Marvista Entertainment, one of the world’s biggest independent movie studios, and Elefantec Global, the media-entertainment startup launched by former Televisa execs José “Pepe” Bastón and Jeff Symon, have joined forces to create a Spanish-language movie studio.

Underscoring the scale of the studio’s ambition, 15 movies are currently in pre-production and 30 more in development, Marvista and Elefantec announced Tuesday.

The “pre-eminent movie studio,” as the partners describe it, will focus on “crafting original, highly commercial and locally produced Spanish-language content to meet the growing appetite of existing and emerging platforms,” the partners added. Films in development run a broad gamut of comedies,  romantic comedies, dramas, family features and thrillers.

 

The films look set to play off the complementary skill-sets of the two companies. Bastón and Symon are institutions on the Spanish-language scene, Bastón serving for years in top positions at Mexico’s Televisa Group, including president of television and content, and Symon heading global content, distribution and licensing.

 

At Elefantec Global, launched in January 2020, they will bring their “know-how and know-whom” of the global Latino audience, as Bastón has put it, to create and produce the partners’ films in Spanish.

MarVista Ent., which adds approximately 60 new movies per year to its distribution pipeline, will leverage its studio infrastructure and expertise at producing at scale, plus distribution deals to handle global distribution.

Selling to 125 territories, MarVista has become what it describes as a pre-eminent programming partner to major cable networks, including Disney Channel/Disney XD, Lifetime, Hallmark Channel, NBC Universal, Nickelodeon, BET and other Viacom Networks, as well as key international broadcasters, cable networks and digital platforms, including Hulu and Netflix, MarVista said Tuesday.

The companies are “actively engaging” with an extensive lineup of platforms and clients to develop and produce movies to serve the 460 million-plus native Spanish-speaking audience worldwide, it added.

“I’ve long admired Pepé’s creative and business acumen,” said MarVista Ent. CEO Fernando Szew, himself Argentine-born.

He added: “Bringing together the dynamic studio structure we’ve created at MarVista with his career history and the team he is building at Elefantec will allow us to adapt our library of universal narratives to Spanish-speaking audiences worldwide, and create new ones.”

“MarVista’s best-in-class know-how and what Fernando has built in the U.S. is astonishing, especially in respect to the high quality and volume of production and distribution,” Bastón noted. “Partnering together to create a Spanish-language movie powerhouse couldn’t be a more perfect fit.”

Talking the creation of Warner Media’s Particular Crowd, Warner Media CEO Tomás Yankelevich argued that English-language movies were one of the only forms of content that could travel the world. Spanish-language movies can also look for huge audiences playing off core markets of Spain, Latin America and the U.S., but often breaking out beyond them. Spanish action thriller “Below Zero,” for example, was watched this year by 47 million Netflix household accounts in its first 28 days.

 

 

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