] thenMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) acquired 2/3 of PolyGram's pre-April 1996 library in October 1998.[16] Therefore, MGM now owns most of the Nelson Entertainment library with the copyrights being held by Orion Pictures. Due to a previous agreement withViacom Enterprises,Paramount Pictures (throughTrifecta Entertainment & Media) holds the North American television rights to Nelson's post-January 1989 films not co-produced with Castle Rock Entertainment. Castle Rock Entertainment's pre-January 1994 titles are owned byWarner Bros., but are controlled by MGM via Orion, while the filmLabyrinth is currently controlled byThe Jim Henson Company, with distribution rights currently licensed toShout! Studios.
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