Fortissimo/Psyop to Merge with Stink?

I’ll be honest, most of the details in this article about Fortissimo (the acquisition company that bought Psyop back in January) and Stink Productions in London are over my head. The gist of the deal, however, is that Psyop and Stink would be combining powers “to form a global production and digital content creation company with expertise in live action production, design, animation, visual effects and mixed media, initially focused on the advertising market.”

Some of Psyop’s biggest and best projects over the last year or so have come through Stink, so in terms of a creative partnernship, the deal definitely makes sense. Given the ever-expanding European market and Stink’s dominant position there, the merger seems like a solid business move, too.

It’s interesting to see this level of growth, especially when you consider that it’s backed by a publicly traded company.  Since the turn of the 21st century, the predominant form of motion studios has been the boutique—small privately owned shops working with cutting edge tech that enabled desktop production without massive investment.

Is this Psyop/Stink merger a harbinger of things to come for the industry at large? Are we leaving the boutique mentality behind? What new challenges do creative services companies face when shareholders are thrown into the mix?

About the author

Justin Cone

/ justincone.com
Together with Carlos El Asmar, Justin co-founded Motionographer, F5 and The Motion Awards. He currently lives in Austin, Texas with is wife, son and fluffball of a dog. Before taking on Motionographer full-time, Justin worked in various capacities at Psyop, NBC-Universal, Apple, Adobe and SCAD.

2 Comments

Douglas

I was recently talking with a friend about Prime Focus Group (India/UK) and how they’ve been snatching up vfx/post facilities lately. Rumor has it that they have a warehouse army of maya dudes ready to do all your production work dirt cheap. I don’t think the boutique mentality will get left behind by choice, but good creative, no matter the size of your production staff, will be able to hold it’s own. Taking advantage of certain technology, and producing works on a grand scale requires people and money though. Thus is the commerical/entertainment business :(

Brett1

I’d be interested to know what this means for the other directors at Stink. In such a case you might think that Stink would favor Psyop, no? The others there don’t seem to get as many jobs anyway. Might be wrong though.

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