The honeymoon period for Hollywood’s newest mega-merger has ended before it even began.
A staggering coalition of more than 1,000 actors, directors, and writers has launched a massive revolt against Paramount Skydance’s proposed US$111 billion (AU$156 billion) takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery.
As Variety and The New York Times first reported, an open letter published on BlocktheMerger.com outlines the industry’s ‘unequivocal opposition’ to the deal. The massive document reads like a who’s who of Hollywood royalty.
Signatories include A-list heavyweights like Joaquin Phoenix, Ben Stiller, Kristen Stewart, Mark Ruffalo, Emma Thompson, and Jane Fonda. Blockbuster directors Denis Villeneuve and J.J. Abrams also added their names to the growing list of dissenters.

Joaquin Phoenix, Ben Stiller, Kristen Stewart and 1,000-plus Hollywood names oppose Paramount-Warner Deal in an open online letter: ‘Block the Merger’. Image: Yahoo
Fewer studios, fewer jobs, fewer blockbusters
The core argument driving the backlash is brutally simple. Consolidation kills creativity.
The creatives argue that combining two legacy studios will reduce the number of major US film studios to just four. They warn that this contraction will obliterate the mid-budget film market and trigger catastrophic job losses across the production ecosystem.
The Guardian noted the deep historical ties many of these stars hold with the very studios they are fighting. Mark Ruffalo and Joaquin Phoenix both built significant portions of their careers on Warner Bros. projects.
Now, they are openly warning that the merger will prioritise the interests of powerful stakeholders over the broader public good.
Television creator Damon Lindelof took to Instagram to summarise the industry panic. He noted that merging two storied backlots inevitably turns one into a ghost town. Lindelof famously declared, “I am scared. But I am not a ghost. And a fight is already lost if it is never fought.”
Paramount pushes back
David Ellison’s Paramount Skydance finally won the Warner Bros. Discovery bidding war in late February 2026.
The victory followed a tense battle against streaming giant Netflix. Ellison pledged to keep both Paramount and Warner Bros. operating as standalone movie studios. He even promised to release a combined 30 movies a year in theatres.
Hollywood clearly does not buy the spin.
Paramount executives quickly issued a corporate rebuttal to the explosive letter. A studio spokesperson claimed the merger strengthens consumer choice and competition.
The statement promised the deal would create greater opportunities for creators and audiences alike.
The regulatory authorities in Washington will ultimately decide the fate of the merger. But a massive public revolt by the very talent that fuels these studios creates a spectacular public-relations nightmare for Ellison.
He might have greenlit the biggest merger in Hollywood history, but his cast is already walking off set.
Feature image- AI generated.