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George Lucas and Lucasfilm Succession: A Cautionary Tale of Mergers and Acquisitions

George Lucas and Lucasfilm Succession: A Cautionary Tale of Mergers and Acquisitions

Glenshore Perspectives · Glenshore

February 10, 202614m 25s

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Show Notes

In 2012, George Lucas sold Lucasfilm, the production company behind Star Wars and Indiana Jones, to Disney for $4 billion. It was intended as a thoughtful succession: handing over his life's work to ensure it endured, while he retired to focus on family and philanthropy.

Sequels grossed billions, Disney+ surged from The Mandalorian (2020), and Lucas's Disney shares ballooned to an estimated $7 billion by 2021.

But there was a painful personal reality.

Lucas watched his singular creative vision unravel under committee-driven decisions, resulting in declining box office returns, flops like Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018), and his public expressions of deep regret, including his famous comparison to "selling his kids to the white slavers."

This wasn't about the money but the stark clash between a founder's coherent vision and a public company's drive for shareholder returns, that ultimately backfired.

In this episode of Glenshore Perspectives, we dive into this iconic deal as a cautionary tale for any business leader contemplating an exit or succession.

This podcast episode is inspired by the article written by Amine Laouedj, Managing Director at Glenshore, available at https://www.glenshore.com/articles/george-lucas-and-lucasfilm-succession-a-cautionary-tale-of-mergers-and-acquisitions