Disney has revealed Star Wars and Marvel movies will only be available on its own new streaming service when in launches in 2019.
Earlier this year the entertainment giant announced is to pull all of its Disney and Pixar movies from Netflix and start its own streaming service.
Now, CEO Bob Iger on Thursday ended speculation about what would happen to the Marvel and Lucasfilm titles currently being streamed on Netflix, according to Variety.
Earlier this year the entertainment giant announced is to pull all of its Disney and Pixar movies from Netflix and start its own streaming service, and now it has revealed Star Wars and Marvel movies will follow
The new Disney branded direct-to-consumer streaming service will launch in 2019, putting the firm in direct competition with Hulu, Netflix, Amazon and others.
‘We’ve now decided we will put the Marvel and ‘Star Wars’ movies on this app as well,’ Iger said during a question-and-answer session at Bank of America Merrill Lynch Media’s communications and entertainment conference held at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel.
Iger also narrowed the time frame when the Disney streaming service will launch, saying he expects it will go live in late 2019.
He also reveald Disney plans to produce four or five original movies, as well as an equal number of original series and TV movies.
The company will also launch its own ESPN video streaming service in early 2018.
Disney is to pull all of its movies from Netflix and start its own streaming service in 2019, it has been revealed.
The platform, which will feature about 10,000 sporting events each year, will have content from the MLB, NHL, MLS, collegiate sports and tennis’ Grand Slam events.
The current plan is for Disney and ESPN streaming services to be available for purchase directly from Disney and ESPN, in app stores, and from authorized pay-TV partners.
‘This represents a big strategic shift for the company,’ CEO Bob Iger told CNBC’s Julia Boorstin.
‘We felt that having control of a platform we’ve been very impressed with after buying 33 percent of it a year ago would give us control of our destiny.’
Netflix played down the effect of Disney’s announcement, and said it would continue to do business with Disney globally, including its relationship with Disney’s Marvel TV.
‘U.S. Netflix members will have access to Disney films on the service through the end of 2019, including all new films that are shown theatrically through the end of 2018,’ the company said in a statement.
Disney will end its distribution agreement with Netflix for subscription streaming of new releases, beginning with the 2019 calendar year theatrical slate.
The move will affect all its titles, and mean although Netflix should get the next two Star Wars movies, it won’t get the new trilogy’s final installment.
Disney will end its distribution agreement with Netflix for subscription streaming of new releases, including the Star Wars films, beginning with the 2019 calendar year theatrical slate
Netflix stock dropped more than 5 percent upon announcement of the news.
Disney is one of the most recognized names on Netflix, but it is not the company first to pull away. Starz Entertainment in 2011 said it would pull its movies and shows from Netflix due to a dispute over pricing of the roughly 1,000 films in the Starz catalog on Netflix at the time.
It comes as Disney reported a near 9 percent fall in quarterly profit, pulled down by higher programming costs and declining subscribers at its flagship sports channel ESPN.
The company also said it would pay $1.58 billion to buy an additional 42 percent stake in video-streaming firm BAMTech to power its new service.
Last year, Disney said it was taking a 33 percent stake in BAMTech for $1 billion.