Groupe Canal+

French media company
  • Canal+
  • Canal+ Luxembourg
  • Canal+ Netherlands
  • Canal+ Austria
  • Canal+ Czech Republic
  • Canal+ Slovakia
  • OCS (100%)
  • StudioCanal
  • Viaplay Group (29%, with PPF)
Websitehttps://www.canalplusgroup.com/Footnotes / references
[1]

Canal+ Group is a French media and telecommunications conglomerate. It is owned and controlled by Vivendi and has a film library in excess of 5,000 films. It is headquartered in Issy-les-Moulineaux, in the suburbs of Paris.[2] It has operations in France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Poland, Romania, Hungary, in the Czech Republic, Myanmar, Vietnam, and in 23 African countries.

The Wall Street Journal described Canal+ as "the French film industry's biggest financial backer, beloved by French cineastes".[3]

It is a major source of finance for domestic film production, participating in the financing of the vast majority of films produced in France. It also has its own subsidiary companies with direct involvement in film production.[4]

StudioCanal, one of those subsidiaries, announced in 2011 that it would now spend €200 million a year on movie production, establishing its position as "the first port of call outside the U.S. for intelligent upmarket movies" such as Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy which is fully financed by the studio.[5]

Corporate divisions

  • Canal+ – premium TV channel (Metropolitan France, Caribbean, Africa)
    • Canal+ Cinéma(s) – premium TV channel devoted to movies
    • Canal+ Sport – premium TV channel devoted to sports programmes
    • Canal+ Kids – premium TV channel devoted to family programming
    • Canal+ Docs
    • Canal+ Grand Écran
    • Canal+ Foot
    • Canal+ Séries – premium TV channel devoted to series
    • Canal+ Sport 360 – premium TV channel, delayed broadcast of Sport from Canal+
    • Canal+ Box Office
    • Ciné+ – set of six thematic cable television channels
    • Comédie+ (formerly Comédie!) – cable TV channel devoted to humorous programs
    • CStar Hits France – cable TV channel devoted to musical programs
    • Foot+ – cable TV channel devoted to football
    • Rugby+ – cable TV channel devoted to rugby football
    • Golf+ – cable TV channel devoted to golf
    • Infosport+ – cable TV news channel devoted to sports
    • Piwi+ (formerly Piwi) – cable TV channel devoted to children programs
    • Planète+ – cable TV channel devoted to documentaries
    • Planète+ Adventure – cable TV channel devoted to documentaries from A&E Networks channels
    • Planète+ Crime– cable TV channel devoted to crime documentaries
    • Polar+ – cable TV channel devoted to movies
    • Seasons – cable TV channel devoted to documentaries
    • Télétoon+ (formerly Télétoon) – cable TV channel devoted to animation
    • Teletoon+ (formerly Minimax/ZigZap) – cable TV channel devoted to animation broadcast in Poland
    • MiniMini+ (formerly MiniMini) – cable TV channel devoted to animated series for children from 3 to 8 years in Poland
    • CNews (formerly i>Télé) – free-to-air news channel
    • C8 – free-to-air channel
    • CStar – free-to-air channel devoted to musical programs
    • MyCanal – free streaming service for Canal+ subscribers to stream the channel's programming live and on-demand
    • Canal+ International – international French premium channel featuring programming from Canal+ and its various other channels
  • Canal+ Régie – advertising network for the group channels and the cinema operator UGC
  • Canal+ (provider) – satellite TV provider
  • Canal+ Luxembourg – television service provider based in Luxembourg
  • StudioCanal – film producer and distributor
    • StudioCanal Home Entertainment (North America, the United Kingdom and Ireland)
    • SAM Productions ApS (Scandinavian)
    • Arthaus (Germany)
    • Red Production Company (United Kingdom)
    • Tandem Productions (Germany)
  • SPI International

Former channels

Former streaming

Canal+

Canal+ has operations in France, Poland, Vietnam and Myanmar, Rwanda[6] and other world nations not yet listed through its flagship brand Canal+. It is encrypted for most of the day, and viewers who wish to watch the channel's more popular programming (new-release movies and live sport) must subscribe to the service. Previously this involved the purchase of a decoder to decrypt the signal, but increasingly Canal+ is being offered as part of a multi-channel satellite or cable television package (known as CanalSat in France.).

Former operations

Canal Plus was the first cable TV channel to operate in Brazil, in 1989. It operated on the MMDS system and broadcast part of ESPN programming. Its Brazilian operations were sold to Grupo Abril in 1991.[7][8]

Canal+ has previously also been present in several other European countries such as Spain, Italy (as Tele+) and the Netherlands as early as 1990, but as of 2016 it is only active in Poland and France, due to many of these divisions being sold to other companies such as Sky Europe and Movistar.[citation needed] Canal+ would begin returning to European markets outside of France and Poland in 2022, as a streaming service, in countries such as Austria, Czechia and Slovakia.

Canal Plus came to the Nordic countries in 1997, acquiring the two FilmNet-channels and renaming them. The Nordic part was sold in October 2003 to the Telenor-owned Canal Digital, and the Canal+ brand was used under license until 2012, when the channels were re-branded C More Entertainment.

Canal+ Hi-Tech was a private television channel in France dedicated to the broadcasting of films in 16:9 aspect ratio and HDTV. Canal+ 16/9 changed its name to Canal+ Hi-Tech in March 2005. Through this change, the channel offered the latest technological advances in terms of image and sound, especially with high-definition programs. The channel was deleted when switching Canal+ to the 16:9 format.[citation needed]

Canal+ 3D was born on June 10, 2010, to broadcast some matches of the 2010 FIFA World Cup in 3D. It regularly broadcast films or sporting events of Canal+ in stereoscopic 3D format.[citation needed] It stopped broadcasting on January 24, 2012.[9]

StudioCanal

StudioCanal is a production company formed in 1988, associated with NBCUniversal until 2011.[10] Nowadays, StudioCanal is operating in several countries such as Germany, Japan, or Australia.[11] For the movie industry, it is a major player at the European level.[12]

Canal+ (provider)

Formerly Canal Satellite Numérique, a pay satellite and IPTV distributor (as CanalSAT DSL). Canal+ is a satellite TV package launched in 1992 as an extension to the original Canal+ analogue channel.[13] A merger between CanalSat and its main competitor TPS started in 2007, and finally canceled by the Competition Authority in 2011.[14] With Canal+, the utilization of the card pairing (QEV) technology allowed access to many channels such as, Eurosport, Paris Premiere or LCI.[15]

This pay TV platform also served as the basis for many of its international equivalents, including in Spain (Canal Satélite Digital), Italy (Tele+ Digitale) and Poland (Cyfra+), mainly during the late 1990s and early 2000s, with these versions sharing similar decoding technology and set-top boxes.

Canal+ Luxembourg (former M7 Group)

Canal+ Luxembourg (former M7 Group) is a Luxembourg-based television provider which operates several direct broadcast satellite pay TV platforms: HD Austria in Austria, Télésat in Belgium and Luxembourg, TV Vlaanderen in the Flanders region in Belgium, Skylink in Czech Republic and Slovakia, Canal Digitaal in the Netherlands, Focus Sat in Romania, and Direct One in Hungary. It also operates a terrestrial pay television platform in Flanders, Belgium and offers B2B multimedia services. Canal+ acquired M7 Group for 1.1 billion euros on 12 September 2019.[16][17]

Thema

Thema is a Canal+ Group company that oversees distribution of Pay TV services in various countries, and is the parent company of channels including Novelas TV and Nollywood TV. Thema was founded in 2005 by François Thiellet, and acquired by Canal+ in 2014.[18]

International versions

As Canal+ was launched in new markets the brand has been used in several countries. When launching additional channels the channels were usually given colour-coded names, such as Canal+ Blue, Canal+ Green, Canal+ Yellow and Canal+ Red. Many of these subsidiaries have been sold and as of 2016, only the Polish Canal+ is partially owned by French Canal+.

  • Canal+ Spain, later known as #0. Launched in 1990 in Spain by Sogecable as an analogue pay channel, similar to the French and Polish version. In 2015 the largest Spanish telecommunications company Telefónica received the approval and closed the acquisition of Canal+ Spain alongside its satellite TV platform, now renamed Movistar Plus+.
  • Canal+ Flanders, became Canal+ when FilmNet was bought. Later sold and is now known as Play More (Telenet, a subsidiary of Liberty Global).
  • Canal+ Belgium, now known as BeTV. It shares many common programs with the French channels. It is owned by VOO, a public telco in Wallonia.
  • Canal+ Netherlands, FilmNet was rebranded as Canal+ in 1997.[19] Canal+ sold the channels later on. In 2005, the channels were bought by Liberty Global and renamed them to Sport1 and Film1 in February 2006.[20] Sport1 changed its name to Ziggo Sport Totaal in November 2015,[21] Film1 was sold to Sony Pictures Television in the same year.[22] On 1 May 2019, Sony announced that Film1 would close on 1 August 2019.[23][24] However it was sold to SPI International instead,[25] which was fully acquired by Canal+ in August 2023. Canal+ will be reintroduced in Netherlands as a streaming service, on January 29, 2024.[26]
  • Canal+ Poland, the channel is called Canal+ Premium, the satellite platform Canal+ Polska
  • Canal+ Scandinavia, launched as Canal+ in 1997 with the integration of the FilmNet channels. The company was sold and renamed C More Entertainment, although the brand Canal+ was still used. It was purchased by the SBS Broadcasting Group in 2005, which was merged with ProSiebenSat.1 Media in 2007. In 2008, an agreement was made to sell the channels to TV4 Group. Since 2012 it is called C More.
  • Tele+ Digitale, the Italian branch sold in 2003 to News Corp. and fused with Stream TV, the direct competitor. Now, it is called Sky Italia.
  • Premiere, a German premium television channel and platform launched in 1990, was founded by Canal+, Bertelsmann and Kirch. A few years later, Canal+ sold its share of Premiere. It is now known as Sky Deutschland and is owned by the UK's Sky plc.
  • Movie Network, an Australian premium television service launched in 1995, was founded as a partnership between Canal+, HBO (a subsidiary of Time Warner), The Walt Disney Company, MGM/UA and Village Roadshow. A few years later, Canal+ dropped out of the partnership.
  • Canal+ Brazil, a Brazilian version created in 1989, not the own version, retransmission of American ESPN. Ended transmissions due to launch of the Brazil cable providers in 1991.[7][8]
  • In May 2009, K+ founded by Canal+ and VTV was launched. K+ brings national level satellite TV service and OTT service to Vietnamese households, offering five premium and exclusive channels,[27] up to 170 SD channels and HD channels across genres: sports, movies, general entertainment, news, music, and documentaries.[28]
  • Canal+ Afrique, launched as Canal Horizons in 1990, is the channel in Africa.
  • Canal+ Myanmar, originally launched by Forever Group as 4TV in 2006, it became a joint venture with Canal+ Group in 2017, and was rebranded as Canal+ in February 2018.
  • Canal+ Ethiopia, launched in 2021.[29]
  • Canal+ Czechia and Slovakia, launched on 28 February 2023, as a streaming service.[30]

References

  1. ^ "Rapport annuel document de référence 2018" (PDF) (in French). Retrieved 2019-11-25.
  2. ^ "Mentions legales Archived 2010-03-27 at the Wayback Machine." Canal+ Group. Retrieved on 5 March 2010.
  3. ^ Carreyrou, John; Orwall, Bruce (17 April 2002). "Vivendi Turmoil Rises as Messier Ousts Popular Canal Plus Chief". The Wall Street Journal.
  4. ^ Kuhn, Raymond (January 4, 2002). The Media in France. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9780203192689 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ Adler, Tim Adler (September 29, 2011). "Studiocanal Raises More Film Financing: Says It Won't Have To Borrow To Fund Slate".
  6. ^ "Google Street View". Google. Retrieved December 10, 2022.
  7. ^ a b "Em 1989, ESPN chegou ao Brasil como canal UHF e com esportes impopulares". NaTelinha (in Brazilian Portuguese). 25 April 2016. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
  8. ^ a b Larangeira, Álvaro Nunes; Musse, Christina Ferraz; Thomé, Cláudia de Albuquerque; Tavares, Denise; Silva, Juremir Machado da; Ribeiro, Renata Rezende (1 April 2021). 1969 a 1970: Janelas do Tempo (in Brazilian Portuguese). Editora Sulina. ISBN 978-65-5759-023-2.
  9. ^ "Canal+ abandonne sa chaîne 3D". ozap.com.
  10. ^ "StudioCanal Sues Universal Claiming Millions in Working Title Film Revenue". The Hollywood Reporter. 28 February 2013.
  11. ^ Hopewell, John (July 17, 2012). "Studiocanal buys Hoyts Distribution".
  12. ^ "Vivendi". webzine.vivendi.com.
  13. ^ Camexport. Archived 2014-12-02 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "France : Merger of TPS and CanalSat: Competition Authority Pronounces Injunctions". merlin.obs.coe.int.
  15. ^ "CanalSat to offer short-term subscriptions". Broadband TV News. September 24, 2009.
  16. ^ "Vivendi's Canal Plus to buy M7 for 1 billion euros to expand its European reach". www.reuters.com. Retrieved 2019-09-17.
  17. ^ "Vivendi: strong earnings growth in 2019". www.vivendi.com. 2020-02-13. Retrieved 2022-03-01. Constant perimeter notably reflects the impacts of the acquisition of M7 by Canal+ Group (September 12, 2019), the acquisition of the remaining interest in Ingrooves Music Group, which has been consolidated by Universal Music Group (March 15, 2019), the acquisition of Editis (January 31, 2019), the acquisition of Paylogic by Vivendi Village (April 16, 2018) and the sale of MyBestPro by Vivendi Village (December 21, 2018).
  18. ^ Dziadul, Chris (October 29, 2014). "Canal+ buys Thema". Broadband TV News.
  19. ^ Fransen gaan Nederlanders vermaken, Trouw, Dorien Pels, 26 July 1997
  20. ^ "Cookies op AD.nl - AD.nl". Ad.nl. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  21. ^ "Ziggo Sport". Sport1.nl. Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  22. ^ SONY PICTURES TELEVISION CLOSES FILM1 DEAL Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Sonypicturestelevision.com, Retrieved on July 26, 2015
  23. ^ Jarco Kriek (30 April 2019). "Film1 stopt lineair" (in Dutch). TotaalTV.nl.
  24. ^ David de Jong (1 May 2019). "Film1 stopt alle activiteiten" (in Dutch). NederlandsMediaNieuws.nl.
  25. ^ David de Jong (2 July 2019). "SPI International neemt Film1 over" (in Dutch). NederlandsMediaNieuws.nl.
  26. ^ "Canal Plus confirms Dutch launch". Broadband TV News. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  27. ^ "Kênh mới dành cho thiếu nhi K+KIDS chính thức được lên sóng từ ngày 1/10".
  28. ^ "CANAL+ Group launch new channel package K+ in Vietnam | Media". Campaign Asia. Retrieved 2023-10-05.
  29. ^ "Ethiopia/Media: Canal+ ready to take on StarTimes and Multichoice". The Africa Report.com.
  30. ^ "Canal+ expands in Czech Republic and Slovakia". Broadband TV News. 2023-02-28. Retrieved 2023-10-03.

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