DMG Entertainment Founder Dan Mintz on Acquiring Valiant...
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Re: DMG Entertainment Founder Dan Mintz on Acquiring Valiant
Great business move Dino. And one you deserved, as your love for the Valiant Universe was obvious long before you acquired ownership of it.
Valiant is the son of the New Universe.
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Re: DMG Entertainment Founder Dan Mintz on Acquiring Valiant
I'm sticking to my theory that DMG Entertainment only bought Valiant to try to sell it at a later point for a higher price. If Valiant is worth a minimum of $220 million right now it could easily climb past the $500 million mark as long as the first few films are successful. Dan Mintz is probably hoping to strike a deal similar to Marvel's Disney for $4 Billion. I seriously doubt that will happen. The stock market overall is on the decline for all industries, and that Dan Mintz could potentially lose access to his Chinese funding due Yinji potentially going under. As soon as a Valiant film bombs, Dan's going to pull the plug and sell before the market cap drops any further.
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Re: DMG Entertainment Founder Dan Mintz on Acquiring Valiant
I wouldn't be in the least surprised if this transpires to be true, in the event of poor film returns. Having said that, if the VMU (Valiant Movie Universe) ends up making a tonne of money and becomes a household name (I'm into hypotheticals here) then why sell the company on at a higher price? There's at least a chance that DMG would try to further develop and captialise on the property.SuperMage wrote:I'm sticking to my theory that DMG Entertainment only bought Valiant to try to sell it at a later point for a higher price. If Valiant is worth a minimum of $220 million right now it could easily climb past the $500 million mark as long as the first few films are successful. Dan Mintz is probably hoping to strike a deal similar to Marvel's Disney for $4 Billion. I seriously doubt that will happen. The stock market overall is on the decline for all industries, and that Dan Mintz could potentially lose access to his Chinese funding due Yinji potentially going under. As soon as a Valiant film bombs, Dan's going to pull the plug and sell before the market cap drops any further.
Kurt Busiek wrote:Bull$#!t
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Re: DMG Entertainment Founder Dan Mintz on Acquiring Valiant
It all comes down to which scenario yields the best results with the lowest risks to Dan Mintz. The Valiant purchase was opportunistic and timely. DMG bought Valiant at exactly the right moment after all the contracts were locked in for actors and directors on multiple blockbuster films, after the scripts had been written for said films, and after studios had been contracted to distribute the films. DMG Entertainment showed up after all the real work had been done, and bought Valiant while it was still a relatively small company with the guarantee that Valiant's value would likely triple by 2021 as long as everything continued as planned. The work has been done for them, and this scenario nets them the highest results without them having to get involved in the creative process of production. How long DMG retains control of Valiant is a question of how long an investment group can attempt to do a media company's job. If they want to continue trying that hand at running Valiant after the Sony deal expires they'll need to hire people who can act as creative directors for Valiant as a whole.Shadowman99 wrote:I wouldn't be in the least surprised if this transpires to be true, in the event of poor film returns. Having said that, if the VMU (Valiant Movie Universe) ends up making a tonne of money and becomes a household name (I'm into hypotheticals here) then why sell the company on at a higher price? There's at least a chance that DMG would try to further develop and captialise on the property.SuperMage wrote:I'm sticking to my theory that DMG Entertainment only bought Valiant to try to sell it at a later point for a higher price. If Valiant is worth a minimum of $220 million right now it could easily climb past the $500 million mark as long as the first few films are successful. Dan Mintz is probably hoping to strike a deal similar to Marvel's Disney for $4 Billion. I seriously doubt that will happen. The stock market overall is on the decline for all industries, and that Dan Mintz could potentially lose access to his Chinese funding due Yinji potentially going under. As soon as a Valiant film bombs, Dan's going to pull the plug and sell before the market cap drops any further.
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Re: DMG Entertainment Founder Dan Mintz on Acquiring Valiant
Dmg needs to put out some decent comics. Riding on a movie when their comics blow isnt winning them any awardsShadowman99 wrote:I wouldn't be in the least surprised if this transpires to be true, in the event of poor film returns. Having said that, if the VMU (Valiant Movie Universe) ends up making a tonne of money and becomes a household name (I'm into hypotheticals here) then why sell the company on at a higher price? There's at least a chance that DMG would try to further develop and captialise on the property.SuperMage wrote:I'm sticking to my theory that DMG Entertainment only bought Valiant to try to sell it at a later point for a higher price. If Valiant is worth a minimum of $220 million right now it could easily climb past the $500 million mark as long as the first few films are successful. Dan Mintz is probably hoping to strike a deal similar to Marvel's Disney for $4 Billion. I seriously doubt that will happen. The stock market overall is on the decline for all industries, and that Dan Mintz could potentially lose access to his Chinese funding due Yinji potentially going under. As soon as a Valiant film bombs, Dan's going to pull the plug and sell before the market cap drops any further.
I Miss the good old days.
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Re: DMG Entertainment Founder Dan Mintz on Acquiring Valiant
Given the recent publishing slate I'd not be happy to use the descriptor 'blow' as a blanket term for the whole line, as I've been enjoying Ninja-K, Q+W!, XO Manowar, Shadowman and Britannia. Admittedly I haven't yet got my teeth into Dreamside, Rising Spirit or Livewire, but I'd be very surprised if they're absolutely and utterly awful.nonplayer wrote:Dmg needs to put out some decent comics. Riding on a movie when their comics blow isnt winning them any awardsShadowman99 wrote:I wouldn't be in the least surprised if this transpires to be true, in the event of poor film returns. Having said that, if the VMU (Valiant Movie Universe) ends up making a tonne of money and becomes a household name (I'm into hypotheticals here) then why sell the company on at a higher price? There's at least a chance that DMG would try to further develop and captialise on the property.SuperMage wrote:I'm sticking to my theory that DMG Entertainment only bought Valiant to try to sell it at a later point for a higher price. If Valiant is worth a minimum of $220 million right now it could easily climb past the $500 million mark as long as the first few films are successful. Dan Mintz is probably hoping to strike a deal similar to Marvel's Disney for $4 Billion. I seriously doubt that will happen. The stock market overall is on the decline for all industries, and that Dan Mintz could potentially lose access to his Chinese funding due Yinji potentially going under. As soon as a Valiant film bombs, Dan's going to pull the plug and sell before the market cap drops any further.
I know that most(?) folks here are far from pulling the whole monthly line which is a reflection of general opinion on it, but do Valiant comics really blow now? Not in my opinion
Is it just that people are generally bummed out by all the DMG *SQUEE*? I know I've seen a few people psyched for the 'Breakthrough' titles coming later this year, so is this just residual negativity?
On the whole, I agree with the statement though, to some degree. Having said that, there is always the possibility that Valiant could one day shift 100% to a screen-based franchise rather than a paper-based one. Unlikely of course, but undoubtedly a possibility. Have to admit, saw Avengers: Infinity War a few days back and was impressed at how well the Marvel film universe is standing apart from its comic counterpart. Nothing to say that one day there won't be any more Marvel comics and we'll all just be watching Marvel movies instead.
Kurt Busiek wrote:Bull$#!t
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Re: DMG Entertainment Founder Dan Mintz on Acquiring Valiant
Nor mine. Some titles are better than others and there are a few things I'd change, but I'm enjoying the books overall.Shadowman99 wrote:... but do Valiant comics really blow now? Not in my opinion