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Paramount Jumps On the Redbox Express

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Paramount Jumps On the Redbox Express

Red Box has secured a deal with Paramount to distribute the studio's DVDs through Red Box rental kiosks the day they're available for retail. The move follows similar deals with Lions Gate and Sony. Other studios are fighting Red Box; they say the low-cost renter undercuts DVD sales, and they want to delay Red Box access to their DVDs until several weeks after a movie's general retail release.


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Movie studio Paramount Pictures is following the lead of Lions Gate Entertainment and Sony (NYSE: SNE) by agreeing to supply films to US$1-per-night DVD rental kiosk company Redbox.

Paramount Home Entertainment and Redbox, a subsidiary of Bellevue, Wash.-based Coinstar, said Tuesday they have begun a trial licensing program through which Redbox will be able to stock its kiosks with Paramount Pictures DVDs on the day they are released for retail Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse sale and rental, through the end of the year.

Access for Information

Los Angeles-based Paramount, which is owned by Viacom (NYSE: VIAb), will get detailed DVD rental information from Redbox, which the studio will use to determine the worth of the program. Paramount will be able to extend the deal through 2014, with an option to opt out after two years.

As part of the deal, Redbox has agreed to destroy any Paramount DVDs it removes from its rental kiosks.

In a statement, Redbox President Mitch Lowe called the trial a "positive step with Paramount."

"The agreement ensures that our customers will have increased access to some of the biggest titles of the year," he said.

Inking Deals

Coinstar said in a regulatory filing Tuesday that Redbox estimates it would pay Paramount $575 million if the deal runs through 2014. It said that Redbox, which has kiosks at more than 15,000 locations across the country, plans to license and buy DVDs from Paramount that will represent about 18.5 percent of the total discs it licenses and buys this year.

The deal comes two weeks after Lions Gate agreed to supply Redbox with DVDs on the same day they are offered for retail sale, from Sept. 1 through Aug. 31, 2014, according to a regulatory filing.

In that filing, Coinstar estimated Redbox will pay Lions Gate $158 million over the life of the deal. Lions Gate, too, can pull out after two years.

Coinstar said in July that it had penned a five-year, $460 million deal with Sony's movie division.

Encountering Resistance

Other Hollywood studios, such as News Corp.'s 20th Century Fox and General Electric's Universal Pictures, have moved to cut off supply to Redbox unless it agrees to delay rentals until more than a month after DVDs are available for sale, in the hopes of preserving demand for higher-priced DVD purchases.

Last week, a federal judge in Delaware rejected a request from Universal to drop a suit filed by Redbox that stemmed from its demand that new releases be kept out of Redbox's kiosks for 45 days after they go on sale. Time Warner's Warner Bros. has also insisted on an availability delay and it, too, is embroiled in a legal fight with Redbox.

Even if studios cut off supply, Redbox has kept its kiosks loaded with new-release DVDs by buying through retailers.

© 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
© 2009 ECT News Network. All rights reserved.


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