TV-Loonland AG
German branding and management company
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TV-Loonland AG was a German branding and management company that specialized in the production of children's programmes. The company's offices were located in Europe (Paris, Munich and London). The company's mascot is a sheep on a blue dome.
TMO-Loonland Film GmbH (1997–2000)
Film
Television
Logo used from 2000 to 2009 | |
| Formerly | TMO Film GmbH (1989–1997) TMO-Loonland Film GmbH (1997–2000) |
|---|---|
Company type | Private |
| Industry | Animation Film Television |
| Genre | Children's animation |
| Founded | 1989 |
| Founder | Peter Volkle |
| Defunct | April 5, 2011 |
| Fate | Bankruptcy; assets were acquired by Made 4 Entertainment |
| Successor | Studio 100 International |
| Headquarters | , |
| Divisions | Loonland Merchandising Loonland UK Loonland Home Entertainment Loonland Films Loonland Online GmbH[1] |
| Subsidiaries | Loonland Animation Ltd. RG Prince Films Salsa Entertainment SRE Corporation Sunbow Entertainment Telemagination Metrodome Distribution |
History
TMO Film GmbH was founded by Peter Volkle in 1989.[2] The company first began working on animated content within this time, and by 1993 began to produce popular animated content. The company then released its first film - Die Schelme von Schelm, in 1995. In the same year, the company opened up an animation studio in Hungary called Loonland Animation in Hungary which TMO later purchased a stake in. The company then rebranded as TMO-Loonland Film GmbH in 1997. The company later purchased a stake in RG Prince Films in Korea, and increased the number of programmes being produced.[3]
At the start of 2000, the company was rebranded to TV-Loonland AG.[3] In March, the company announced their plans to go public at the end of the month and signed a first-look distribution deal with Sony Wonder to represent their television catalogue for German-speaking and certain CEE regions.[4] The company also began to search for a UK sales agent for a planned expansion to the United Kingdom.[5]
In April 2000 to expand TV-Loonland's distribution operations and the planned opening of its office based in London, the company signed a pan-european co-production deal with AAC Kids, the children's production arm of Toronto-based film & television production/distribution company Alliance Atlantis to handle co-financing, production, distribution and merchandising of upcoming six animated television series and three live-action programming while TV-Loonland AG would handle European distribution rights to AAC Kids' programming such as The Famous Jett Jackson with Alliance Atlantis would handle distribution rights for the rest of the world whilst UK distribution rights to AAC Kids' programming would be handled by the two companies.[6][7]
In September 2000, TV-Loonland expanded its operations into the United Kingdom and entered the British animation industry with the company announcing that they had purchased London-based British animation studio Telemagination, giving TV Loonland their own British animation production company outside of Germany and taking over Telemagination's production library while John M. Mills, co-founder & chairman and executive producer at Teleimagination had stepped down from his role of chairman while staying as a consultant.[8] Two and a half weeks later in that same month following TV-Loonland's acquisition of London-based British animation studio Teleimagination, the company acquired Latin American distribution company Salsa Distribution, who represented products from The Jim Henson Company in these territories, thus expanding TV Loonland's operations into the Latin America countries outside of Europe with Salsa Distribution being placed as the former's own Latin American distribution subsidiary.[9]
On October 3, 2000 following their initial distribution deal months prior, TV-Loonland announced they had purchased Sony Wonder's television business assets. The deal included full ownership in American animation production studio Sunbow Entertainment, alongside a programming library that included shows based on Hasbro properties giving TV Loonland their own American animation production studio outside of Europe.[10][11] In exchange for the purchase, Sony Wonder retained North American home video rights to their catalogue and worldwide music rights. Two months later in December 2000 following TV Loonland's acquisition of Sony Wonder's television operations and the latter's animation production studio Sunbow Entertainment, the company purchased a 65% stake in Seoul-based South Korean home video distribution firm Saerom Entertainment expanded their operations outside of Europe, giving TV Loonland their own South Korean home video distribution subsidiary and their entry into the South Korean distribution business.[12]
In April 2001, the company signed a licensing deal with Nox Music where they would represent Loonland's catalogue in all CSS/Russian territories.[13] On May 15, the company shuttered own their Hamburg-based internet subsidiary Family Harbour with TV Loonland considerated their future online activities under their division Loonland Online.[1] In November, Loonland purchased a 29.9% stake in UK distributor Metrodome Distribution.[14]
In January 2002, TV-Loonland increased its American production services with TV-Loonland had signed a first-look production deal with AMG Animation & Family Entertainment, the kids & family production arm of American investment alum Artists Management Group, to develop & produce television series marking Loonland's first deal with a management firm.[15] One day later on the 22nd of that year, TV-Loonland renewed its co-production pact with ZDF's production/distribution division ZDF Enterprises with the two would produce upcoming television series beginning with Rudi (later became Rudi & Trudi), adapted from ZDF's long-running live-action television series Siebenstein whilst TV-Loonland's British animation studio Teleimagination would produce & handle animation, TV-Loonland and ZDF Enterprises handling distribution worldwide.[16]
The company expanded to Japan two months later in March by pre-selling home video rights to Little Ghosts to TDK Core while PT-Naina took all non-Japanese Asian rights.[17] In August, Loonland's stake in Metrodome increased to a 54.4% operational controlling stake, with Loonland fully taking control of the distributor.[18]
In January 2003, the Metrodome stake was increased to 75%.[19] In March 2003, they sold their 72.2% interest stake in SRE Corp. (Saerom Entertainment) to Moohandae Media.[20]
In 2004, Loonland filed for a British ATM listing.[21]
In August 2005, Loonland was sued by shareholder group Aktieninvestor.com, after the company deliberately excused them from its AGM in August 2005, following violation of Section 21 of the Securities Trading Act when the latter tried to apply a hostile takeover within Loonland. The lawsuit ended in favour of TV-Loonland.[22] On September 27, 2005, the company launched a feature-film division called Loonland Pictures, and signed deals with the local branch of 20th Century Fox and NFP Marketing as marketing and distribution partners for the companies' movies, the first of which being Heidi, which would be released theatrically in the country at the end of the year.[23]
In October 2007, TV-Loonland announced they would sell off their then-61.2% stake in Metrodome Distribution.[24]
In May 2008, Romanian company MediaPro purchased 50.1% of Loonland's shares in Metrodome for £3.2 Million, leaving them with 11.6% which MediaPro could purchase out in the future.[25] On May 14, Hasbro acquired the Sunbow programs based on its properties, which are now part of the Hasbro Entertainment library.[26][27][28][29] On May 23, fellow German management company Your Family Entertainment invested a 3% stake in the company.[30]
In March 2009, Loonland signed a new home video deal with Hasbro for Transformers and G.I. Joe, bringing those shows back under the Loonland umbrella. They also acquired distribution rights to My Little Pony: Twinkle Wish Adventure.[31] In December, TV-Loonland announced they would file for bankruptcy protection.[32]
In April 2011, when TV-Loonland filled for bankruptcy protection four months prior in December 2010, fellow German entertainment company Made 4 Entertainment (M4E) AG through its television division m4e Television had brought TV-Loonland's programming catalogue including the libraries of Sony Wonder's television division & American animation studio Sunbow Entertainment and Teleimagination alongside its assets out of bankruptcy, the acquisition of the TV-Loondland AG library including the catalogues of Sony Wonder's television division & American animation studio Sunbow Entertainment and the Teleimagination library had effectively expanded m4e's programming catalogue as it became part of m4e's portfolio with them along with its Dutch distribution subsidiary Telescreen began distributing internationally the acquired TV-Loonland programming catalogue.[33][34][35]
In late-January 2017, Belgian production group Studio 100 via its global distribution division Studio 100 Media (now Studio 100 International) had established a deal to acquire a 68% majority stake in German brand management and media production & distribution company behind the TV-Loonland library, Made 4 Entertainment (M4E AG), alongside its Dutch distribution subsidiary Telescreen, which handle distribution to the TV-Loonland library, in a deal that could combine Made 4 Entertainment (m4e)'s wider library with Studio 100's expanded catalogue which would make the latter as the biggest kids & family entertainment content companies across Europe while Studio 100 Media would handle distribution to the TV-Loonland catalogue when the acquisition is completed[36] A month later in late-February of that same year, Studio 100's global distribution division Studio 100 Media announced that they've completed their acquisition of a 68% majority stake in German brand management and media production & distribution owner of the TV-Loonland library, Made 4 Entertainment (m4e AG), alongside its Dutch distribution subsidiary Telescreen, making it a subsidiary of Studio 100 Media as Studio 100's distribution arm became the new owner of the TV-Loonland library alongside the catalogues of Sunbow Entertainment and Teleimagination.[37][38]
Programmes
Original series
| Title | Year(s) | Network | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Babar[39] | 1989–2001 |
| co-production with Nelvana and Kodansha Animation services for 2001 series |
| Small Stories | 1995–1998 | ARD France 3 & TiJi (France) | as TMO Film co-production with Les Films de l’Arlequin and EVA Entertainment |
| The Little Lulu Show | 1995–1999 |
|
|
| Tigerenten Club | 1996 | Das Erste | as TMO Film "Janosch, Tigerente und Frosch" sequences only |
| Robin | SVT1 Teletoon (Canada) | as TMO Film co-production with Nelvana and Happy Life | |
| Big Sister, Little Brother | 1997 | SVT1 |
|
| Ned's Newt | 1997–2000 | Teletoon |
|
| Lisa | 1998 |
| as TMO-Loonland Film co-production with Happy Life |
| The Three Friends and Jerry | 1998–1999 |
|
|
| The Famous Jett Jackson | 1998–2001 | Disney Channel |
|
| Pettson and Findus | 2000 | ||
| Fat Dog Mendoza | 2000–2001 | Cartoon Network UK[41] |
|
| Redwall | 2000–2002 | Series 2–3 only, co-production with Nelvana. Also held some European distribution rights) | |
| The Fantastic Flying Journey[43] | 2001 | CITV |
|
| Letters From Felix | 2001 | Series 1 only, co-production with NDF, Caligari Film GmbH and ZDF. Series 2 produced by Mondo TV | |
| The Cramp Twins[45][46] | 2001–2004 | co-production with Sunbow Entertainment (series 1) and Teleimagination[49] (series 2) | |
| Little Ghosts | 2002 | co-production with Telemagination | |
| Pongwiffy[50] | 2002 | co-production with Telemagination | |
| Something Else[51] | 2002 | co-production with Studio B Productions, excluding Canadian distribution rights | |
| Henry's World | 2002-2005 | Series 1 only, produced by Alliance Atlantis. Also held European distribution rights. 2003, co-production with Telemagination | |
| Metalheads[52] | 2003–2004 | ZDF CBBC (United Kingdom) | co-production with Teleimagination |
| Dragon's Rock[53] | 2004 | Super RTL | |
| Rudi & Trudi[16] | 2006–2007 | ZDF Channel 4 (United Kingdom) | co-production with Telemagination and ZDF Enterprises |
| The Owl [54] | 2006-2007 | co-production with Studio Hari and France Télévisions | |
| Pat and Stan[55] | 2007 | ||
| My Life Me[56] | 2010-2011 | uncredited; produced by CarpeDiem Film & TV |
Acquired from Sony Wonder/Sunbow Entertainment
- G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (1983)
- The Transformers (1985)
- Super Sunday (1986)
- Jem and the Holograms (1985)
- Inhumanoids (1985)
- Robotix (1985)
- Bigfoot and the Muscle Machines (1985)
- My Little Pony 'n Friends (1986)
- The Glo Friends (1986)
- MoonDreamers (1986)
- Potato Head Kids (1986)
- Bucky O'Hare and the Toad Wars (1991)
- My Little Pony Tales (1992)
- Conan the Adventurer (1992)
- Conan and the Young Warriors (1994)
- Sgt. Savage and his Screaming Eagles (1994)
- G.I. Joe Extreme (1995)
- Salty's Lighthouse (1997)
- The Crayon Box (1997)
- The Brothers Flub (1999)
- Mega Babies (1999)
- Rainbow Fish (1999)
- Generation O! (2000)
Distribution only
- ReBoot (1994–2000, Europe, distribution rights acquired in 2001)[57]
- Clifford the Big Red Dog (2000, European TV distribution)[58]
- In a Heartbeat
- Yvon of the Yukon (2001, Europe)
- Connie the Cow (2002, Europe excluding Spain)[59]
- Clifford's Puppy Days (2003, European TV distribution)[60]
- Little Princess (2006)[61]
- Penelope (2007, Europe, Russia, Baltic States, Scandinavia, Israel, the Middle East, and Africa)[62]
- Mister Otter (2009) [63]
Specials
Original
- The Last Polar Bears (2000, produced by Telemagination)
- Donner (2001, co-produced with Sunbow Entertainment and Rainbow Studios)
Acquired from Sony Wonder/Sunbow Entertainment
- Thanksgiving in the Land of Oz (1980)
- G.I. Joe: The Revenge of Cobra (1984)
- The GloFriends Save Christmas (1985)
- Transformers: Five Faces of Darkness (1986)
- Transformers: The Return of Optimus Prime (1986)
- Visionaries: Knights of the Magical Light(1987)
- Transformers: The Rebirth (1987)
- Santa's Special Delivery (1999)
Movies/Direct-to-Video
Original
- The Real Shlemiel (1994, as TMO Film)
- Kiss My Blood (1998, as TMO Film)
- Pettson and Findus (2000)
- Babar: King of the Elephants (1999, as TMO-Loonland, co-production with Nelvana. Also held German-speaking distribution rights)
- Heidi (2005, co-production with Telemagination and Nelvana. Also held European distribution rights)
Acquired from Sony Wonder/Sunbow Entertainment
- Alice of Wonderland in Paris (1966; international distribution rights)
- My Little Pony: The Movie (1986)
- The Transformers: The Movie (1986)
- G.I. Joe: The Movie (1987)
- Sony Wonder Enchanted Tales (1994-1999)
- The Beginner's Bible (1994-1990s)
- Famous Fred (1996)
- Lion of Oz (2000)