US | Hollywood Why Can't They Just Get Along? Inside the bitter feud that's breaking up Dreamworks and Paramount By Jonas Oransky Posted Nov 17, 2007 4:25 PM CST Copied Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone, center, talks to the media at the annual Allen and Co.'s media conference Friday, July 13, 2007, in Sun Valley, Idaho. (AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac) (Associated Press) Less than two years after Paramount acquired DreamWorks, executive tempers have boiled over. The much-heralded union has degenerated into a series of scathing personal attacks between the principals, Sumner Redstone and David Geffen. Shuttling between the bigwigs, Vanity Fair offers an in-depth look at the Hollywood war—and maybe even helps the titans settle scores. Relations are so bleak that Geffen and DreamWorks partner Steven Spielberg are expected to resign. One Paramount bigwig stoked the fire by saying Spielberg's departure would be no big deal. When nasty stories began surfacing about Redstone's personal life, his people blamed Geffen. Before VF went to press, however, Geffen called writer Bryan Burrough to report a truce, saying his reporting aired grievances that healed "our personal relationship." Read These Next Netflix plan to buy Warner Bros. isn't sitting well in Hollywood. It's not Honda or Toyota at top of Consumer Reports' car list. Olivia Nuzzi, Vanity Fair to part. Trump sees inspiration in Aussie retirement funds. Report an error