So if it's too expensive to advertise one movie that costs less then a hundred million dollars, then why not advertise two movies together? But things are on the verge of change. There's a website, Tugg, that allows you to arrange your own screenings from a library of selected films. They allow their users to suggest new films for their library too. Unfortunately for your sake, it's only available in the United States right now.
http://www.tugg.com/
And here's a blog post on the Animation Anomaly describing it's relevance for animation:
Excerpts from Steven Soderbergh's keynote address to the 56th San Francisco International Film Festival. Read the whole thing here. It's long, but worthwhile.
"The simplest way that I can describe it is that a movie is something you
see, and cinema is something that’s made. It has nothing to do with the
captured medium, it doesn’t have anything to do with where the screen
is, if it’s in your bedroom, your iPad, it doesn’t even really have to
be a movie. It could be a commercial, it could be something on YouTube.
Cinema is a specificity of vision. It’s an approach in which everything
matters. It’s the polar opposite of generic or arbitrary and the result
is as unique as a signature or a fingerprint. It isn’t made by a
committee, and it isn’t made by a company, and it isn’t made by the
audience. It means that if this filmmaker didn’t do it, it either
wouldn’t exist at all, or it wouldn’t exist in anything like this form.
"...The idea of cinema as I’m defining it is not on the radar in the
studios. This is not a conversation anybody’s having; it’s not a word
you would ever want to use in a meeting. Speaking of meetings, the
meetings have gotten pretty weird. There are fewer and fewer executives
who are in the business because they love movies. There are fewer and
fewer executives that know movies. So it can become a very strange
situation. I mean, I know how to drive a
car, but I wouldn’t presume to sit in a meeting with an engineer and
tell him how to build one, and that’s kind of what you feel like when
you’re in these meetings. You’ve got people who don’t know movies and
don’t watch movies for pleasure deciding what movie you’re going to be
allowed to make. That’s one reason studio movies aren’t better than they
are, and that’s one reason that cinema, as I’m defining it, is
shrinking.
"...And unfortunately the most profitable movies for the studios are going
to be the big movies, the home runs. They don’t look at the singles or
the doubles as being worth the money or the man hours. Psychologically,
it’s more comforting to spend $60 million promoting a movie that costs
100, than it does to spend $60 million for a movie that costs 10. I know
what you’re thinking: If it costs 10 you’re going to be in profit
sooner. Maybe not. Here’s why: OK. $10 million movie, 60 million to
promote it, that’s 70, so you’ve got to gross 140 to get out. Now you’ve
got $100 million movie, you’re going spend 60 to promote it. You’ve got
to get 320 to get out. How many $10 million movies make 140 million
dollars? Not many. How many $100 million movies make 320? A pretty good
number, and there’s this sort of domino effect that happens too. Bigger
home video sales, bigger TV sales, so you can see the forces that are
sort of draining in one direction in the business.
"...In 2003, 455 films were released. 275 of those were independent, 180
were studio films. Last year 677 films were released. So you’re not
imagining things, there are a lot of movies that open every weekend. 549
of those were independent, 128 were studio films. So, a 100% increase
in independent films, and a 28% drop in studio films, and yet, ten years
ago: Studio market share 69%, last year 76%. You’ve got fewer studio
movies now taking up a bigger piece of the pie and you’ve got twice as
many independent films scrambling for a smaller piece of the pie. That’s
hard. That’s really hard."
posted by Mark Mayerson at 7:25 AM on Apr 30, 2013
"Steven Soderbergh on the State of Cinema"
1 Comment -
So if it's too expensive to advertise one movie that costs less then a hundred million dollars, then why not advertise two movies together? But things are on the verge of change. There's a website, Tugg, that allows you to arrange your own screenings from a library of selected films. They allow their users to suggest new films for their library too. Unfortunately for your sake, it's only available in the United States right now.
http://www.tugg.com/
And here's a blog post on the Animation Anomaly describing it's relevance for animation:
http://animationanomaly.com/2012/09/26/tugg-people-to-the-cinema/
May 01, 2013 11:35 PM