By Vanessa Mock 

BRUSSELS--European regulators Monday launched a probe into some of Europe's leading pay-TV channels and major U.S. film studios, saying they may have violated antitrust rules in their licensing deals.

The U.K.'s British Sky Broadcasting Group PLC, France's Société d'Édition de Canal Plus, Italy's Sky Italia, Sky Deutschland AG of Germany and Spain's Distribuidora de Televisión Digital SA, or DTS, which operates under the Canal Plus brand in Spain, are all under formal investigation over concerns that their licensing agreements may have flouted European Union rules by preventing viewers in other countries from accessing their films. 21st Century Fox Inc. owns part of BSkyB and Sky Deutschland, and all of Sky Italia. Canal Plus owns part of DTS.

The probe also centers on five leading film studios: 21st Century Fox's Twentieth Century Fox, Time Warner Inc.'s Warner Bros., Sony Corp.'s Sony Pictures Entertainment, Comcast Corp.'s NBCUniversal and Viacom Inc.'s Paramount Pictures Corp.

Walt Disney Co. isn't part of the investigation because it had already started changing its contracts when the inquiry began, a person familiar with the probe said.

BSkyB, Canal Plus and DTS declined to comment on the investigation. Sky Italia and Sky Deutschland did not immediately return calls.

"We intend to cooperate fully with the European Commission's investigation," said a spokesman for Warner Bros. "It is premature to comment further at this time."

Representatives for Fox, Sony Pictures and Paramount declined to comment. Universal didn't immediately comment.

"The investigation will allow us to look at the restrictions in agreements between film studios and pay-TV broadcasters that grant 'absolute territorial exclusivity' to these broadcasters," the EU's antitrust chief, Joaquín Almunia, said. "More and more European citizens watch films, use pay-TV services broadcast by satellite and increasingly available through online streaming."

Deals signed between studios and pay-TV channels are done on an exclusive and territorial basis. For instance, a studio will typically draw up an agreement to sell popular content such as films with a single pay-TV broadcaster for each European Union member state, rather than across all 28 EU countries. The commission said it wasn't trying to get studios to sell films on a pan-European basis or to scrap territorial deals. But it has worries in regard to specific cases, such as requests from viewers in other member states, or regarding existing subscribers who travel or move abroad.

"Our investigation will focus on restrictions that prevent the selling of the content...[to] viewers located in other member states," Mr. Almunia said. "If I live in Belgium and want to subscribe to a Spanish TV service, I may not be able to subscribe at all if there is absolutely territorial exclusivity."

Mr. Almunia told reporters in Brussels that investigators would also look at instances where European nationals were unable to access audiovisual content when traveling or moving abroad. "If you subscribe to a pay-TV service in Germany and you go to Italy for holidays, you may not be able to view the film offered by that service...that you have on your laptop during your holidays."

Licensing to foreign television networks has contributed an increasingly significant share of studios' revenue in recent years as sales of DVDs have cratered. Typically, studios use popular new movies as the bait for wide-ranging deals that include rights to hundreds of titles from their libraries of older films and television shows.

Independent studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. recently reported that it generated $396.2 million, or 37% of its total revenue, from world-wide television licensing in the first nine months of 2013.

The launch of the commission probe comes after a top European court ruled in 2011 that territorial licensing restrictions for English Premier League soccer matches wiped out competition between broadcasters and carved up the market along national borders.

Mr. Almunia said that those exclusivity deals were being eliminated for soccer, but that this wasn't the case for films. "We will carefully examine the principle set out by the court," Mr. Almunia said.

21st Century Fox until last year was part of the same company as Wall Street Journal parent News Corp.

Ben Fritz, Erich Schwartzel and Simon Zekaria contributed to this article.

Write to Vanessa Mock at vanessa.mock@wsj.com

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