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Gaumont Film Company

The Gaumont Film Company (/ˈɡmɒ̃/,[citation needed] French: [ɡomɔ̃]), often shortened to Gaumont, is a French film studio headquartered in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France.[2] Founded by the engineer-turned-inventor Léon Gaumont (1864–1946) in 1895, it is the oldest extant film company in the world, established before other studios such as Pathé (founded in 1896), Titanus (1904), Nordisk Film (1906), Universal, Paramount, and Nikkatsu (founded in 1912).[3]

Gaumont SA
Formerly
  • L. Gaumont & Cie (1895–1906)
  • Société des Établissements Gaumont (1906–1930)
  • Gaumont-Franco-Film-Aubert (1930–1938)
  • Société Nouvelle des Établissements Gaumont (1938–1975)
TypePublic
Euronext Paris: GAM
IndustryMotion pictures
Founded23 June 1895; 127 years ago (1895-06-23)
FounderLéon Gaumont
Headquarters,
France
Key people
Nicolas Seydoux (Chairman and CEO)
ProductsMotion pictures
Television programs
Film distribution
Revenue €169.1 million (2013)[1]
€12.7 million (2013)[1]
Total assets €451.5 million (2011)[1]
Total equity €255.9 million (2011)[1]
OwnerSidonie Dumas (89.7%)
Number of employees
173 (2011)[1]
SubsidiariesGaumont Animation
Gaumont International Television
Gaumont-Pathe Archives
Gaumont Distribution
Websitegaumont.fr (France)
gaumont.net (America)
A Spido reportage at the Fotomuseum Antwerp

Gaumont predominantly produces, co-produces, and distributes films, and in 2011, 95% of Gaumont's consolidated revenues came from the film division.[4] The company is increasingly becoming a TV series producer with its American subsidiary Gaumont International Television as well as its existing French production features.

Gaumont is run by Nicolas Seydoux (President), Sidonie Dumas (General Director), and Christophe Riandee (Deputy General Director).[5]

History

Originally dealing in photographic apparatus, the company began producing short films in 1897 to promote its make of camera-projector. Léon Gaumont's secretary Alice Guy-Blaché became the motion picture industry's first female director, and she went on to become the Head of Production of the Gaumont film studio from 1897 to 1907.[6] From 1905 to 1914, its Cité Elgé studios (from the normal French pronunciation of the founder's initials L-G) at La Villette, France, were the largest in the world. Gaumont began producing full-length feature films in 1908.

The company manufactured its own equipment and mass-produced films until 1907, when Louis Feuillade became the artistic director of Gaumont. When World War I broke out, he was replaced by Léonce Perret, who continued his career in the United States a few years later.[citation needed] In 1909 the company participated in the Paris Film Congress, a failed attempt by European producers to create a cartel similar to that of the MPPC in the United States.

Gaumont opened foreign offices and acquired the theatre chain Gaumont British, which later notably produced several films directed by Alfred Hitchcock such as The 39 Steps (1935) and The Lady Vanishes (1938). Along with its competitor Pathé Frères, Gaumont dominated the motion picture industry in Europe until the outbreak of World War I in 1914.

 
Gaumont–British logo in the 1910s and 20s
 
Gaumont logo in the 1920s

Following World War I, Gaumont suffered economic losses owing to increased competition from American Hollywood productions. In 1925, the studio's output decreased to only three films. In addition, Gaumont was unable to keep pace with the cost of technological changes (e.g., the advent of sound movies). Struck by mounting debts in the early 1930s and the effects of the Great Depression, Gaumont declared bankruptcy in 1935. In 1937, the studio ceased production and operated only as a theater and distribution company. The company was purchased by the French corporation Havas in 1938, was renamed Société Nouvelle des Etablissements Gaumont, and reopened its film production studio.[7]

During the later years of World War II, Gaumont was affected by the financial ruin of France's economy as well as the physical destruction of its facilities. The company ceased production until 1947. However, the global interest in French New Wave films in the 1950s, as well as the permissiveness within French films (e.g., nudity), allowed French productions to successfully compete against an American cinema that was still burdened by conservative moral codes. The period was to see the return to prominence of Gaumont Studios.[7]

In 1975, media tycoon and French old money heir multimillionaire Nicolas Seydoux started managing Gaumont; he personally owned 60% of the shares and 70% of the votes.

 
Gaumont–Columbia–TriStar Films logo (2004–2007)

On 2 February 2000, Philippe Binant, technical manager of Digital Cinema Project at Gaumont, realized the first digital cinema projection in Europe[8] with the Texas Instruments prototype projector.[9]

From 1993 to early 2004, Gaumount and Disney made a partnership for producing films for theater distribution.[citation needed] In 2001, Gaumont spun off the cinema division into a joint venture with Pathé since known as Les Cinémas Gaumont Pathé. Gaumont owned a 34% stake in the entity, which controls a large cinema network in France, Switzerland, and the Netherlands. As of 2011, this stake was worth €214 million.[10] In 2004, Gaumont continued its development with Pathé to set up another joint venture, Gaumont-Pathé Archives. Gaumont owns 57.5% of this entity, which contains newsreels, documentaries, and silent movies from the 20th and 21st centuries.

From early 2004 to 2007, the company had a partnership with Sony for producing films and for theater and DVD distribution worldwide. And for many years, Gaumont's home video division was a joint venture with Sony Pictures. Currently, Gaumont distributes its films through Paramount Home Media Distribution on video in France.

At the end of 2007, Gaumont took over the French animation studio Alphanim for €25 million and renamed it Gaumont Alphanim. As of 2013, it is known as Gaumont Animation.[11]

On 16 December 2010, Gaumont acquired a 37.48% stake in the share capital of the Légende company and its subsidiaries for €6.6 million. Légende is a full-length film and television series production and distribution company managed by Alain Goldman. As of 2011, the Légende stake is worth €6.3 million.[12]

2011 was also the year that Gaumont opened its Gaumont International Television division in Los Angeles, USA.[13]

In 2011, Gaumont co-produced and co-distributed The Intouchables, which became France's highest-grossing movie of all time.[14] The international release of The Intouchables was equally successful, trumping previous international blockbusters such as Harry Potter and Transporters in Germany.[15] Intouchables is the highest-grossing foreign-language movie (any language other than English) beating the previous record of $275 million by the Japanese Spirited Away. The film was a major catalyst for Gaumont's boosting fourth-quarter 2011 cinema sales to €47.9 million, up 651% year on year.[16] The film's success turned a half-year 2011 loss to a record annual €26 million profit.[1] The Intouchables currently has a box office of $361 million.[17]

In 2012, Gaumont acquired the production company Nouvelles Editions de Films (NEF) for €3.1 million. The company was previously run and created by cinema legend Louis Malle. As part of the acquisition, Gaumont now owns the entire Malle collection, including Ascenseur pour l'échafaud, Atlantic City, and Au Revoir les Enfants.[18]

In February 2012, Gaumount restarted its television division, which had been defunct for about ten years.[14]

On 2 May 2016 according to Deadline Hollywood, Gaumont teamed up with Lionsgate and seven other international companies to launch the Globalgate Entertainment consortium. Globalgate will produce and distribute local-language films in markets around the world. Lionsgate said Monday it had partnered with international entertainment executives Paul Presburger, William Pfeiffer and Clifford Werber to launch Globalgate.[19] Three years later, Gaumont was replaced by TF1 Studio as Globalgate's new French member.[20]

On 1 March 2017, Gaumont sold its 34% stake in Les Cinémas Gaumont Pathé to Pathé for $400 million in order to focus on production.[21]

In January 2018, it was announced that the company's first office, in Cologne, is scheduled for opening in July 2018. The office is set to focus on development and production of premiere drama programming, according to film producer and new manager Sabine de Mardt.[22]

Production

Gaumont currently[as of?] has 938 films in its catalogue, most of which are in French; there are, however, some exceptions, such as Luc Besson's The Fifth Element (1997). Among the most notable films produced by Gaumont are the serials Judex (1916) and Fantômas (1913); the comic Onésime series, starring Ernest Bourbon; and the comic Bébé series, starring five-year-old René Dary. The two biggest films that Gaumont owns the rights of are Jean-Marie Poiré's Les Visiteurs, with a box-office of $98 million, and the 2011 blockbuster Intouchables by Olivier Nakache and Éric Toledano, with a box office of $427 million.[17]

Directors such as Abel Gance and the early animator Emile Cohl worked for the studio at one time or another.

The company has also produced television shows, including seven animated series: Highlander: The Animated Series, Space Goofs, The Magician, Dragon Flyz, F Is for Family, and Sky Dancers (the second and third are based on their respective toy lines), and the very popular Oggy and the Cockroaches. The company also began production in its American unit Gaumont International Television on two series: Hannibal and Hemlock Grove.

The studio has been described as a mini-major studio.[23]

Corporate structure

Ciné Par is a majority shareholder with 69.92% of the voting rights: this entity is controlled by CEO Nicolas Seydoux. The other private shareholders are First Eagle Investment Management, Bolloré, and Groupe Industriel Marcel Dassault. The company has a free float of 416,784 shares, which represents 9.75% of the capital and 5.99% of the voting rights.[1]

Financial information

In the first half of 2012, Gaumont recorded a profit of €7.7 million, which reversed the €0.6 million loss from the first half of 2011. The profit was driven by a 49% increase in revenue, which reached €50.1 million. The company cited the continued effects of Intouchables, which increased International revenues by 153%.[24]

Gaumont's current[as of?] market capitalization is €164 million.[25]

Léon Gaumont selected the ox-eye daisy as the company logo to pay homage to his mother, whose first name was Marguerite (Daisy). Through the decades the logo has been redesigned several times, but the daisy has always remained present, even though its significance has been largely forgotten.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "2011 Gaumont Annual Report" (PDF).
  2. ^ "Contactez-nous." Gaumont Film Company. Retrieved on 2 March 2010.
  3. ^ Richard Abel, The Ciné Goes to Town: French Cinema, 1896–1914, University of California Press, 1994, p. 10, ISBN 0-520-07936-1
  4. ^ "2011 Gaumont Revenue statement"
  5. ^ "Qui – Gaumont". www.gaumont.fr. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  6. ^ Green, Pamela and Sluijs, Jarik van. Be Natural documentary precis. http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/benatural/be-natural-the-untold-story-of-alice-guy-blache . Accessed 10 Aug 2013.
  7. ^ a b "Gaumont SA - Company Profile, Information, Business Description, History, Background Information on Gaumont SA". Reference for Business. 2015. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
  8. ^ Cahiers du cinéma, n°hors-série, Paris, April 2000, p. 32.
  9. ^ Claude Forest, « De la pellicule aux pixels : l'anomie des exploitants de salles de cinéma », in Laurent Creton, Kira Kitsopanidou (sous la direction de), Les salles de cinéma : enjeux, défis et perspectives, Armand Colin, Paris, 2013.
  10. ^ "2011 Gaumont Annual Report p.54"
  11. ^ "Gaumont - Sorties en salles, actualité DVD et VOD, catalogue en ligne" (PDF). www.gaumont.com.
  12. ^ "Gaumont 2010 Report"
  13. ^ Keslassy, Elsa. Alphanim Inks DreamWorks Deal, Rebrands. March 11, 2013. Variety. Retrieved August 5, 2013.
  14. ^ a b Keslassy, Elsa. Gaumont ups TV activity. February 25, 2012. Variety.
  15. ^ "‘The Intouchables’ Overtakes 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2' at German Box Office"
  16. ^ "Gaumont Q4 revenues"
  17. ^ a b "Intouchables Box-office mojo". 17 February 2018
  18. ^ "Gaumont press release"
  19. ^ Lieberman, David (2 May 2016). "Lionsgate Partners With Execs At Film Initiative Targeting Global Local Markets". Deadline. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  20. ^ Dave McNary (10 July 2019). "Lionsgate's Globalgate Consortium Adds France's TF1 Studio". variety.com. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  21. ^ Hopewell, John (1 March 2017). "Gaumont Sells Cinema Chain Stake to Pathé for $400 Million".
  22. ^ "Gaumont Expands to Germany, Appoints Warner Bros. Executive (EXCLUSIVE)". variety.com. 24 January 2018.
  23. ^ Keslassy, Elsa (5 August 2013). "Gaumont Intl. Television Staff Up L.A. Headquarter". Variety. Retrieved 5 August 2013. Gaumont International Television, the French mini-major's L.A.-based production and distribution studio,...
  24. ^ "Gaumont 2012 First Half Earnings Report"
  25. ^ "Gaumont share price"

Sources

  • Philippe Binant, Au cœur de la projection numérique, Actions, 29, 12–13, Kodak, Paris, 2007
  • Marie-Sophie Corcy, Jacques Malthete, Laurent Mannoni, Jean-Jacques Meusy, Les Premières Années de la société L. Gaumont et Cie, Afrhc, Bibliothèque du Film, Gaumont, Paris, 1999
  • François Garçon, Gaumont. Un siècle de cinéma, Gallimard, coll. "Découvertes Gallimard" (nº 224), Paris, 1992
  • Philippe d'Hugues et Dominique Muller, Gaumont, 90 ans de cinéma, Editions Ramsay, Cinémathèque Française, Paris, 1986
  • Yoana Pavlova, « Gaumont », in Jean-Michel Frodon & Dina Iordanova (editors), Cinemas of Paris, 145–150, University of St Andrews, St Andrews Film Studies, Scotland, 2016.
  • Nicolas Seydoux, Cent ans de réflexions, Cent ans de cinéma, 6–15, Gaumont, Neuilly-sur-Seine, 1995

External links

  • Official website

gaumont, film, company, british, company, gaumont, british, citation, needed, french, ɡomɔ, often, shortened, gaumont, french, film, studio, headquartered, neuilly, seine, france, founded, engineer, turned, inventor, léon, gaumont, 1864, 1946, 1895, oldest, ex. For the British company see Gaumont British The Gaumont Film Company ˈ ɡ oʊ m ɒ citation needed French ɡomɔ often shortened to Gaumont is a French film studio headquartered in Neuilly sur Seine France 2 Founded by the engineer turned inventor Leon Gaumont 1864 1946 in 1895 it is the oldest extant film company in the world established before other studios such as Pathe founded in 1896 Titanus 1904 Nordisk Film 1906 Universal Paramount and Nikkatsu founded in 1912 3 Gaumont SAFormerlyL Gaumont amp Cie 1895 1906 Societe des Etablissements Gaumont 1906 1930 Gaumont Franco Film Aubert 1930 1938 Societe Nouvelle des Etablissements Gaumont 1938 1975 TypePublicTraded asEuronext Paris GAMIndustryMotion picturesFounded23 June 1895 127 years ago 1895 06 23 FounderLeon GaumontHeadquartersNeuilly sur Seine FranceKey peopleNicolas Seydoux Chairman and CEO ProductsMotion picturesTelevision programsFilm distributionRevenue 169 1 million 2013 1 Net income 12 7 million 2013 1 Total assets 451 5 million 2011 1 Total equity 255 9 million 2011 1 OwnerSidonie Dumas 89 7 Number of employees173 2011 1 SubsidiariesGaumont AnimationGaumont International TelevisionGaumont Pathe ArchivesGaumont DistributionWebsitegaumont fr France gaumont net America A Spido reportage at the Fotomuseum Antwerp Gaumont predominantly produces co produces and distributes films and in 2011 95 of Gaumont s consolidated revenues came from the film division 4 The company is increasingly becoming a TV series producer with its American subsidiary Gaumont International Television as well as its existing French production features Gaumont is run by Nicolas Seydoux President Sidonie Dumas General Director and Christophe Riandee Deputy General Director 5 Contents 1 History 2 Production 3 Corporate structure 4 Financial information 5 Logo 6 References 6 1 Sources 7 External linksHistory EditOriginally dealing in photographic apparatus the company began producing short films in 1897 to promote its make of camera projector Leon Gaumont s secretary Alice Guy Blache became the motion picture industry s first female director and she went on to become the Head of Production of the Gaumont film studio from 1897 to 1907 6 From 1905 to 1914 its Cite Elge studios from the normal French pronunciation of the founder s initials L G at La Villette France were the largest in the world Gaumont began producing full length feature films in 1908 The company manufactured its own equipment and mass produced films until 1907 when Louis Feuillade became the artistic director of Gaumont When World War I broke out he was replaced by Leonce Perret who continued his career in the United States a few years later citation needed In 1909 the company participated in the Paris Film Congress a failed attempt by European producers to create a cartel similar to that of the MPPC in the United States Gaumont opened foreign offices and acquired the theatre chain Gaumont British which later notably produced several films directed by Alfred Hitchcock such as The 39 Steps 1935 and The Lady Vanishes 1938 Along with its competitor Pathe Freres Gaumont dominated the motion picture industry in Europe until the outbreak of World War I in 1914 Gaumont British logo in the 1910s and 20s Gaumont logo in the 1920s Following World War I Gaumont suffered economic losses owing to increased competition from American Hollywood productions In 1925 the studio s output decreased to only three films In addition Gaumont was unable to keep pace with the cost of technological changes e g the advent of sound movies Struck by mounting debts in the early 1930s and the effects of the Great Depression Gaumont declared bankruptcy in 1935 In 1937 the studio ceased production and operated only as a theater and distribution company The company was purchased by the French corporation Havas in 1938 was renamed Societe Nouvelle des Etablissements Gaumont and reopened its film production studio 7 During the later years of World War II Gaumont was affected by the financial ruin of France s economy as well as the physical destruction of its facilities The company ceased production until 1947 However the global interest in French New Wave films in the 1950s as well as the permissiveness within French films e g nudity allowed French productions to successfully compete against an American cinema that was still burdened by conservative moral codes The period was to see the return to prominence of Gaumont Studios 7 In 1975 media tycoon and French old money heir multimillionaire Nicolas Seydoux started managing Gaumont he personally owned 60 of the shares and 70 of the votes Gaumont Columbia TriStar Films logo 2004 2007 On 2 February 2000 Philippe Binant technical manager of Digital Cinema Project at Gaumont realized the first digital cinema projection in Europe 8 with the Texas Instruments prototype projector 9 From 1993 to early 2004 Gaumount and Disney made a partnership for producing films for theater distribution citation needed In 2001 Gaumont spun off the cinema division into a joint venture with Pathe since known as Les Cinemas Gaumont Pathe Gaumont owned a 34 stake in the entity which controls a large cinema network in France Switzerland and the Netherlands As of 2011 this stake was worth 214 million 10 In 2004 Gaumont continued its development with Pathe to set up another joint venture Gaumont Pathe Archives Gaumont owns 57 5 of this entity which contains newsreels documentaries and silent movies from the 20th and 21st centuries From early 2004 to 2007 the company had a partnership with Sony for producing films and for theater and DVD distribution worldwide And for many years Gaumont s home video division was a joint venture with Sony Pictures Currently Gaumont distributes its films through Paramount Home Media Distribution on video in France At the end of 2007 Gaumont took over the French animation studio Alphanim for 25 million and renamed it Gaumont Alphanim As of 2013 it is known as Gaumont Animation 11 On 16 December 2010 Gaumont acquired a 37 48 stake in the share capital of the Legende company and its subsidiaries for 6 6 million Legende is a full length film and television series production and distribution company managed by Alain Goldman As of 2011 the Legende stake is worth 6 3 million 12 2011 was also the year that Gaumont opened its Gaumont International Television division in Los Angeles USA 13 In 2011 Gaumont co produced and co distributed The Intouchables which became France s highest grossing movie of all time 14 The international release of The Intouchables was equally successful trumping previous international blockbusters such as Harry Potter and Transporters in Germany 15 Intouchables is the highest grossing foreign language movie any language other than English beating the previous record of 275 million by the Japanese Spirited Away The film was a major catalyst for Gaumont s boosting fourth quarter 2011 cinema sales to 47 9 million up 651 year on year 16 The film s success turned a half year 2011 loss to a record annual 26 million profit 1 The Intouchables currently has a box office of 361 million 17 In 2012 Gaumont acquired the production company Nouvelles Editions de Films NEF for 3 1 million The company was previously run and created by cinema legend Louis Malle As part of the acquisition Gaumont now owns the entire Malle collection including Ascenseur pour l echafaud Atlantic City and Au Revoir les Enfants 18 In February 2012 Gaumount restarted its television division which had been defunct for about ten years 14 On 2 May 2016 according to Deadline Hollywood Gaumont teamed up with Lionsgate and seven other international companies to launch the Globalgate Entertainment consortium Globalgate will produce and distribute local language films in markets around the world Lionsgate said Monday it had partnered with international entertainment executives Paul Presburger William Pfeiffer and Clifford Werber to launch Globalgate 19 Three years later Gaumont was replaced by TF1 Studio as Globalgate s new French member 20 On 1 March 2017 Gaumont sold its 34 stake in Les Cinemas Gaumont Pathe to Pathe for 400 million in order to focus on production 21 In January 2018 it was announced that the company s first office in Cologne is scheduled for opening in July 2018 The office is set to focus on development and production of premiere drama programming according to film producer and new manager Sabine de Mardt 22 Production EditGaumont currently as of has 938 films in its catalogue most of which are in French there are however some exceptions such as Luc Besson s The Fifth Element 1997 Among the most notable films produced by Gaumont are the serials Judex 1916 and Fantomas 1913 the comic Onesime series starring Ernest Bourbon and the comic Bebe series starring five year old Rene Dary The two biggest films that Gaumont owns the rights of are Jean Marie Poire s Les Visiteurs with a box office of 98 million and the 2011 blockbuster Intouchables by Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano with a box office of 427 million 17 Directors such as Abel Gance and the early animator Emile Cohl worked for the studio at one time or another The company has also produced television shows including seven animated series Highlander The Animated Series Space Goofs The Magician Dragon Flyz F Is for Family and Sky Dancers the second and third are based on their respective toy lines and the very popular Oggy and the Cockroaches The company also began production in its American unit Gaumont International Television on two series Hannibal and Hemlock Grove The studio has been described as a mini major studio 23 Corporate structure EditCine Par is a majority shareholder with 69 92 of the voting rights this entity is controlled by CEO Nicolas Seydoux The other private shareholders are First Eagle Investment Management Bollore and Groupe Industriel Marcel Dassault The company has a free float of 416 784 shares which represents 9 75 of the capital and 5 99 of the voting rights 1 Financial information EditIn the first half of 2012 Gaumont recorded a profit of 7 7 million which reversed the 0 6 million loss from the first half of 2011 The profit was driven by a 49 increase in revenue which reached 50 1 million The company cited the continued effects of Intouchables which increased International revenues by 153 24 Gaumont s current as of market capitalization is 164 million 25 Logo EditLeon Gaumont selected the ox eye daisy as the company logo to pay homage to his mother whose first name was Marguerite Daisy Through the decades the logo has been redesigned several times but the daisy has always remained present even though its significance has been largely forgotten citation needed References Edit a b c d e f g 2011 Gaumont Annual Report PDF Contactez nous Gaumont Film Company Retrieved on 2 March 2010 Richard Abel The Cine Goes to Town French Cinema 1896 1914 University of California Press 1994 p 10 ISBN 0 520 07936 1 2011 Gaumont Revenue statement Qui Gaumont www gaumont fr Retrieved 14 November 2017 Green Pamela and Sluijs Jarik van Be Natural documentary precis http www kickstarter com projects benatural be natural the untold story of alice guy blache Accessed 10 Aug 2013 a b Gaumont SA Company Profile Information Business Description History Background Information on Gaumont SA Reference for Business 2015 Retrieved 22 March 2015 Cahiers du cinema n hors serie Paris April 2000 p 32 Claude Forest De la pellicule aux pixels l anomie des exploitants de salles de cinema in Laurent Creton Kira Kitsopanidou sous la direction de Les salles de cinema enjeux defis et perspectives Armand Colin Paris 2013 2011 Gaumont Annual Report p 54 Gaumont Sorties en salles actualite DVD et VOD catalogue en ligne PDF www gaumont com Gaumont 2010 Report Keslassy Elsa Alphanim Inks DreamWorks Deal Rebrands March 11 2013 Variety Retrieved August 5 2013 a b Keslassy Elsa Gaumont ups TV activity February 25 2012 Variety The Intouchables Overtakes Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 at German Box Office Gaumont Q4 revenues a b Intouchables Box office mojo 17 February 2018 Gaumont press release Lieberman David 2 May 2016 Lionsgate Partners With Execs At Film Initiative Targeting Global Local Markets Deadline Retrieved 1 November 2016 Dave McNary 10 July 2019 Lionsgate s Globalgate Consortium Adds France s TF1 Studio variety com Retrieved 23 February 2020 Hopewell John 1 March 2017 Gaumont Sells Cinema Chain Stake to Pathe for 400 Million Gaumont Expands to Germany Appoints Warner Bros Executive EXCLUSIVE variety com 24 January 2018 Keslassy Elsa 5 August 2013 Gaumont Intl Television Staff Up L A Headquarter Variety Retrieved 5 August 2013 Gaumont International Television the French mini major s L A based production and distribution studio Gaumont 2012 First Half Earnings Report Gaumont share price Sources Edit Philippe Binant Au cœur de la projection numerique Actions 29 12 13 Kodak Paris 2007 Marie Sophie Corcy Jacques Malthete Laurent Mannoni Jean Jacques Meusy Les Premieres Annees de la societe L Gaumont et Cie Afrhc Bibliotheque du Film Gaumont Paris 1999 Francois Garcon Gaumont Un siecle de cinema Gallimard coll Decouvertes Gallimard nº 224 Paris 1992 Philippe d Hugues et Dominique Muller Gaumont 90 ans de cinema Editions Ramsay Cinematheque Francaise Paris 1986 Yoana Pavlova Gaumont in Jean Michel Frodon amp Dina Iordanova editors Cinemas of Paris 145 150 University of St Andrews St Andrews Film Studies Scotland 2016 Nicolas Seydoux Cent ans de reflexions Cent ans de cinema 6 15 Gaumont Neuilly sur Seine 1995External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gaumont Official website Portals France Companies Film Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gaumont Film Company amp oldid 1130466317, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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