1989–1997: Cannon Pictures, Inc. era
Even as the original Cannon became part of Pathé and subsequently MGM, Parretti opted to reform Cannon in 1989 as his low-budget filmmaking arm (now known as
Cannon Pictures, Inc.), led by veteran Italian film producer
Ovidio G. Assonitis. The new Cannon announced their presence at that year's MIFED international film market in
Milan, with an impressive line-up of multiple new productions and releases, including some with Cannon standbys like Chuck Norris (
Fifty/Fifty,
Delta Force 2: The Colombian Connection and
TOP KICK) and
Michael Dudikoff (
WINGS, Midnight Ride and
American Ninja 4),
JAM to be directed by
Joel Silberg,
Dusted (later released as
Death Warrant with
Jean-Claude Van Damme), ''
Keaton's Cop with Lee Majors, an untitled film starring Charles Bronson, Crack House with Richard Roundtree and Jim Brown, Rockula, The Rose Garden with Maximilian Schell and Liv Ullmann, The Secret of the Ice Cave
with Michael Moriarty and Sally Kellerman and A Man Called Sarge. The new slate of pictures was expected to cost $50 million. The company managed to post a small operating profit before the end of the year. JAM
was rebranded as Lambada'' to cash in on the craze and was released in 1990. However, the troubles of parent Pathé soon began to affect the re-established Cannon. After the MGM-Pathé merger, Parretti agreed to sell Pathé's 60% majority stake in Cannon Pictures to Assonitis and a group of investors for $14 million. The sale would include the office building at 8200 Wilshire Blvd, where Cannon Pictures was based. Parretti tried to push the deal through quickly to release some capital for MGM-Pathé; however, the deal fell through less than two months later due to financing problems, and MGM-Pathé was granted an easement on financial conditions that were placed upon it by its lenders as part of the MGM buyout. At the same board meeting, Assonitis and Cannon Pictures vice-chairman William J. Immerman were fired and replaced by Danny Dimbort. Cannon's marketing and casting operations were shut down by Pathé. All of Cannon Pictures' marketing was placed under Pathé's existing operations. Former Cannon Group production head Christopher Pearce was named as Assonitis' replacement and in November 1990, he bought Pathé's stake in Cannon Pictures for $14 million with a deal which allowed Pathé to distribute
Lambada,
Midnight Ride and
American Ninja 4. Under Pearce, Cannon Pictures announced it would keep contracts with players
Charles Bronson,
Chuck Norris and
Michael Dudikoff signed under Golan's management and revealed a slate of films for 1991,
Fifty/Fifty (now starring
Peter Weller and
Robert Hays),
No Place to Hide with
Kris Kristofferson and
Drew Barrymore,
The Hitman (with Norris), as well as
The Human Shield and
Rescue Me (both with Dudikoff). Richard Inouye joined the company in February 1991 as vice-president and CFO.
American Ninja V and the unmade
Ants of God were added to the slate at the
AFM in 1991 and
Warner Home Video signed an agreement to distribute Cannon Pictures' output in North America, UK, Japan, Italy and Australia for ten years. Cannon Pictures greatly expanded its slate in time for the
Cannes Film Festival in 1991 with a total of 18 films, in addition to those already announced,
American Kickboxer 1,
Black Cat Run with Dudikoff,
The Borrower,
Deep End and
Dream Lover from
Boaz Davidson,
Delta Force 3: The Killing Game,
Ninja: The American Samurai,
Solemn Oath and
Terminal Bliss had all been added to Cannon's production slate. When Crédit Lyonnais foreclosed on Parretti in July 1991, the sale of Cannon Pictures was questioned by the bank because Pearce was a board member of MGM-Pathé at the time of the sale and his disclosure of interest had not been documented. Crédit Lyonnais' legal filings against Parretti also named Dimbort, a member of the board of both companies, for receiving $140,000 "for services rendered, although Mr Dimbort did not perform any services to justify payments". In the wake of the Crédit Lyonnais foreclosure on MGM-Pathé, Pearce stepped down as president of Global Pictures, being replaced by Avi Lerner. In early 1992, there was a middle-management reshuffle at Cannon Pictures with an aim to maximize revenue from Cannon's releases.
The Hitman proved to be an early success for the new team. That March, Cannon sued Vision International and its chairman
Mark Damon for $15 million over Chuck Norris' involvement in the film,
Sidekicks. Cannon Pictures had retained Norris under an "exclusive services" contract that was made in the 1980s by Golan. Cannon Pictures loaned Norris to the makers of
Sidekicks for a cameo role under the agreement that he would not appear in more than 30% of the movie; Cannon subsequently objected to Norris receiving "above the title billing" for the film. At the Cannes Film Festival in 1992, Pearce and Yoram Globus announced they were merging Globus' privately held Melrose Entertainment, Pearce's privately owned Global Pictures and the publicly traded Cannon Pictures into one single entity called the
Cannon Entertainment Group. The merger was announced alongside a slate of pictures including
Chicago Loop with
James Spader,
Cold to the Touch with Norris,
Teen Angel from Boaz Davidson,
Ivory to be directed by
Aaron Norris,
Delta Force IV: The Deadly Dozen directed by Brian Hutton and
White Sun with Dudikoff, as well as a new TV show called
Sam Bolt: Texas Ranger, which would later become
Walker, Texas Ranger. Shortly afterwards, they announced that
Joe Lara had been signed to an exclusive 10-picture deal with the new company. Lara was then in production on
American Cyborg: Steel Warrior which would not be included in the overall deal; however, no films were ultimately made from this deal. By mid-1992, the merger was cancelled after the backers were unable to come to an arrangement with Crédit Lyonnais. Cannon continued with development of
Walker, Texas Ranger after CBS picked the series up for 13 episodes. Cash flow problems began to have a serious impact on the company. In October 1992, James Spader sued Cannon Pictures over his $1 million fee for his
Chicago Loop pay-or-play deal; and a suit from Michael Dudikoff followed in December, stating he had not been paid from the four films he had made for Cannon. Cannon Pictures posted a net profit of $1.3 million for the nine months ending September 1992 and secured a new $15 million line of credit from the
ING Bank in
Amsterdam after Crédit Lyonnais refused to lend more until their loans were fully repaid (said loans weren't due for another four years). In February 1993, Cannon ran out of money to continue production of
Walker, Texas Ranger, due to the indictments of funding partner
Banca Nazionale del Lavoro, then embroiled in a scandal over unauthorized loans to
Iraq, and producers were desperately trying to raise more money to complete the
miniseries.
CBS Productions later stepped in with additional funds to complete the production. In August 1993, Cannon reported a net profit of $1 million for its second quarter, double the same period the previous year, due to the success of
Walker, Texas Ranger. Cannon Pictures was sued for $14 million in December 1993 by Pictor Insurance Co. and the Peter Miller Corp. for breach of contract over Cannon pulling out of a financing agreement with the two companies. With this additional pressure, Pearce began exploring selling his stock in Cannon Pictures, but this resulted in another lawsuit being filed against the company and two investment bankers, Robert Blake and Runa Alam, by the Independent Artists Picture Corp. The lawsuit claimed interference and breach of contract in connection with IAPC's plans to buy Cannon Pictures stock in a takeover bid, which would have seen Blake purchase Pearce's stock and Blake and Alam taking control of the day-to-day operations of the company. During this time, Pearce was also exploring a sale to Panda Pictures, but this deal collapsed in yet another lawsuit with Panda claiming $20 million in damages from Cannon Pictures after Pearce reportedly lied about the company's financial condition. In 1994, Cannon Pictures released its last film,
Hellbound, in select theatres in Los Angeles. Shortly afterwards, Pearce sold controlling interest in Cannon Pictures to VMI Acquisitions Inc. Cannon Pictures, its library of 135 films, as well as 112 films from the company's previous incarnation, 21st Century Film Distribution, officially went up for sale on August 14, 1997 with the auction taking place on September 15. The property was sold to Imperial Entertainment. In February 1998, a judge ruled that
Ovidio G. Assonitis had been wrongfully terminated from the company by Parretti and Pathé. The judge awarded Assonitis $2.9 million in damages, but by this time, Pathé was bankrupt and had been foreclosed on by Credit Lyonnais. == 2001–2002: New Cannon, Inc. era ==