Warner Bros. Reaches $57 Million Deal With Village Roadshow Over ‘Matrix Resurrections’ Legal Battle – USA

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Warner Bros. has reached a $57 million settlement with Village Roadshow to resolve a bitterly fought legal battle over financing for The Matrix Resurrections.

The agreement, approved in bankruptcy court, brings some closure to a dispute that began in 2022 and played a significant role in driving Village Roadshow — once one of Hollywood’s most prolific behind-the-scenes financiers — into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

The Numbers: What Was Owed, What Was Paid

AmountExplanation
$107 millionOriginal damages awarded to Warner Bros.
$17 millionAdditional interest
$125 millionTotal judgment against Village Roadshow
$57 millionFinal settlement amount paid by Village Roadshow

The $57 million figure represents the damages owed to Warner Bros. after an arbitrator’s ruling was modified on appeal.

The dispute traces back to 2022, when Warner Bros. filed two arbitration demands against Village Roadshow:

ArbitrationSubject
FirstThe Matrix Resurrections
SecondWonka and other shared properties

Village Roadshow’s Counter-Lawsuit

Village Roadshow responded by filing a headline-grabbing lawsuit against Warner Bros. in California state court, accusing the studio of breach of contract over its decision to release The Matrix Resurrections simultaneously on HBO Max and in theaters — a practice Warner Bros. employed during the pandemic.

The case was quickly moved to arbitration, where Village Roadshow lost.

The Arbitrator’s Ruling (2023)

An arbitrator found in 2023 that Village Roadshow breached the co-ownership and distribution agreements by failing to pay its $107 million share of the co-financing agreement.

FindingResult
Village Roadshow’s liabilityBreached agreements
Warner Bros. awarded107million+107million+17 million interest
Village Roadshow’s claimsDenied (unfair competition, breach of contract, bad faith)

The decision initially called for Village Roadshow to pay $125 million to buy a 50% share of The Matrix Resurrections — meaning it would be entitled to half of all proceeds after Warner Bros. recouped distribution fees.

However, on appeal, it was concluded that Village Roadshow could not be forced to purchase the film. The $57 million figure represents the modified damages.

The Bankruptcy Connection

When Village Roadshow moved for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year, Warner Bros. filed a claim for the $125 million judgment.

EventDetail
Bankruptcy filingLast year (2025)
Warner Bros. claim$125 million
Settlement agreement$57 million in bankruptcy court
Payment deadlineWednesday (May 6, 2026)

Why Did Village Roadshow Go Bankrupt?

According to Keith Maib, Village Roadshow’s chief restructuring officer, the Warner Bros. lawsuit “irreparably decimated the working relationship” with the studio.

Other factors included:

  • A costly endeavor aimed at creating content in-house
  • The breakdown of a decades-long partnership with Warner Bros.
  • Inability to participate in key franchises

The Wonka Dispute and Other Franchises

The second arbitration over Wonka and other properties is covered by the settlement — but with an important caveat:

Warner Bros. said it would dismiss the case without prejudice, meaning those claims can be reasserted in the future.

Other Films at Issue in the Legal Battle

Village Roadshow alleged it was shut out of co-financing sequels and remakes to key franchises, including:

  • Wonka
  • Joker
  • I Am Legend

The ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ Example

According to court filings, Village Roadshow wanted in on a TV series being developed based on Edge of Tomorrow but was told the project wouldn’t move forward if it didn’t relinquish its rights. The studio ended up abandoning the show entirely.

Who Bought Village Roadshow’s Derivative Rights?

During the bankruptcy, Warner Bros. tried to buy Village Roadshow’s derivative rights to several movies — which give the owner the right to participate in certain sequels and remakes.

BidderAmountResult
Alcon Entertainment$18.5 million✅ Won
Warner Bros.$19.5 million (revised bid)❌ Rejected

Practical Magic 2 is among the first titles that Alcon and Village Roadshow have partnered on under the new arrangement.

Timeline of Key Events

DateEvent
2021The Matrix Resurrections released (theatrical + HBO Max same day)
2022Warner Bros. files arbitration demands; Village Roadshow sues
2023Arbitrator rules against Village Roadshow ($125 million judgment)
2025Village Roadshow files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
May 2026$57 million settlement reached and approved

What This Means for Hollywood Financing

The collapse of the Warner Bros.-Village Roadshow partnership — once one of Hollywood’s most successful co-financing relationships — serves as a cautionary tale.

PreviouslyNow
Backed The Matrix and Ocean’s franchisesIn bankruptcy
Long-term co-financing dealsRelationship “irreparably decimated”
Major behind-the-scenes playerDerivative rights sold to Alcon

The case highlights the risks of:

  • Simultaneous release strategies (theatrical + streaming)
  • Breakdowns in long-term studio-financier relationships
  • Legal disputes that spiral into existential crises

A Settlement, But Not an End

The $57 million settlement resolves Village Roadshow’s liability to Warner Bros. over The Matrix Resurrections — but the company’s future remains uncertain.

Having emerged from bankruptcy with its derivative rights sold to Alcon and its relationship with Warner Bros. in tatters, Village Roadshow is a shadow of the company that once helped finance some of Hollywood’s biggest blockbusters.

For Warner Bros., the settlement brings a measure of closure — though the without prejudice dismissal on the Wonka dispute means the legal saga may not be entirely over.

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