The news that Warner Bros has secured its $111bn merger is not merely a business transaction. It is a cultural declaration. It is the sound of history repeating itself as farce, or perhaps as tragedy for those of us who still believe in the faint possibility of a British film industry. The consolidation of Hollywood into a handful of corporate behemoths is not a new phenomenon: it is a return to the vertical integration of the Golden Age, a time when studios owned the stars, the theatres, and the narrative itself. But where does that leave the UK, a nation that has long served as a cheap backlot for American productions? We are not partners in this merger. We are the talent hired on a daily rate, grateful for the scraps of a blockbuster shoot in Leavesden.
Let us not pretend this is about ‘diversity of content’ or ‘synergies’. This is about control. When one entity holds the distribution, the production, and the streaming platform, there is no room for the idiosyncratic, the provincial, the authentically British. The great hope of the 1990s, when Working Title produced ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’ and ‘Trainspotting’, now seems a quaint anomaly. Those films succeeded because they were local. They spoke a specific language of class and place. Today, the algorithm demands universality, which in practice means American universality. The British film industry, such as it is, will be reduced to a supplier of period dramas and Hogwarts nostalgia, a kind of living museum for the cultural tourism trade.
And what of the independent British filmmakers? They will be squeezed further. The streaming wars have already decimated the mid-budget film. Now the mergers ensure that the few remaining slots on a schedule will go to franchises. Everything else is ‘content’, dumped onto a platform with minimal fanfare. The merger will accelerate the concentration of risk-averse production. The great filmmaking traditions of this country, from the kitchen-sink realism of the 1960s to the social horror of the 1970s, will be impossible to fund. They do not fit the template. They do not ‘travel’.
The pundits will wring their hands about job losses and co-production opportunities. This misses the point. The issue is not employment. It is sovereignty. A nation that cannot tell its own stories on its own terms is a nation in decline. We are sleepwalking into a cultural colony, where the only images we see of ourselves are filtered through a foreign lens. The merger is a hammer blow to the already crumbling notion that we possess a distinct cinematic identity. We might as well rename Pinewood Studios ‘Los Angeles East’ and be done with it.
There is, of course, a historical parallel. In the 1940s, the US government forced the studios to divest their theatre chains. This broke the monopolies and ushered in the ‘New Hollywood’ of the 1970s. Today, the regulators have shrugged. The $111bn deal passes without serious antitrust challenge. The lesson is clear: the state has abandoned the cultural sphere to the market. We are left with the ironic possibility that the only way to preserve British cinema is to reject it entirely; to embrace the local, the amateur, the unprofitable. Anything else is a surrender.
I am Arthur Penhaligon, and I have seen this empire fall before. It fell in Rome when the bread and circuses became entirely imported. It fell in Britain when the Empire ceased to believe in its own myths. Now we are watching the last reel of our indigenous film industry. The projector is on. The popcorn is ready. And the film, alas, is an American one.








