Man, you crazy. Paramount has a MASSIVE library and arguably more box office hits than Fox (probably much more so of classic films)
This chart contains the top 100 Paramount Pictures movies based on the cumulative worldwide box office.
www.the-numbers.com
This chart contains the top 100 20th Century Fox movies based on the cumulative worldwide box office.
www.the-numbers.com
Neither of them stand a chance against Disney (good god they were a BEAST till 2020!!) but to say Paramount is worth 10B versus Fox at 66B or whatever, thats just crazy. Disney WAAAAAY overpaid to get x-men IMHO.
Tom Holland can't open shit unless he is Spiderman.
And Batman also has a deep comic background. Indy has ONLY been Ford in any real meaningful context, which is why he is so hard to recast (though I am with you, Pratt about 7-8 years ago would have been PERFECT, maybe Nathan Fillion 20 years ago).
Fox had way more modern and relevant IP and a lot of the value is dependent on debt.
Disney getting X-Men allowed them to largely complete the Marvel universe. You say they overpaid for X-Men, but you've yet to see what they've done with X-Men to make that determination. Historically X-Men was right behind Spider-Man in terms of popularity for Marvel. It's a very valuable franchise, but it's not all that came with Fox. It allowed Disney to also complete their ownership of Star Wars. It gave them FX and further ownership of Hulu, which allowed it to complete its ownership of Hulu. Fox was especially valuable, especially to Disney.
Tom Holland's Uncharted performed pretty well, especially given when it released. If Tom Holland can't open, and you're taking out superhero movies, who under 40 can?
If Sony wants to stay relevant in movies, they know buying Paramount is probably the first step to doing so. Then you have to look at Universal, but there are a lot of issues there, similar with trying to buy Paramount, Sony can't own CBS or NBC. And then the only other player is Warner.
Not sure what Batman's comic book background means to being able to cast multiple actors. Ford has been the only meaningful indy, but he hasn't had a meaningful entry since 1981.
Similar to how Pratt would have been perfect and maybe still could be, I think Holland could successfully reboot Mission Impossible into his own franchise, where Jeremy Renner failed to do so with Bourne, and Chris Pine failed to do so with Jack Ryan.
Sean Connery was Bond for 21 years. Tom Cruise has been Ethan Hunt for 28 years. Though Connery made 7 bond movies in those 21 years vs Tom Cruise only has done 7 in 28 years.
There are no actors in their 30s that are worth risking a mission Impossible reboot with and starting with an actor in their 40s doesn't make a lot of sense. There will be a Mission Impossible movie the last with Tom Cruise in 2025. You wait at least 2-3 years to reboot, that brings you to 2027-2028. Holland will be 31 by then, which is really close to when Tom Cruise initially was cast in the role.