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International Business Times UK
International Business Times UK
Entertainment
Jan Kevin Bautista

Netflix Buys Warner Bros In Biggest Entertainment Merger Yet: Is This the End of the Studio Era?

Netflix Wins Epic Bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, Enters Exclusive Talks (Credit: Cottonbro Studios : Pexels)

Netflix has finalised its acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery's film and television studios in what is now recognised as the largest entertainment merger in modern history. Valued at US $82.7 billion (£61.99 billion), the deal marks a once-unthinkable moment: a streaming giant absorbing one of Hollywood's oldest and most prestigious studios, and, in doing so, reshaping the future of global entertainment.

The acquisition hands Netflix control of Warner Bros.' historic film library, HBO and HBO Max, and some of the most valuable intellectual property in modern culture including DC Comics, Harry Potter, Game of Thrones, and portions of The Lord of the Rings catalogue.

Why Warner Bros. agreed to sell

Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) has spent years fighting financial instability, strategic misalignment, and falling cable revenues. The sale follows its decision to split off legacy cable channels (CNN, TBS, TNT) into a separate business — clearing the way for Netflix to acquire the studio and streaming assets outright.

The bidding war, which included Paramount–Skydance and Comcast, intensified concerns that WBD would be carved up or forced into bankruptcy. In the end, Netflix outmanoeuvred all rivals. Paramount and Comcast executives publicly criticised the process, arguing the board skewed the sale toward Netflix.

How Netflix plans to use its new empire

A vertically integrated entertainment giant

For Netflix, the takeover is transformational. The company now controls:

  • A full Hollywood film studio
  • A global streaming platform
  • A century-old film library
  • Multiple billion-pound franchises
  • Significant licensing and merchandising revenue streams

For the first time, a streaming-led company owns a legacy Hollywood studio at scale, reversing the paradigm that once saw streamers as a threat to studio power.

Cost savings and consolidation

Netflix projects US $2–3 billion in cost synergies by 2028, largely through:

  • Consolidation of production resources
  • Reorganising global distribution
  • Reducing overlapping staff
  • Streamlining streaming services

Analysts, however, warn that major staff cuts and restructuring across Warner Bros. and HBO Max are likely.

The Future of the Theatrical Experience

Warner Bros. has historically been a champion of theatrical releases, from Harry Potter to Christopher Nolan's films. Netflix, by contrast, built its empire on bypassing cinemas entirely.

Industry experts fear the merger could accelerate the decline of traditional theatrical windows and push more blockbusters straight to streaming.

Others argue Netflix may preserve Warner Bros.' cinema pipeline to maintain relationships with filmmakers and secure awards recognition, vital for cultural prestige.

The Impact on Creative Diversity

A merged Netflix–Warner Bros. becomes a content bottleneck, controlling thousands of titles and dozens of franchises. Filmmakers worry this level of consolidation could limit creative risk-taking, prioritising algorithm-approved content over bold, auteur-driven cinema.

Analysts compare the merger to the late-studio-era consolidations of the 1950s — but with far more global reach and far greater technological power.

What viewers gain and lose

Consumers could benefit from:

  • Larger streaming libraries
  • Unified subscription options
  • More consistent access to major franchises

But they may also see:

  • Higher subscription prices
  • Fewer competitors
  • Less content variety

As regulators in the U.S. and Europe prepare to scrutinise the merger, consumer impact will be a major focus.

Netflix Logo (Credit: Netflix https://about.netflix.com/en/company-assets)

Is This the End of Hollywood's Studio Era?

Hollywood's 'studio era', defined by vertically integrated giants controlling production, distribution, and exhibition, faded decades ago. But this merger raises the possibility that a new studio era is emerging, dominated not by film moguls but by Silicon Valley platform power.

Netflix didn't just buy a studio. It bought:

  • a century of American cinematic heritage,
  • global distribution infrastructure,
  • and control over the next generation of film-making formats.

Whether this marks the end of the studio era, or the beginning of a new, more consolidated one, will become clearer as the deal closes in mid-2026.

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