Platinum Studios
Platinum Studios, Inc. is a media company based in the United States. It controls a library of thousands of comic-book characters, which it seeks to adapt, produce, and license for all forms of media. The company has released films and/or television programming with Universal Studios, Paramount Pictures, DreamWorks, MGM, Showtime, and Lions Gate. Platinum has developed film or television with others, including Disney's 20th Century Studios, WarnerMedia's New Line Cinema and Sony Pictures Entertainment.
History
Platinum Studios was co-founded in January 1997 by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg and European rights agent Ervin Rustemagić. As the former head of Malibu Comics, Rosenberg led comic spin-offs into toys, television, and feature films, including the 1.65 billion-dollar film and television franchise Men in Black, based on the Marvel/Malibu comic The Men in Black by Lowell Cunningham. In 1992, Rosenberg brokered a deal in which seven top-selling artists defected from Marvel Comics to form Image Comics. Rosenberg signed the artists to a label deal which made Malibu the publisher of record for the first comics from Image, which gave the upstart creator-run publisher access to the distribution channels. This subsequently led to Malibu breaking all sales records for independent comics. In 1992, Malibu grabbed almost 10% of the American comics market share, temporarily moving ahead of industry giant DC Comics.Platinum Studios acquired the film and television rights for Jeremiah, which became the first European graphic novel series to be turned into a live action television series on U.S. television.
Platinum produces based on two categories: Those from the "Macroverse Bible," a multi-thousand page bible of interrelated comic characters created by Rosenberg, including titles such as Cowboys & Aliens, and properties acquired from other companies or creators such as Dylan Dog and Jeremiah. Rustemagić left Platinum Studios in 2000. The company's comic publishing philosophy is for the original publishers or rights holders to continue publishing their comics with Platinum Studios handling all other rights and development. Comics have been published based on Platinum's properties, continuously since inception, whether by Platinum itself or the original rights holders.
In May 1997, soon after forming Platinum Studios, Rosenberg licensed Cowboys & Aliens to DreamWorks/Universal Studios based on film and comic treatments, storylines, artwork and an iconic one sheet of a cowboy on horseback shooting at an oncoming spaceship. The one sheet went on to become the graphic novel cover, and the graphic novel has appeared on the New York Times Bestseller List fourteen times for both hardcover and softcover. Platinum Studios Comics published the Cowboys & Aliens graphic novel in various formats between mid-2006 through 2012:
- Full graphic novel online at for free
- Regular edition to comic shops released through Top Cow Productions
- Special editions to large comics-retailers and mail-order houses, with their own logos along with sales incentives and promotions
- Special gold softback and Black hardback editions, many of which were Platinum Studios’ and Rosenberg's gifts to cast and crew of Cowboys & Aliens
- New York Times Best Seller Hardback graphic album, released by Harper Collins
- New York Times Best Seller softback "movie cover" released by Harper Collins
- Barnes & Noble "Nook" Edition
Over the next ten years, Platinum Studios continued to increase the size of its portfolio through licensing, publishing, film, and television contracts with comic book creators.
In 2005, Platinum hired former Time Warner executive Brian Altounian as its chief operating officer.
Originally running for three years from 2006–2008, Platinum produced the Comic Book Challenge, an annual, televised competition among aspiring comic book creators. The first Challenge was broadcast on KNSD in conjunction with the San Diego Comic-Con, but outgrew NBC affiliate's venue. The following year it was hosted by AT&T.
Platinum Studios posted net losses of $4.3 million in 2006 and $5.1 million in 2007., growing to a revenue of $10.5 million. In September 2006, Platinum Studios purchased the webcomics community site DrunkDuck.com, and in 2008 it acquired the digital media content site WOWIO.
In 2009, Platinum sold WOWIO to Brian Altounian, a Platinum Studios board member and former Platinum COO. In 2010, WOWIO acquired the DrunkDuck community from Platinum Studios as well.
In early 2012, Platinum Studios moved to new offices in West Los Angeles. In 2014, 27 million shares of Platinum were acquired by KCG Holdings.
Film and television production
Platinum has licensed film and television rights to several Hollywood studios. In addition to the finished films Cowboys & Aliens and , Platinum is developing a slate of feature films based on Platinum Studio's portfolio, including:- Atlantis Rising — with producer Mark Canton
- Red Mantis — with producer Tony Krantz
- Unique — with producer David Heyman/Walt Disney Pictures
- The Weapon — with TV star David Henrie attached
- Indestructible Man — an as-yet unreleased Platinum Studios Comics title, with Fox 21
- Gunplay — Fox 21
''Cowboys & Aliens''
Digital publishing
Platinum Studios’ digital publishing works in three areas: web comics publishing, mobile content, and comic news and resources.Drunk Duck and WOWIO
In September 2006, Platinum Studios purchased the webcomics community site DrunkDuck.com for an undisclosed sum. Drunk Duck was at the time a community of mostly amateur webcomics artists. Platinum Studios signed several option agreements with Drunk Duck community members after the purchase, which caused some discord in the community. Some felt it would help the site's popularity and the community would only get bigger and better; others were concerned Platinum was going to "take over" and claim the rights to people's comics. After the purchase, the site featured a mixture of Platinum Studios-owned professional comics and independently owned amateur comics. Platinum never claimed ownership of any comic that it had not entered into legal documentation with. The Drunk Duck community grew to 95,000 subscribed users in mid-2010.In June 2008, Platinum Studios announced that it had begun talks to acquire WOWIO, a Los Angeles-based online destination that provides users the ability to share and consume digital media content, such as e-comics and E-books, while providing revenue-generating opportunities for creators and publishers through advertising and merchandising programs. Platinum hoped to make WOWIO a "major cornerstone" of "a global digital publishing distribution initiative."
The companies projected that the acquisition would be concluded early in the third quarter of 2008, but issues related to Wowio's non-payment of quarterly earnings delayed the sale. In June 2009, WOWIO was purchased outright by Brian Altounian ; leaving Platinum Studios with no ownership stake or percentage.
In June 2010, WOWIO acquired DrunkDuck.com from Platinum Studios.
Platinum Studios Comics
Platinum Studios Comics are distributed both online and in print. Online releases start before in-store print release. In addition, some Platinum Studios Comics titles are developed for film, television, and other media such as app games for mobile devices.Platinum Studios Comics' first print project was the Cowboys & Aliens original graphic novel, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Fred Van Lente and Andrew Foley, and illustrated by Dennis Calero and Luciano Lima.
Titles published
Original graphic novels
- Alien at Large, created by Bob Keenan and Rich Larson
- The Big Amoeba, created, written and illustrated by Art Baltazar
- Cowboys & Aliens, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Fred Van Lente and Andrew Foley, illustrated by Dennis Calero and Luciano Lima
- Gunplay, created and written by Jorge Vega, illustrated by Dominic Vivona
- Hot Shot & Mighty Girl, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Fred van Lente, illustrated by Billy Penn
- Love Bytes, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Josh Elder, illustrated by Gigi
- Nightfall, created and written by Scott O. Brown, illustrated by Ferran Xalabarder
- Red Mantis, created, written and illustrated by Martin Pardo and David Morancho — translated from a Spanish comic called Mal Chance: Lola; film rights sold to producer Tony Krantz in 2009
- Super Larry, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Andy Mangels, illustrated by Dan Thompson
- Watchdogs, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Fred Van Lente and illustrated by Brian Churilla —
Limited series/ongoing series
- The Adventures of Tymm: Alien Circus, created by Dave Roman and L. Frank Weber
- Atlantis Rising, created by Scott O. Brown and Tim Irwin — film rights sold to producer Mark Canton in 2012
- Big Badz, created by Rob Moran, written by Chuck Dixon, illustrated by Enrique Villagrán
- Blood Nation, created and written by Rob Moran, illustrated by James Devlin
- Consumed
- Ghosting, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Fred Van Lente, illustrated Charles Carvalho and Carlos Ferreira — co-published with Top Cow Productions
- Hero by Night, created, written and illustrated by D. J. Coffman, colored by Jason Embury
- * Limited series
- * Ongoing series
- * Hero By Night Free Comic Book Day Edition
- I Was Kidnapped By Lesbian Pirates From Outer Space, created, written and illustrated by Megan Rose Gedris
- Incursion, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Jay Busbee, illustrated by Axel Medellin Machain
- Kiss 4K, written by Ricky Sprague, illustrated by Kevin Crossley and Thomas Ruppert
- Unique, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Dean Motter, illustrated by Dennis Calero — film rights licensed to Walt Disney Pictures in 2009
- The Weapon, created by Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, written by Fred Van Lente, illustrated by Scott Koblish — film rights sold in 2009
Comic Book Challenge
The winner of the 2006 Comic Book Challenge was D. J. Coffman's Hero by Night, which was subsequently published as a limited series and an ongoing series by Platinum Studios Comics. I Was Kidnapped By Lesbian Pirates From Outer Space by Megan Rose Gedris made the final round of the 2006 Comic Book Challenge, and was also subsequently published by Platinum Studios Comics and taken offline by Gedris in 2012.
The 2007 judge's panel consisted of Scrubs regular Donald Faison, Shrek producer John H. Williams, and Platinum Studios Chairman Scott Mitchell Rosenberg. The 2007 winner was Jorge Vega's Gunplay, which was published as an original graphic novel by Platinum Studios Comics in 2008. Actor Brandon Routh was a judge for the 2008 Comic Book Challenge which was won by Carlos Weiser's The Armageddon Chronicles. Due to the economic U.S.crisis at the time, Platinum Studios was unable to publish Weiser's book and the event was discontinued after that.
In 2007–2008, Platinum Studios Comics released a large slate of comic book titles and original graphic novels, including KISS 4K, produced in conjunction with the rock band Kiss; and comics by the winners of its Comic Book Challenge talent contest, including Hero by Night by D.J. Coffman.