Alliance Atlantis
Alliance Atlantis Communications Inc. was a media company that operated primarily as a specialty service provider in Canada. Primarily based in Toronto, Alliance Atlantis also had offices in Halifax, Los Angeles, London, Dublin, Madrid, Barcelona, Shannon, and Sydney.
Alliance Atlantis was the result of a merger of two companies: Atlantis Communications, founded in 1978 by Michael MacMillan, Janice L. Platt and Seaton S. MacLean, and Alliance Communications, founded in 1984 by Stephen Roth, Denis Héroux, John Kemeny, Robert Lantos, Andras Hamori and Susan Cavan as Alliance Entertainment. Alliance Communications and Atlantis Communications merged to form Alliance Atlantis in 1998 which was a member of the North American Broadcasting Association.
The company ceased to exist in 2007 as the broadcasting division was acquired by Canwest Global Communications and an affiliate of Goldman Sachs that year. The motion picture division was then spun off and operated independently as Alliance Films, headquartered in Montreal, and the international television distribution division was sold to Echo Bridge Entertainment.
All of the former Alliance Atlantis specialty networks, except for the now-defunct BBC Kids, are now owned by Corus Entertainment. The films division was later acquired by Entertainment One group and folded into eOne on January 9, 2013. Most of the assets of eOne, which included Alliance Atlantis' films division and television library, were later acquired by Lionsgate on December 27, 2023.
The Alliance name survived under the Alliance Cinemas banner until January 1, 2021; the theaters under the chain are now owned by Cineplex Entertainment.
Formation and history
On July 20, 1998, Canadian production companies Alliance Communications and Atlantis Communications announced plans to merge their operations under a single company, Alliance Atlantis Communications Inc. The deal was fully closed on September 21. As President and Board Director of the subsequent combined Alliance Atlantis, Lewis Rose was responsible for leading the teams which arranged the merger financing of $545 million and which achieved in excess of $20 million in savings and synergies from the combination of the two companies in the year following the merger. After the merger, the company laid off 15% of their staff, and closed the former Atlantis sales office in Amsterdam. As part of the merger deal, Robert Lantos, founder of Alliance, signed a deal for film and TV production with Alliance Atlantis through his own firm, Serendipity Point Films.At the time of the merger, both companies had launched various Canadian specialty television services; in 1995, Alliance launched Showcase Television while Atlantis launched Life Network ; in fall 1997 the companies launched History Television and HGTV Canada respectively. Earlier that year, Alliance Atlantis teamed up with Hallmark Cards to create Crayola Kids Adventures, a series of three direct-to-video adaptations of well-known children's novels. Atlantis had also been a major investor in YTV in its first few years before selling out to Shaw Communications and later, Corus Entertainment from 1999.
In 1998, the company purchased 75% of Cineplex Odeon Films. In 1999, German-based distributor Kinowelt took a 20% stake in the company alongside a 50% in their UK distribution arm Alliance Atlantis Releasing, which was renamed to Momentum Pictures in 2000. Also that year, the company secured the Canadian rights to distribute features by Destination Films. Also in 2000, it purchased the rights to CSI: Crime Scene Investigation from Disney's Touchstone Television. Another major deal in 2000 was a renewal of their distribution pact with Artisan Entertainment, including Canadian distribution of Artisan material, and UK theatrical distribution of Artisan films via Momentum Pictures.
The company expanded its business with its launch of its children's production label AAC Kids in 1999, and its nonfiction production label, AAC Fact in 2000. These labels were dissolved in 2003.
In April 2000, AAC Kids signed a European co-financing and distribution deal with German studio TV-Loonland AG. The distribution deal was valued at $14 million.
In July 2000, three months before Alliance Atlantis launched AAC Fact, Alliance Atlantis entered the documentary & nonfiction programming by acquiring independent producer and distributor Great North Communications for C$6 million. The acquisition of Great North had given Alliance Atlantis their own documentary and nonfiction production division.
In 2001, the company purchased Salter Street Films, which produced a number of television shows for both the Canadian and international market. However, soon after the acquisition, Salter Street was disbanded and its active projects were transferred to Alliance Atlantis' own television production/development division.
Citing lower profits, Alliance Atlantis later closed the majority of its production arm, aside from the highly profitable CSI: Crime Scene Investigation family of series, which it co-produces with CBS Television Studios. It briefly maintained Salter Street's long-running This Hour Has 22 Minutes before transferring the show to the Halifax Film Company, made up of former Salter Street employees. Its primary business became its ownership of a number of Canadian specialty services, which, in addition to those listed above, later included Food Network, Discovery Health, BBC Canada, BBC Kids and more.
Throughout the years, the company had purchased assets of several bankrupt studios, including Norstar Entertainment, Telescene, Peace Arch, Cinemavault, Odeon Films and in 2005, had bought out the television library of Fireworks Distributing Corporation from CanWest Global Communications.
In 2007, Alliance Atlantis was named one of Canada's Top 100 Employers, as published in Maclean's magazine, the only broadcaster to be included on the list.
Sale to CanWest / Goldman Sachs
On December 20, 2006, the company announced that it was "exploring strategic alternatives", effectively putting the company up for sale. Expected bidders included Canwest Global, Corus Entertainment, Astral Media, and Rogers Communications. The rights to CSI were expected to be sold separately, with CBS Paramount Television as the most likely bidder. A similar announcement was made previously regarding the Motion Picture Distribution unit, which is also expected to be sold separately while finding a bidder to acquire most parts of the company.On January 10, 2007, it was announced that Alliance Atlantis would be acquired by a consortium of Canwest Global and Goldman Sachs Alternatives.
- The Entertainment and Production division, consisting mainly of AAC's 50% stake in the lucrative CSI franchise, was acquired by Goldman Sachs Alternatives. CBS Paramount TV gained Alliance Atlantis' international distribution rights to the programs. These assets are now owned by Lionsgate Television as of 2024.
- *Alliance Atlantis' international television distribution operations were sold by Goldman Sachs Alternatives to Echo Bridge Entertainment.
- Motion Picture Distribution LP, including its publicly traded income fund, was acquired by Canada-based EdgeStone Capital Partners and Goldman Sachs Alternatives. On January 15, 2008, Edgemont's 51% voting stake in the Alliance label was purchased by Société générale de financement du Québec, an investment agency of the provincial government. Since the breakup, the company's films have been distributed under the "Alliance" banner for English-language releases and "Alliance Vivafilm" for French-language releases until the sale of the company to eOne.
- The Broadcasting division was jointly acquired by Canwest and Goldman Sachs Alternatives, with the former owning a majority voting interest and the latter a majority of the equity. Canwest owns 66.67% and GS owns 33.32% of CW Media, the holding company for the former AAC channels. Initially, Canwest still managed the channels it owned before the merger separately. It was expected that the Canwest and CW Media broadcasting divisions would eventually be merged, potentially also giving GS a sizable interest in Global and other Canwest channels.
Ramifications
Following Canwest seeking creditor protection in late 2009, Shaw Communications subsequently took over most of Alliance Atlantis's former broadcasting assets as of October 27, 2010. after CRTC approval for the sale was announced on October 22. Alliance Atlantis became part of the Shaw Media division. Corus Entertainment acquired Shaw Media on April 1, 2016.Entertainment One would later acquire Alliance Films on January 9, 2013, and all of their subsidiaries from Goldman Sachs, similar to the purchase of Maple Pictures a year prior. eOne subsequently adopted the 2004 Alliance Atlantis fanfare, still in use by Alliance Films, for their own logo. On November 20, 2014, Echo Bridge Entertainment sold Alliance Atlantis' children's programs, including the international distribution rights to the Degrassi franchise, to DHX Media. In 2017, producer Steven Paul announced that he would acquire the non-family assets of Echo Bridge Entertainment, including the international distribution rights to Alliance Atlantis' library and later folded it into SP Releasing, in turn licensed most of Alliance Atlantis, Cineplex Odeon Films, Echo Bridge and PM Entertainment libraries to FilmRise for digital distribution and online streaming. eOne in turn was acquired by U.S. toy maker Hasbro in 2019. On August 3, 2023, Hasbro announced that it would sell most of eOne's assets, including the copyrights and Canadian distribution rights to the library of Alliance Atlantis, to Lionsgate. The deal closed on December 27, 2023.
Assets
Broadcasting
Channels marked in bold lettering indicates Alliance Atlantis was the managing partner.;Specialty channelsBBC Canada BBC Kids Discovery Health Canada Fine Living Canada Food Network Canada HGTV Canada History Television IFC Canada National Geographic Channel Canada ShowcaseShowcase Action Showcase Diva Slice
- Historia with Astral Media owned the other stake.
- One
- SCREAM with Corus Entertainment owned the other stake
- Séries+ with Astral Media owned the other stake
- Score Media Inc.
- * HARDtv
- * OutTV
- * The Score
;Proposed but never launched
- Adventure One
- Aviation TV
- The Canadian Consumer Channel
- Canal Aventure
- Canal National Geographic
- Classics TV
- Comedy for Kids
- Corporate TV
- Cottage Life eventually launched in 2013
- DIY Television
- Girls TV
- Jobs TV
- Justice TV
- The Luxe Network
- Magazine Rack Television
- Martial Arts TV
- Military Television
- Nature TV
- Nostalgia TV
- Ocean Life TV
- Play TV
- Real TV
- Recovery TV
- Relationships TV
- Scream TV
- Skating TV
- The Collectors Network
- The World Cinema Channel
- Trains, Boats and Planes
- TV Guide Channel
- U8TV
- Wheels
- Wheels Channel
- World News TV
- X-Treme TV
- ZTV
Cinemas
Alliance Atlantis owned a chain of cinemas called Alliance Cinemas. The chain owned movie theatres in British Columbia and Ontario and was based in Toronto.Entertainment
This division of Alliance Atlantis developed and distributed various television programmes to Canadian, American and International broadcasters. The programs ranged from series, lifestyle and documentaries. Some documentaries were produced through the AAC Fact unit.AAC Kids
In April 2008, Echo Bridge Home Entertainment acquired the television catalogue of Alliance Atlantis. In November 2014, DHX Media acquired a majority of Echo Bridge's children's catalogue.In 2011, the German distributor m4e AG acquired the catalogue of TV-Loonland AG, AAC Kids' European distributor. In 2017, the Belgian distributor Studio 100 acquired a majority stake in m4e AG.The Olden Days Coat A Child's Christmas in Wales Ramona Double Daniel Max Glick The Adventures of the Black Stallion Maniac Mansion The Cutaway Kelly That Scatterbrain Booky Wild Side Show The Odyssey White Fang The Mighty Jungle Squawk Box ReBoot Mirror, Mirror Flash Forward Straight Up Beast Wars: Transformers My Life as a Dog Crayola Kids Adventures Captain Star Mirror, Mirror II Mowgli: The New Adventures of the Jungle Book Legacy The Famous Jett Jackson Shadow Raiders Pumper Pups I Was a Sixth Grade Alien Hoze Houndz Yvon of the Yukon In a Heartbeat A Fish Tale Oscar Charlie Sail Away Old Tom Degrassi: The Next Generation Ace Lightning Connie the Cow Henry's World Mental Block Poko Dragon Booster Instant Star
- ''Lunar Jim''
Comedy and drama programs
Airwaves The Ray Bradbury Theater Mount Royal Bordertown E.N.G. Mom P.I. Neon Rider Counterstrike African Skies Destiny Ridge This Hour Has 22 Minutes Due South TekWar Mysterious Island The Outer Limits Adventures of Sinbad Traders Psi Factor: Chronicles of the Paranormal Fast Track Night Man Earth: Final Conflict Cold Squad Welcome to Paradox The Crow: Stairway to Heaven Da Vinci's Inquest Power Play Little Men Nothing Too Good for a Cowboy Total Recall 2070 Peter Benchley's Amazon BeastMaster Drop the Beat Starhunter 2gether: The Series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Trailer Park Boys Haven The Associates CSI: Miami The Eleventh Hour CSI: NY- ''Rent-a-Goalie''
AAC Fact
- Turning Points of History Gladiatrix
- ''Daredevils''
Feature films
Overdrawn at the Memory Bank Iron Eagle II The Wraith The Gate The Gate II: Trespassers Black Robe The Twist I Love a Man in Uniform Paris, France Exotica Johnny Mnemonic When Night Is Falling National Lampoon's Senior Trip Never Talk to Strangers Family of Cops Crash The Sweet Hereafter In the Company of Men Last Night Air Bud: Golden Receiver Existenz The Five Senses A Room for Romeo Brass Jesus' Son Something More Sunshine Felicia's Journey Stardom Relative Values The Claim The 51st State Slackers Virginia's Run Men with Brooms Bowling for Columbine Morvern Callar Ararat Alice's Odyssey The Good Thief Max Steal Owning Mahowny Blizzard Kart Racer The Barbarian Invasions Game Over: Kasparov and the Machine Foolproof My Life Without Me The Blue Butterfly Going the Distance Saint Ralph The Rocket Munich Angel's Rage Bon Cop, Bad Cop Snow Cake Trailer Park Boys: The Movie It's a Boy Girl Thing Days of Darkness- ''The Stone Angel''
Short films
- ''Boys and Girls''
Alliance Films
Alliance Films was a major motion picture distribution/production company which serves Canada, the United Kingdom, and Spain. Formally known as Motion Picture Distribution LP, it was re branded and relaunched in 2007 due to the break-up of its preceding company, Alliance Atlantis, which was sold off piece by piece to Canwest Global, Goldman Sachs Alternatives, along with several other smaller companies. Alliance Atlantis and Vivafilm home video releases were manufactured and distributed by NBCUniversal's Universal Pictures Home Entertainment.Entertainment One later acquired Alliance Films on January 9, 2013, for $225 million and merged Alliance Films and all of their subsidiaries under the latter brand. Most of the assets of eOne, as well as Alliance Films libraries was subsequently bought by Lionsgate in late 2023.