Claire Atkinson

Claire Atkinson

Movies

Ex-Warner boss behind ‘Gravity’ eyes starting new company

Warner Bros. boss Jeff Robinov is out raising money to start his own movie company, sources tell The Post, but the question bouncing around Hollywood is: Where will he and the bag of cash land?

Robinov, the executive who greenlighted two Best Picture nominees — “Gravity” and “Her” — is planning to hang out his shingle in the near future and invest in movies.

Whispers in Tinseltown have Robinov deciding between 20th Century Fox and Sony Pictures — with most of the smart money pointing to the executive heading to Sony.

Robinov’s track record has led several deep-pocketed potential partners looking to back him, including a private investor from China.

“The question isn’t where will he get the money, but who will he choose to back him,” said one person close to talks.

Reps for both Sony and Fox declined to comment.

To some extent, Robinov, who left Hollywood’s largest studio last June after he was passed over for the top spot, is the unsung hero of this Oscar season — having picked up “Gravity” after other studios passed it up as too risky.

Even so, Robinov didn’t want to shoulder all the responsibility and won financing from Brett Ratner and James Packer’s Ratpac. Warner will be sharing its considerable box office take with Ratpac as a result.

Ratpac, in tandem with Dune Entertainment, has a $450 million commitment to co-finance 75 Warner films over four years.

If “Gravity,” wins for Best Picture, Robinov won’t be among the Warner pack cheering for the movie — but if it does win, it will be interesting to see if either of the film’s producers, leading actress Sandra Bullock, and any of the film’s nominees give Robinov a shout out from the stage.


DreamWorks boss Stacey Snider has a high-class problem — she runs a studio but doesn’t have enough to do.

The studio behind “Lincoln” and “The Help” is releasing two movies per year and has slashed staff almost in half.

After talks with Comcast about a deal to hop to its Universal Pictures were scuttled because of the complexities of such a move, Snider had been quietly going about her business until informal talks began at 20th Century Fox.

The news was first reported by Hollywood Reporter and confirmed by The Post.

Snider’s desire to exit is likely prompted by a host of frustrations. At the top of the list is the paucity of projects at the studio, launched in 1994 by Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen.

DreamWorks will likely recruit from within to replace her if she leaves, sources said.

Disney, which distributes DreamWorks movies, and Reliance, a financial backer, and Spielberg would all have to be OK about Snider’s move.

Even with Snider’s talents, the studio’s recent movies, including “The Fifth Estate,” about Wikileaks, and “Delivery Man,” failed to connect.

“Stacey is withering away [at DreamWorks],” said someone who knows her.

DreamWorks’ next project, “Need for Speed,” based on a video game, has much brighter prospects, according to Hollywood insiders.

DreamWorks is backed by India’s Reliance, which invested $200 million in the firm as recently as 2012 and has imposed strict financial structures on the company.