Lionsgate, the studio behind John Wick and The Hunger Games, extended its equity stake in Runway on Friday 12 June, deepening the partnership the two struck in 2024 1. Runway is a generative-video AI company whose models turn text and reference footage into moving images. Lionsgate injected no fresh cash and disclosed no terms. The two are co-developing a slate of short-form episodic series built from existing Lionsgate intellectual property run through Runway's models. Vice-chair Michael Burns described it as an iterative process 2.
This is the partner-and-build path, set against Fox's acquire move and the rent-then-replicate route others have taken. The same buy-the-vendor instinct showed when Runway opened its London headquarters this month and named the BBC, Fremantle and WPP as paying UK enterprise customers , and again when Netflix used Runway VFX on The Eternaut while advertising a $545,000 role to build its own equivalent in-house . What differs across these moves is depth of commitment: a licence, an equity stake, or a full acquisition.
Lionsgate chose the middle rung, and the choice carries a specific exposure. An equity stake locks the studio to Runway's release schedule and pricing without giving it control of either, the way owning the vendor would. If Runway's models stall or its terms change, Lionsgate cannot simply switch the way a pure licensee could, nor can it redirect the roadmap the way an owner could. The absence of fresh cash and disclosed terms suggests a deepening of an existing position rather than a new bet, a studio adding to a hand it already holds rather than opening a fresh one.
