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Deluxe Entertainment Services Group

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Type
  
Subsidiary

Website
  
bydeluxe.com

Founder
  
William Fox

Parent organization
  
MacAndrews & Forbes

Products
  
Film Technology

CEO
  
John Wallace (Sep 2015–)

Founded
  
1915


Industry
  
Entertainment Creative Industries

Services
  
Subtitling Digital processing Creative services Post-production

Headquarters
  
Los Angeles, California, United States

Subsidiaries
  
Method Studios, Company 3, EFILM

Deluxe Entertainment Services Group Inc., often shortened to Deluxe, is an American global provider of digital services and technology solutions for content creation and delivery.

Contents

Clients include major motion-picture groups, television studios, digital content providers and advertising agencies. The company has been recognized with 10 Academy Awards for scientific and technical achievement, including developments in CinemaScope pictures (as part of Fox Film Corp.) and, more recently, for a process of creating archival separations from digital image data.

Founded in 1915 by producer William Fox, Deluxe has been owned by MacAndrews & Forbes since 2006. Deluxe's headquarters are in Los Angeles and New York, with operations in 25 key media markets worldwide.

What prompted standard poor s rating action on deluxe entertainment services group


History

Deluxe began as a film processing laboratory which was part of a conglomeration owned and operated by producer William Fox in the early 1900s. In 1915, Fox established the De Luxe laboratory as part of the Fox Film Corporation in Fort Lee, New Jersey in 1915.

In 1916, Fox Film Corporation opened its studio in Hollywood at Sunset and Western. The first Deluxe film laboratory on the west coast was built on the south side of the lot (Fernwood and Serrano), and in 1919 the laboratory was moved to the new Fox studios building on Manhattan's west side where it remained for over 40 years. The "business manager" (later president) of the laboratory was Alan E. Freedman who guided the company into the 1960s.

During the depression, the Fox Film Corporation encountered financial difficulties. Among the actions taken to maintain liquidity, Fox sold the laboratories to Freedman who renamed the operation Deluxe. Under Freedman's leadership, Deluxe added two more plants in Chicago and Toronto. As part of the original plan, Freedman sold Deluxe back to Fox (by this time it had merged with Twentieth Century Pictures to become 20th Century Fox) but remained as president.

Under Freedman's direction, innovations, including the processing and sound striping of Cinemascope, were developed and implemented. Many of those were patented and/or received Academy awards.

After Freedman's retirement in 1962, Deluxe continued expanding into new technological marketplaces, entering the home entertainment marketplace in 1972 and accommodating digital technologies throughout the next few decades.

With the decline of motion picture production on the east coast, Deluxe closed its New York plant in the 1960s. The Chicago and Toronto plants followed. In recent years Deluxe expanded to a high capacity manufacturing plant that was one of several film labs worldwide. The Los Angeles plant continued to operate until May, 2014, when it, like all other large film processing plants, succumbed to the motion picture industry's conversion from film to digital production.

Creative Services assists studios and production companies with all aspects of motion-picture post-production, including on-set services, dailies, digital intermediate, release printing, compression, encoding, authoring, subtitling, and localization. This segment also distributes motion-picture-related marketing materials and provides digital-distribution and asset-management products and services.

Deluxe has been owned by MacAndrews & Forbes since 2006.

References

Deluxe Entertainment Services Group Wikipedia