Friday, September 14, 2012

Rothman Exits as Head of Fox Film Division

By BROOKS BARNES AND MICHAEL CIEPLY

LOS ANGELES â€" Thomas E. Rothman, a chairman and chief executive officer of Fox Filmed Entertainment, resigned late Friday, a move that comes as 20th Century Fox fights to regain market share and forge ahead with two “Avatar” sequels.

News Corporation, which owns the studio and announced the departure, also reversed a three-year-old decision to consolidate management of its movie and TV operations. Going forward, Jim Gianopulos, who shared responsibility for those businesses with Mr. Rothman, will have a narrower focus, running 20th Century Fox Film â€" the movie studio, the Fox Searchlight specialty label and home entertainment.

The newly separate 20th Century Fox Televisi on will be overseen by its current co-chairs, Dana Walden and Gary Newman. Mr. Gianopulos, Ms. Walden and Mr. Newman will report to Chase Carey, News Corporation's chief operating officer.

Mr. Rothman's resignation takes effect Jan. 1. In an internal email addressed “dear friends,” Mr. Rothman, 57, offered no details about his decision to leave after 18 years. But he may have chafed at News Corporation's decision to strip television out of his control. In the internal note, Mr. Rothman said he needed “some new challenges and to write a new chapter.”

Although Fox insiders were stunned, the movie capital has been rife with speculation in recent weeks that Mr. Rothman is a candidate for a top movie job at Universal Studios, where the president, Ron Meyer, is expected to retire.

In his note to the staff, Mr. Rothman â€" a company man to the degree that he used Fox's signature trumpet fanfare as his cell phone ring tone â€" spotlighted the role he played in creating Fox Searchlight, which won a best picture Oscar with “Slumdog Millionaire.” He also listed his involvement with the two highest-grossing movies in history, “Avatar” and “Titanic,” as being among his proudest achievements.

Among contemporary studio chiefs, Mr. Rothman was a bit of a paradox. He is an ardent film-lover who hosted his own screenings of classic films, called “Fox Legacy,” on the Fox Movie Channel. But he also focused heavily on populist films that could border on the low-brow, as with the successful “Alvin and the Chipmunks” series.

Mr. Rothman, one of the longest-tenured studio chiefs in Hollywood, started his career as an entertainment lawyer and had been an executive vice president at Columbia Pictures under David Puttnam in the 1980s.

Known for its tough cost controls, Fox is coming off a difficult stretch. Films like “Prometheus,” “Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter” and “We Bought a Zoo” were disa ppointing at the box office, and Mr. Rothman has been waiting for James Cameron to finish scripts for two “Avatar” sequels that now won't arrive before 2015.

But Mr. Rothman â€" exhibiting his colorful style - expressed confidence in his internal email over the coming Fox slate, which includes “Life of Pi,” an Oscar hopeful directed by Ang Lee. “A bunch of you guys know what the tattoo on my ankle says,” he said. “It's what I wish for us all: ‘Excelsior!'”



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