When he wasn’t hanging out with Bradley Cooper, or leasing a horse for Kate Bosworth, or negotiating a Golden Globes shout-out from Christian Bale, or bringing a baby wolf to the office, one Hollywood studio head was talking up the sweetest game in town: the chance to invest in movies that couldn’t fail. And plenty of people bought what Ryan Kavanaugh was selling.
In an industry where no one knows anything, here, finally, was someone who seemed to know something: Ryan Kavanaugh, a spikily red-haired man-child with an impish grin and a uniform of jeans and Converse sneakers who had an uncanny ability to fill a room and an irresistible outlook on how to make money making movies. Not yet 30 when he founded Relativity Media in 2004, he very quickly became not only a power player in Hollywood but the man who might just save it. With a dwindling number of studios putting out ever fewer movies, other than ones featuring name-brand superheroes, Kavanaugh became first a studio financier and then a fresh-faced buyer of textured, mid-budget films. To bankers, Kavanaugh appeared to have come up with a way to forecast a famously unpredictable business by replacing the vagaries of intuition with the certainties of math.
Even Hollywood wasn’t used to a pitch this good. Kavanaugh alternately dazzled and baffled—talking fast, scrawling numbers and arrows and lines on whiteboards, projecting spreadsheets. “You get caught up in the enthusiasm,” a former colleague says of Kavanaugh’s powers of persuasion. “It’s like trying to analyze love. I know that sounds absurd. This guy’s charisma is really that good.”
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Verily, Are the Kids All Right?
A Romeo and Juliet production that's all (vape) smoke and shimmer.
Masterpieces, Then and Now
The Met reunites Siena Renaissance paintings for the first time in centuries.
Heritage Regained
A fantastical documentary follows the return of 26 plundered artworks to Benin.
Emilia Pérez States Its Case Right Away
The film's impressive opening number drops you into a world of corruption and chaos.
WHEN KYLIE JENNER WRITES A NOVEL
Celebrities occasionally like to try their hand at fiction. But who’s really the author?
Emily Watson Is in Charge
The double Oscar nominee grew up in a cultlike organization. Acting became her way out of it.
RESTAURANT REVIEW: Everyone's Eating at Bridges
Manhattan's hottest restaurant doesn't play it safe.
Upstairs From His Favorite Italian Restaurant
Ryan Lawson designs other people’s places differently from how he did his own Village apartment.
165 MINUTES WITH...Mike and Kiki Tyson
After a near-death experience, the boxer is preparing, his wife by his side, for his big fight against Jake Paul.
Neighborhood News: Attention, Satmar Shoppers
At Williamsburg's W Mall, a milchig food court and refuge for weary mothers.