Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Study Notes
Unit G322 Section B
Audiences and Institutions
Part 2
The Film Industry
19
Production was, is and probably always will be the most written about and the most
discussed of the three. It is how films are created. It concerns stars, special effects, million
dollar budgets, walkabouts at premieres and Oscars. It's the glamour and the glitz. It's
Hollywood. Or Bollywood! However, without the other two equally important links in the
chain, we would never see the films that are created. Distribution and Exhibition are
virtually unknown worlds to the general cinema-goer they may have heard the terms but
know very little detail about what constitutes a distributor or the difference between an art
house cinema and a multiplex.
This section will provide an overview of contemporary film production, distribution and
consumption in relation to UK audiences, case studies on specific films, and institutional
case studies. Starting with
This describes everything that happens in between production (making the film) and
exhibition (people watching the film in cinemas or on DVD, on television, via the internet or
on a plane, or anywhere else). Far from being straightforward, distribution involves all of the
deals done to get films shown (many films never get seen) and, just as importantly, marketed.
This marketing involves paid for 'above the line' advertising, which will be funded as part
of the project, such as trailers, posters, billboards and various spin-offs which are of mutual
benefit to the film and another commercial agency, for example a McDonalds 'Happy Meal'
with a film theme. It also includes related merchandising and 'below the line' publicity
which is not paid for, but again generates mutual interest. For example, an interview with a
star in a newspaper or magazine and reviews (the former will generally be positive, but the
latter is, of course, the great unknown for film producers).
It is crucial not to see film distribution as a 'helpful' stage in the life of a film whereby
20
distributors treat all films equally and ensure fair play in getting films to the public's
attention. The key players, the big companies who control much of the industry, control
distribution of their own products, and of others. Effectively films are loaned out to cinemas
for a fixed period and release deals are done that secure access to a certain number of screens
at a time.
Q1. In the UK film market, an increase in the number of screens available to show films
has not led to an increase in the number of films being shown. Why?
54 million
72m (first UK multiplex opens)
75.5m
78.5m
84 m
94.5m
97.4m
100.3m
103.7m
114.4m
123.5m
114.6m
123.8m
139.3m
135.5m
139.8m
Source: Film Distributors Association
Though their parent companies are involved in producing only one third of the films released
in this country they earn three quarters of the overall box office from a limited number of
blockbusters. Although theres an increasing amount of competition among exhibitors, the
majors have increased their market share since 1985 through the opening of an increasing
number of multiplexes. Unfortunately a rising number of screens does not mean a wider
variety of films as long holdovers of popular films are common, as are the same film
starting at different times during the afternoon and evening.
Looking at the UK cinema admissions for the last 20 years, there is certainly a correlation
between the opening of the new multiplexes in 1985 and a massive return of people back to
the cinema. There was a steady rise of admissions until 1994.
Q2. In your opinion what might account for the fact that cinema attendances have
fluctuated between 139 million and 176 million between 1999 and 2008? Hint: Look at
21
Distributors also deal with exhibitors who are no longer (as used to be the case) owned by
the same Hollywood companies, but who do, for reasons of profit, prioritise Hollywood
films over others. Usually the blockbuster films we are familiar with are distributed via
'blanket or saturation release', so even if a small UK independent company manages to get
its product into cinemas, it is usually competing for attention with one or more films that
take on the status of an 'event'. One of the outcomes of the distribution arrangement outlined
above is that half of the films released in Britain do not reach the whole country.
The British cinema market is the least hospitable in the world for British films as they are
largely distributed by the subsidiaries of their US competitors.
(Encyclopaedia of Contemporary Culture)
Another major problem for independent distributors in the UK is the cost of launching a new
film which is upwards of 1 million - so independent producers handling smaller budget
British or subtitled foreign films must pay prohibitively to launch them, and then face having
only limited distribution outlets, run by their competitors to show them in.
Q3. MATHS TEST! In 2011, UK film distributors invested 330 million in advertising
their new releases and on 35mm film prints. If around 450 new films receive a
theatrical release in the UK every year. How much, on average, do distributors spend
distributing a film in the UK?
Q4. This spending stirred up enormous demand - 171.5 million cinema tickets were
bought UK in 2011. This is great news for cinemas whats the downside of all this
excitement generated and consumer demand for film PRODUCERS in the UK?
22
(http://www.cinemauk.org.uk/facts-and-figures/admissions/monthly-uk-cinema-admissions-2004-2011/)
Q5. In 2004 the average cost of releasing a US film domestically was $39m, in
addition to the average production cost of $63.8m, making an overall average
production/distribution cost per film of $102.8m. What effect might this have on
Hollywood production and distribution if these increases have continued?
(source: FDA Yearbook).
UK cinema has always enjoyed an ambiguous relationship with America. On the one hand,
UK cinema has a tremendous advantage over other European national film for the simple
reason that America is huge and Americans speak English. Couple this with the fact that
many people across the world speak English as a second language, and there is potentially a
23
huge audience for British films as a result of this linguistic access. But the flipside of this
coin is obvious. American films have the same advantage and the American studios have
enormous capital at their disposal. They produce more films, those films are more
expensively created and they can afford to take more risks, knowing that one success will
pay for nine failures at the box office. So while British film producers periodically
experience boom periods and have the possibility of attracting a large global audience, in
Britain we are generally consuming an ever more American diet of film. And because of the
popularity of Hollywood films in the UK, the distribution of films into our cinemas and
DVDs into our shops is dominated by US companies, who are clearly going to put their
money and resources into pushing their own products first.
Q6. Why are more middle aged people going to the cinema in 2011? Who, in your
opinion, are the current most bankable leading actors for the youth market in the
UK?
(Going here may give you some help: http://star-currency.forbes.com/celebrity-list/england )
to focus even more on what they perceive to be the taste of an ever-younger audience. The
key demographic now seems to be the 14 to 24 year olds. Younger audiences are not too
bothered about the intrinsic quality of the film, how it is lit or edited for example. They're not
the least bit interested in qualities of what used to be called the well-made film. They are
almost entirely concerned with star names, style and genre. Most alarmingly for the studios
they've proven to be surprisingly discriminating in detecting attempts to pander to what are
perceived to be their lowest-common-denominator tastes. And the high-profile failures of
several summer sequel movies (previously thought to be bullet-proof) have made the studio
bosses even more nervous.
Older audiences do not open a movie because they'll wait till the queues subside before
they'll go to see a film. They're not the ones who will patiently stand in line to swell the
numbers on the all-important opening weekend. Given an increasingly crowded marketplace
the opening weekend becomes the crucial indicator for distributors of all widely released
films. Fall at the fence of that opening weekend and you're rapidly trampled under the feet of
the incoming batch of movies!
A second major shift in recent years has been the growth of the international distribution
market, which now accounts for around 60% of a Hollywood film's theatrical revenues.
Foreign sales are almost entirely name driven and the perception of what makes a name in
the foreign markets is very different from the US. Several stars who are now considered hard
to market in America can still open a film internationally and generate buoyant sales in the
video market.
Partly as a result of these factors, it is increasingly difficult to get well-written, thoughtful
mid-value films (i.e. in the $25 - $50 million budget range!) made in Hollywood. There is
a seemingly endless market for movies made around or below the $12m mark for the teen
and art-house circuits. The prevailing wisdom is that it's hard to lose money at this level.
Studios would prefer to spend $80m+ on high profile, high-concept tent pole pictures with
bankable stars and a large visual effects budget. And a very short list of actors now
effectively determines which films get made.
So how does contemporary Hollywood work? The story of the production of one particular
film provides an answer. The British director Mike Figgis (pictured right) had just finished
directing the American studio backed, critically acclaimed, and highly successful Internal
Affairs (1990). He had, as a consequence, been given the 'green light' to direct a relatively
personal project, Mr. Jones (1993), the story of a manic-depressive to star Richard Gere.
However, very soon the control of the shoot and the type of film Figgis wanted to make were
contested. As soon as shooting began Figgis was repeatedly visited and phoned on the set by
a team of producers who were financing the film. They set about trying to reshape the film
because, on seeing the rushes, they found it too 'dark', and potentially, therefore, a box office
disaster. (Figgis has commented that every response to the film at this stage was made solely
in relation to the likely bottom dollar success of the movie.)
'When Ray Stark says jump, you jump.'
Mike Figgis, Director (Moving Pictures, 1994)
The recommendations the producers made included asking Figgis to give the film 'more
light' by having some of the shoot relocate to the beach (even though the central character
was supposedly locked in a secure hospital!). The contest over the film continued up to the
final cut, when the first full screening took place in the presence of the Executive Producer,
Ray Stark, an old Hollywood mogul. After viewing it Stark called the film a `goddamn piece
of shit' and went about wrestling control from Figgis. The film was re-edited by another
director, and when finally released sank without trace. Figgis has continued to treat studios
with caution, with the finance for his films (Oscar winning) Leaving Las Vegas (1995) and
the digitally shot Timecode (2000) raised independently.
The story, if taken as an indicator of contemporary production more generally, indicates:
1. Producers are still some of the most powerful people in the film production process.
2. Producers have a narrative formula, a notion of a successful (standardised) template
for a successful picture that they expect directors to work to.
3. Art, authorship and creativity are eroded by the business side of the industry.
The specifics of the Figgis case can be applied more widely to Hollywood cinema today.
This increasing trend to approve projects with a particular narrative structure and filmic look
relates to a desire to reduce much of mainstream, commercial cinema to profitable, in box
office terms, High Concept ideas. One critic defines High Concept cinema as a cinema
reliant upon the pre-selling to producers of a relatively standardised package of key film
ingredients, and to the related trend for mass saturated marketing of High Concept films
when they are released. Wyatt argues that High Concept cinema can simply be defined as the
development.
The hook - Simplified and simplistic narrative pattern (capable of being relayed in less than
15 sentences). Love interest. Universal values of good and evil pitched against one other.
Star-genre-director vehicle. Music by famous composer and international pop band.
Merchandising possibilities.
The book - Popular best selling fiction the source of the script/film.
An early, high-octane example of High Concept cinema would be Top Gun (1986); a stargenre-director vehicle (for the pouting, muscular, all-American Tom Cruise, the action film
genre, and Tony Scott, the action director). Top Gun is a film over determined with visuals
and visual effect (notably the aerial dog-fight scenes) and punctuated with long shots of
iconic images (including the chrome reflecting motorcycle); a film with a tub-thumping
popular soundtrack and a narrative pattern that could be retold in less than 15 sentences; a
film based on a magazine article and produced by the pre-eminent architects of High
Concept cinema during the 1980s, Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer.
'Simpson was a vulgarian with an instinct for what sells movies to the archetypal teenage
boy in Des Moines more gorgeous scantily clad women, more explosions and more smartass
one-liners.' Nick James (2000)
Simpson and Bruckheimer are credited with heralding in the High Concept 'event' film in
Hollywood, changing the nature of how films were produced by developing the practice that
a three-act script was the benchmark for box-office success. This shifted power away from
the director to the producers and, to some degree, screenwriter.
Q8. Jerry Bruckheimer is still producing films today find some of the recent films
hes produced and look at the trailers. Is he still a high concept producer? Michael
Bay has taken over his mantle as the go-to man for the event movie. Watch some of
the trailers for his recent films does he deserve his reputation for films that are high
on effects and low on narrative?
In this synergetic age, then, film and cinema becomes just one interconnected branch of a
multimedia institution's output. Film production and distribution are constantly linked to how
they connect with (selling) the institution's other software and hardware. If we take the Sony
Corporation as an example we find that Sony owns and forges links together between its
various media production centres:
This integration is supported by the technology that Sony manufactures: Computer chips, CD
and DVD processing; radio, hi-fi, mini-disc, CD and Walkman production, film cameras,
film stock and film lenses, televisions, video players, DVD players; all Sony products that
you can buy online or in branded Sony 'Design Centre' shops. So tonight I could watch a
Sony produced film like The Amazing Spiderman (2011) using my Sony DVD player on my
32-inch Sony, Digital Television or watch it on my Sony Xperia Tablet. Later I could listen to
the Sony produced soundtrack by James Horner released on Sony Classical, on my Sony hifi. And just before I go to sleep I could probably play the Sony produced game on my Sony
Playstation 3...
The growth of synergetic media institutions has accelerated over the last few years, with the
major players trying to extend into telecom industries and the Internet revolution. The world
has got smaller as these multimedia institutions have got bigger.
'A major studio spends to stimulate all of the revenue streams, from merchandising to
video to theme parks. Look at animated features like Shrek (produced by
DreamWorks). It will gross $300 million world-wide, but when you look at all revenue
streams, that number more than doubles.' (Bart, 1999)
Synergy a Summary
Increasingly, media corporations are now in effect able to give publicity to, advertise and
promote films made by their film production arm via their own newspapers, magazines,
radio stations, TV stations, satellite or cable channels, or through the Internet.
Important financial spin-offs from films are also contained 'in-house': film-related books can
be published by a company that is part of the media corporation's stable of companies, TV or
satellite rights can be sold to a company within the same group, soundtrack CDs can be put
out by another company within the group. In these sorts of ways the business energy of any
single company is magnified, even multiplied, and 'synergy' is created.
Less than 20% of total film revenue now comes from the domestic box-office. So, although a
good first weekend is crucial in giving a film that vital initial impetus, there is now a whole
range of ways of subsequently recouping the financial outlay involved in making films
28
Future Trends?
Despite the growth in the DVD market and the improvement in the hardware for watching
films in the home, going to the cinema to see new films will remain an important activity,
especially with the growth of IMAX and 3D films (see below). Digital cinema will become a
reality and when it does, cinemas will be put to more imaginative use, showing sporting and
other important local or national events and making better use of time slots which have not
traditionally been popular with moviegoers.
29
by these operations, along with Miramax, became known as 'Indiewood', often used as
a disparaging label by those for whom studio involvement was a betrayal of the true spirit of
independence, but characteristic of a hybrid brand of cinema in which markers of indie-style
distinction are often combined with relatively more marketable dimensions than might be
found at the radical/alternative end of the commercially distributed independent spectrum.
The term 'Indiewood' began to be coined in the late 1990s to describe the territory in which
the line between the indie and studio sectors was becoming blurred, especially much of the
output of Miramax and the other studio indie/specialist divisions. If the form of indie cinema
that came to prominence through commercial distribution in the 1980s and 1990s often
mixed distinctive or alternative qualities with more conventional/mainstream features,
Indiewood has been taken to signify a hybrid that tends to lean more towards mainstream
Hollywood than edgy Art House. It suggests the exclusion of the more challenging or radical
end of the indie spectrum in favour of commercially safer films with greater potential for
crossover from niche to larger audiences.
Much of the responsibility for the creation of this phenomenon can be attributed to the
specific strategies adopted by Miramax, particularly its award-garnering prestige
productions like The English Patient (1997), but Indiewood qualities can also be identified
in a range of features produced by its rivals. A notable example is Lost in Translation
(2003), written and directed by Sofia Coppola and released by Universal's Focus Features in
the US and Momentum in the UK, it earned positive reviews and numerous awards,
including the Best Original Screenplay Oscar and Independent Spirit Awards (the indie
equivalent of the Academy Awards) for Best Film, Director, Screenplay and Male Lead.
Lost in Translation positions itself clearly in the quality', specialist arena at the level of its
overall tone, mood and the absence of any strong narrative drive. The story of two
individuals, Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson) and Bob Harris (Bill Murray), who find solace in
each other's company during enforced periods of residence in a luxury Tokyo hotel, the film
is primarily a mood piece, a wry and quite touching observation of fleeting moments of
human connection amid the various alienating aspects of each character's life: he an actor
being overpaid to endorse a Japanese whisky, she the philosophy-graduate wife of a
photographer with whom she seems to have little in common. The film faintly begins to
sketch the possibility of romance between the two, but pulls back from anything like a
consummation, leaving the pair heading their separate ways although only after an inaudible
(thus ambiguous) final exchange that leaves a partially open-ended impression.
At the same time, Lost in Translation also displays more conventional dynamics. The
impression of two lost souls finding one another is a familiar theme, even if not fully
developed. Much of the humour offered by the film is reliant on somewhat
stereotypical meetings of East and West, and the star presence of Bill Murray is central to the
selling of the film. Lost in Translation is also keen to include its own diegetic markers of
distinction, to underline the position it seeks to take up in the wider cultural field, primarily
through the negative reference point provided by a minor character, Kelly (Anna Faris left) a
Hollywood actress presented as a crass and superficial figure who represents the cinematic
polar opposite to that with which Coppola's film wishes to be associated.
By 2002, the largest remaining players outside the studios were Artisan Entertainment and
Lion's Gate. Each qualified as a major independent or mini-major studio through the scale of
its involvement in film production and distribution along with other interests such as
television and DVD. Artisan made its name through its high-profile release of The Blair
31
Witch Project (1999) and established a reputation as a suitable home for unconventional
indie features such as Darren Aronofsky's Requiem for a Dream (2000). Lion's Gate
achieved its initial mark in similar territory, early releases including Buffalo '66 (1998) and
American Psycho (2000). Each grew through a careful strategy of diversification, an
important aspect of which was the purchase of back catalogues to provide the kind of
stability achieved by the studios. The eventual outcome was the takeover of Artisan by Lion's
Gate in 2003, creating a single entity the scale of which meant that it was more likely to
survive in a marketplace still dominated by the majors.
Q11. How many of the current top 15 films on release in the UK are actually
distributed by UK companies?
32