I've been sent Bill Mechanic's keynote speech about the future of indies from this morning's Independent Film & Television Production Conference. The former chairman/CEO of Fox Filmed Entertainment from 1994 to 2000, is now an indie producer (Coraline) and owner of Pandemonium LLC. Mechanic has always been one of the more pensive and articulate execs in Hollywood:
"I was asked to address you this morning with my observations on the present as well as the future state of Independent Production.
But before I begin, I have to relate the story of a close friend of mine, who’s a leading heart surgeon.
He said he’d recently been involved in a very trying and emotional six hour piece of open heart surgery where he and a team of people fought valiantly but unsuccessfully to save a patient.
Afterwards, my friend entered the Doctor’s locker room where one of his colleagues was staring absently into the void, clearly spent from the ordeal. He tried to cheer him up but the colleague turned to him and asked why he was not more distraught.
My friend answered with a smile:
At least we weren’t asked to save Independent Production.
Well, the truth be told, we may not be heart patients but we aren’t that far away. We have too many insignificant movies clogging our distribution channels. Tightening economic conditions are sending sharp pains through our systems. Our blood supply from heretofore vibrant markets such as DVD and TV seemingly have evaporated in front of our eyes.
The question we must ask is if the condition is fatal.
In all candor I would say only to some.
Those who ignore the warning signs. Who don’t adjust to the threatening conditions. Those producers and distributors who pretend there is nothing wrong.
Nine years ago, I was a healthy and occasionally happy studio executive. I had taken Fox over a 7 year period from a doormat to the #1 studio and before that had spent 9 years at Disney building a then-dormant minor player into a muscular and, for the first time in its history, a real force in the studio world. I left Fox with 5 of the Top 10 films in history and departed Disney with 19 of the Top 20 Videos ever and as the #1 International distributor.
I had fought with Rupert Murdoch over my desire to create a business for Fox in the world of animation. He felt no one could compete with Disney. Nevertheless I started up Fox Animation. ANASTASIA was a start, it made money. TITAN AE a misstep, and lost. Even though that is the nature of the business, that not everything works, he didn’t want to wait for ICE AGE to finish production. I didn’t have a foot out of the door before Fox tried to sell off the film. Luckily for them, they couldn’t get a deal done.
At the same time, Peter Chernin thought I was taking too much of a chance with X MEN. He called it my $70mm art film, since everyone knew that not only were comic book movies dead but you certainly couldn’t start one in a concentration camp. That wasn’t comic book fun. Maybe not, but most comic books are dark, so it was a question of being relevant, of being grounded.
Ironically, both films have lasted longer at Fox than I did and are now the most valuable franchises in the history of that studio, throwing off billions of dollars of profit.
But they also were, along with FIGHT CLUB, the leading reasons I was shown the door. My bosses couldn’t deal with the unconventional choices like those and others such as BRAVEHEART and THERE’S SOMETHING ABOUT MARY because the films weren’t pre-sold and thus seemed less predictable. This despite the fact that these unconventional movies guided Fox to the 5 best years in its history.
When I left, a few of the other Majors called to see if I were interested in running their shops. I thought instead it was time to do things on my own, to not work for companies that no longer wanted to be in the film business, that no longer thought enough about the future to not gum it up. Easier to raise money and worry only about making good movies which could make money.
Needless to say I was naïve. I thought raising money would be easy. I didn’t exactly foresee such things as the Silicon Valley bubble bursting, or the economic meltdown, or the Madof scandal. But then I guess the Captain of the Titanic thought the Atlantic was smooth sailing. And Batman thought the Joker would be a laugh.
When I first made the decision to go off on my own, Larry Gordon said to me something that I’ve never forgotten. He said running a studio is a great job but a terrible life. Producing is a great life but a terrible job.
9 years as an independent producer provides a great perspective. It also cause heart palpitations.
Here’s the one key thing I’ve learned: there is no such thing as an independent producer. There are only dependent producers.
Dependent on distributors, financiers, and bankers, and distribution channels that understand the needs of the market even less than the corporations that own the studios.
Which makes a truly independent producer even more truly dependent because the alternatives to the studio system are in many ways more difficult, not easier.
Perhaps even more than the studios, those with the controls over whether or not a movie gets made independent of the studios do so almost with less attention to the movie itself.
Part of that is due to outsiders who always seem to come into the business believing they can do better and yet rarely have an idea of what they are doing. Attorneys and financial analysts picking movies is a recipe for disaster. They can tell you all day long what hasn’t recently worked, but in truth, haven’t the experience or the knowledge to do anything different than has already been done.
That’s been the oddest lesson of this period for me. That the independent world, which should be aiming to do things better and different from the Studios, doesn’t have that as a mandate at all. If anything, the only thing that independent distributors and financiers look for is the SAME. Maybe costing a little less than the Majors, but they want what the Studios want, or in FIGHT CLUB speak, they want copies of a copy.
I now understand that unconventional choices like X MEN and ICE AGE would barely have a prayer getting made independently. Why? Because at the time, they didn’t look like anything else.
It’s disrespectful if not downright dumb to think audiences can’t tell the difference between the original, which occasionally might even have some fresh faces, and the copy, which almost always is populated with retreads. It’s like thinking you can sell yesterday’s news under a different banner.
The exception to the rule is DISTRICT 9, which didn’t try to compete with the Majors with special effects or stars or plot. Instead of feeling recycled, it was fresh and is now one of the year’s best and most successful pictures. But lot of credit has to go to Peter Jackson since it was undoubtedly his clout that got the film made.
Following the lead of the Majors, presumes that they know what they want. It presumes they have a fix on their audiences.
I would say that’s anything but true. Admissions are down over the past few years and, perhaps most troubling, the audience that Hollywood spends the majority of time focusing on, the under 25’s, are the ones finding other things to do.
Take a look at this shift over the past decade. While use of the internet and video games have dominated leisure time activities, movie consumption is down or flat over the same period. And, more to the point, you can see that there is a 21% drop in film going amongst the core target audience and a 24% drop in the next key category, 25-39 year olds.
And yes, these charts beg another question: if the audiences are shifting, why isn’t the product shifting as well. Name 5 mainstream films this year that successfully targeted an over-30 year audience.
In that way, Hollywood in the broadest sense of the word is much like Detroit. It’s a manufacturer’s mentality that reigns, seemingly indifferent to the consumers it serves. Ignore whether the consumer likes our product as long as they buy it.
Market it and they will come.
And don’t worry if they don’t come back. Accept 60% drop off rates as the norm, saying it’s all about wide openings.
Three years ago the Lakers all-but sold out every game even though they had a lousy team. Since Jerry Buss is a smart owner, he knew if he didn’t fix things, no shows would eventually turn into season ticket non-renewals. He did what he needed to do to make it the hottest ticket in town again and a no-show today is a no-no.
When was the last time you heard anyone either from a studio or an independent talking about improving their product, of creating positive buzz and expanding the audience?
Here’s one basic question to ask yourself: If the most popular film in history was TITANIC and it did so by weaving together interest in all demographic pockets as well as pulling in non-film goers, why in the last 12 years has no attempted to do the same?
TITANIC was #1 at the box office for 15 consecutive weeks. It not only spurred on record year in theatrical attendance, and had the biggest video in history, but also generated the biggest Oscar telecast in years. A good movie, like a good team in sports, makes everything around it better.
An independent couldn’t and shouldn’t make movies of that scale but it should make movies as individualistic and compelling. Certainly there are good examples among some of the smaller independent films—-SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE being an easy choice — that actually do stand out and succeed because of their quality and their uniqueness.
But as you can see from these next few charts, the independent world was no more concerned with the consumer than the studios. With the influx of hedge fund money, the past decade saw a glutting of product, again most of it with no idea of who it was for or how it could be sold. Whether some of these movies had artistic integrity or not, there is no question there was no audience appeal.
From the low water mark of 1990, there has been a 50% increase in the number of pictures and even since 2000, nearly a 25% increase. And most of the influx came from non-Majors, rising from 150 in 1990 to 450 in 2008. That, my friends, is insanity.
Remember that through this entire period, the only growth at the box office has been inflationary, which means more films were fighting for a share of a flat box office. Over approximately this same period, the biggest hits took even a greater share of the box office pie, meaning the independents, even with a vastly greater number of releases, are taking a dramatically smaller percentage of the available money.
Let me get out the rest of the bad news, though I’m not telling you anything you don’t already know. The next 2-3 years will be even worse, not because of the flood of new releases, since that is already abating, but rather due to the effect the over saturation has had combined with the economic downturn.
New money is going to be hard, if not impossible to find. Ad sales are down, so TV networks around the world, other than cable, aren’t buying. Add in a confused video market, and it’s going to be tough.
To my mind, the next few years will be about survival.
If it’s any consolation, it will be harder on the Studios than the independents. Not only is it harder for big companies to change, to adapt, but there are legacy issues in terms of personnel. And within the next few years, their big market advantage, the bricks and mortar of their distribution operations, will become a disadvantage in the democratic age of digital. I would assume at least 2 of the Majors to be sold or consolidated by the middle of the decade.
Before I turn to why I don’t think this is all fatal — and in fact, might be a boon — let me address one more item, video. I get asked a lot if the problems are systemic. My answer is not necessarily. That we would reach a point of maturation in DVD is natural and logical, but too much of the downturn is completely self-imposed.
Like much of the bad decision making that has helped take a lot of the profit out of the business, the air was let out of the tires by the studios themselves. No top management of a studio really cared what was going on over the past few years other than was their budget being met.
No one asked whether their units should be pushing Blu-Ray in the face of an economic melt-down or even whether or not Blu-Ray was going to be the next big ap to the general consumer. They simply accepted the idea that they could resell their libraries at higher prices.
So no one asked what impact dropping the price on their existing DVD’s would have. I mean if I can buy TITANIC for under $5 in some stores, why am I so eager then to rush out to pay $30 or so when it’s released on Blu Ray? Is the quality difference that great? How many formats are yet to come?
No one asked what buying great movies at cheap prices would do to new releases, which may not be as great. Give a consumer with less expendable dollars a choice between LEGALLY BLONDE for $5 or ALL ABOUT STEVE for $20 or $30, which do I want to buy?
Simply said, the studios have destroyed the price-value relationship in video, particularly when low priced rental alternatives have sprung up everywhere.
And then add in the absolute flooding of TV product from the beginning of time into the market, and you have the conditions that have absolutely killed video as the key profit center of new movies.
Ok, so in the face of all this, why can I say this is all good news? Because a lot of waste is going to be cleared from the marketplace. Excess product will go away, the people who don’t take the business seriously will go away. Hopefully those who make crummy movies will also go away, but that may just be a personal wish.
In 1984, I went with Michael Eisner and Jeffrey Katzenberg to Disney as perhaps the 4th employee of the new regime. Disney at the time was barely a film producer much less a major distributor. Before we could execute the plans to transform that company into one of the Majors, I was asked to prepare the presentation to the Board of Directors. A lot of capital was at stake.
The numbers, like some of those we’ve discussed today, were overwhelmingly negative. In truth, the film business has never been an easy one to master. More companies fail than succeed. But what I presented, and this is still one of the absolute truths of the industry, was that it was only a bad business on average. If you expect to be an average performer in this world, you can expect to fail.
Those without the ambition or the brains to figure their way through these tough economic conditions are going to be the heart patients who cannot be saved. No one has a birthright in this business.
It is a game for winners. And those who win today will win to an even greater extent than at almost any point in the past. The flattening of the box office is only true on a macro level. For the individual film, the sky is the limit. Even though there’s more piracy of the hit picture than any other, it’s still that same hit picture that can score giant revenues in all the ancillary streams.
Those who will win will be smart about what they make and how they sell their films. They will hopefully make good films but perhaps even more key they will make unique films that stand out, which means they will not have to compete against the bulk of the films for talent. They won’t look like all the other films so they won’t have to spend as much money marketing them.
It’s not that the buyers aren’t there. Consumers, TV outlets, Retailers and, yes, even Pirates want what works.
Don’t believe me? Ask Summit about TWILIGHT. Ask Searchlight about SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE. Ask Screen Gems about DISTRICT 9. Ask Focus about CORALINE.
Let me conclude by saying that the challenges are great. Technological innovations often hurt before they help, it takes resources to fight the sense of entitlement that breeds piracy, it takes skill and experience to know what FDR really meant when he said: We have nothing to fear but fear itself.
"I was asked to address you this morning with my observations on the present as well as the future state of Independent Production.


Clear headed. Bill Mechanic is the dude.
One of the most articulate scenarios of the Independent Film World that I have read.
Insightful, a little scary, no actually a lot scary, but strangly inspiring, thankyou Mr Mechanic, please continue to take risks on great material
Great post Nikki. The only thing he left out in his speech is that you now have to get at least 7 “names” to finance an independent film these days or not only will it not get made, but festivals won’t screen them either. The festivals are not concerned with quality either.
Just look at casting notices — ever since after the writer’s strike there was a change. All of a sudden all the producers realized name talent needed to work and they could get them for cheap. Notices started to post “Name talent only” for every little short film, independent, guest star, and sometimes co-star! That is starting to dissipate, SLOWLY. But part of this “7 names to finance” has come about because producers got spoiled during this downturn, which was exacerbated by the writer’s strike and de facto SAG strike. Over time, this will change, but it will take a very long time because the opportunities for actors is continuing to contract — hasn’t stopped. Like what Mechanic says about how the downturn will weed out the nonsense from film creation, the same thing is happening with actors — weeding out those who can’t financially survive the craft and/or who shouldn’t be doing it at all. In all, very difficult.
Quick note — was at the New York Television Festival last week and the reality pieces shown had tremendously low attendance — like 4 people showing up. One of the producers was begging creators and producers from other scripted works to come to their screenings to fill the room — “For the love of God, won’t you come to my screening?” But to be honest, no one was really interested in reality. Everyone said they were sick of it. Even non-art people — sick of it. I also saw a lot of people really fed up and shaking their heads in disgust with raunchy fare — scripted or not. There is a real swing toward quality scripted, and the fullest rooms were those who had DIFFERENT yet MAINSTREAM product that was done in a QUALITY way – no stars names were required for this. Yet only a very small percentage of pieces in the whole festival were crafted that way.
if people are getting sick of reality TV, that’s some good news!
Yeah, and that’s why every single indie marketing piece showcases names instead of logline, and why their titles suck. My point: Julianne Moore, Blythe Danner, Hope Davis, James LeGros, Roy Scheider, Michael Vartan and Noah Wylie in The Myth of Fingerprints. What’s it about? Who knows? Who cares? The model hasn’t changed since 1997.
I’d like to believe that there’s room for quality over plug in performances. District 9 got made with just one name; Peter Jackson.
Good piece, many fair points.
Unfortunately, these speeches/articles far too often serve as a self-aggrandizing reminder of the individual’s triumphs, the films they championed when no one else believed in them, blah, blah, blah.
You know what? You need a good screenplay. Not a good one, a great one. You need a script that’s castable, has terrific dialogue, etc. A film that will have people Twittering to their friends about a two-hour experience that made them laugh and cry in equal measure. Not hipster-y, ironic laughs, but genuine humor that is on the page, along with characters people care about. It’s not about stars, it’s not about directors, it’s about getting *multiple* talented actors to sign up for a project that will garner critical acclaim and word of mouth. Funding is always there for a good, quality script that can be made for a relatively reasonable price.
Of course, such scripts are few and far between. Most writers have all the ambition in the world, but the raw, unharnessed talent is hard to come by. I think this downturn will force writers to really dig deep within and stop chasing paychecks, and ultimately create real stories that put their own spin on the human condition. We saw the writers strike, let’s see them REALLY strike. It’s all about the script.
Writing great screenplays is rarely about raw unharnessed talent. It is about harnessed talent. Talent modulated by craft. And that takes years of work. It also takes a cast of mind that can somehow undergo that process of being creatively molded by fire as you build the necessary craft without letting your creative fire be snuffed out and being turned into a skilled hack.
Thankyou for your conscise and totally relevant point. Its so true, anyone remember Billy Eliott, a small indie movie pitched up against the Gladiator at the Oscars, but a great movie, wonderful believable characters, great writing! We need movies like that, with heart, people have become knumb to efx and technology, the story is always the most important issue.
That was horrifying and inspiring. Or as I like to call it, “horrispiring.”
More of a wake up call. Whilst I like the Detroit analogy, I was left unsure as to who were the “Toyotas” and “Hondas” of the movie business. I’m probably running against the grain here, but in a world short of risk capital somethings gotta give and that’s gonna be costs. Maybe the old Studio system should be revived where the stars were under contract using weekly retainers. Benign dictatorship, that’s what we need a dose of.
The only honda/toyota as far as every one is concerned is Pixar. They pretty much always make excellent movies and always turn a significant profit.
Too bad there’s not a live action studio doing the same thing. The only one close would be Fox Searchlight. They gave us, or picked up and gave us, Little Miss Sunshine, Juno and Slumdog Millionaire.
Love this guy. If we could only xerox him & put him into mass production.
The industry needs many more like him; instead, we get bean counters, lawyers-turned-dumb moguls, and lapdogs who make “copies of copies”.
Mechanic made some great movies, and he didn’t make an endless stream of sequels. Unique movies. God I love that phrase. You could just see the heads of Paramount, Sony, Disney, Warners, and 20th throwing up at those words.
Bill Mechanic – PLEASE TAKE OVER ANOTHER STUDIO AND MAKE MORE OF YOUR KIND OF MOVIES!
do you mean copies of copies?
God, I miss Mechanic as a studio head. His tenure at Fox was during a time I first started following the business, showing the industry that it was in fact possible to lead a contemporary studio with creativity and business sense.
To even think that Tom Rothman was the “leader” who followed makes me shudder in horror. He came into a studio ripe with franchise possibilities and left the showbiz floor filled with the dead bodies of Alien, Predator, X-Files, Planet of the Apes and pretty soon, what’s left of their “Marvel” franchises. The best thing that has happened to Fox in the last decade was promoting Rothman OUT of the studio and giving him enough duties with both film and TV to leave Alex Young with the opportunity to save what’s left of their most recognizable IPs.
Mechanic’s exit from Fox reminds me a lot of when New Line unloaded Michael De Luca. With his removal came a complete lack of direction in a company that had no idea how to operate with a business model post-Lord of the Rings. It still gets me how Shaye scrubbed De Luca’s name from all the press releases for one of the most profitable franchises of the last decade. Of course, they got what was coming to them.
Can’t wait to see what happens to the Rothman era after Avatar doesn’t open big enough and is then creamed by Sherlock Holmes.
De Luca didn’t really have anything to do with the LOTR movies. That’s not whitewashing, that’s a fact.
I thought LOTR came about because Peter Jackson used to sleep on Mark Ordesky’s sofa before Beautiful Creatures hit. I do think NL lost big when they kicked out DeLuca and now we just have to deal with the carnage left behind by the entitled arrogance of Bob Shaye and Rolf Mittweg who insulted just about every up and coming talent that came through the NewLine door. And now who’s left? That joke, Michael Disco. Pathetic. How a studio could be out of business after making 3B on LOTR is a study in – well I already said it: entitled arrogance, and stupidity.
Come back to the five and dime, Bill.
That was a clear, cogent and accurate assessment of the industry as it stands today. It makes me sad on one hand, but at least there’s one exec who gets it. I keep flashing back to Jeff Zucker bragging that he’s not playing for ratings, he’s playing for margins. Way to go, Jeff, you’re killing the patient by refusing to treat it.
Another reason why I loved working for this guy back in the day… a true professional and gentleman.
The guy greenlit “FIGHT CLUB.” Even if he knows nothing about the movie business, he could give us all lessons on having balls.
I agree when Mechanic insists “this is all good news.” A lot of dead wood is burning, there are fewer development positions for idiot nephews (sorry, Marc) and producers’ girlfriends. His discussion of selling smarter and selling unique films almost points directly to the upcoming “PARANORMAL ACTIVITY.” That small, scary picture is currently getting a seventies-style regional release and word-of-mouth suggests it lives up to the internet hype.
It also seems the best movies appear when studios are at their worst, economically. “EASY RIDERS AND RAGING BULLS” and of course, Evans’ “KID STAYS IN THE PICTURE” make the collapsing backlots sound like a wonderland of creativity and opportunity. We’re almost in a worse position today, so I can’t wait to see what results from the current chaos.
One could argue that FIGHT CLUB should have been little more than a microbudgeted shot-on-DV indie instead of the overscaled, big-budget behemoth that David Fincher insisted on.
PARANORMAL ACTIVITY is sub-BLAIR WITCH in every way, and what’s worse, it’s Borrrrrrrrrring. Not scary. Just hype.
re “what results”: check what happened in the 90’s. We’re in an era of excessive franchising. Studios playing it safe. There will be an audience backlash eventually. It’s a cycle.
Roger, that only depends on the budget of your film. And your second point only depends on the festivals you are aiming for. Common sense dictates that little leaguers shouldn’t play the Yankees.
Haha, true. But since when did the Austin Film Fest and Hollywood Film Fest become major leaguers? I just looked at their lineups and even they’re stacked with huge names.
Good stuff. A lot of that wisdom could be applied to other sectors, including retail and service.
There’s really nothing new here. His argument that (a) there are too many movies; (b) chasing a flat or shrinking box office; (c) with declining support from DVD sales, has been conventional wisdom for at least 4 years.
His solution? Wait for the losers to go bust, and make great movies! Durable advice, but hardly original. What about shifting release windows, changing the revenue model to App Store volume pricing to challenge piracy, finding new ways to leverage overseas box office other than pre-sale financed production, redefining the cash-flow ratio between production, marketing and revenue, or challenging any one of a number of aging dogma? The devil – and the dollar – is in the details.
Bill’s a very smart guy, and I wish he had dug deeper … but maybe he’s so smart that he’s holding back the real keys to the kingdom. As his track record demonstrates, in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.
This guy is way more better than that idiot :cough: Tom Rothman :cough:.
Mechanic’s speech is one of those “I did not know that” moments.
Great insight into what it takes to produce at his level.
Sorry, but this sort of “the ones who make good movies will succeed” is like a casino owner who says those who make smart bets will win.
If he brought us Toy Story and X-Men, he should be the head of ToysRUs. Try to make a movie about human beings for a change. Dump these old “stars” (geezers) whose star-power fiction has you under a spell. Make stories about real people using real people, spread the news virally, and make your profit. Billions in income for a movie about toys should be shameful behavior in a sane world.
Thank God I did not have to pay to sit through this guy’s snooze-fest.
“make stories about real people using real people” –”hear! hear!” or “here! here!”/better yet: “hazzah!”
A lot of great insights here that are relevant for everyone in the business. Love the comment about financial analysts and lawyers having no idea what they’re doing. This applies to television and likely other creative endeavors too. Take NBC: They have a bunch of bureaucrats from different departments judging everything, not to mention with a GE mentality. They preside over meetings in New York like judges in court, yet almost none of then have done anything of note in television, ever. Yet Zucker and the rest of them continue to reign, and the network continues spiraling into oblivion.
Zucker is just there for the paycheck. Nothing else. What does he care what GE does? He doesn’t.
Roger, There were no “names” in Slumdog, or Frozen river.
Slumdog almost went straight to dvd, according to Danny Boyle. His brilliant directing made that movie what it was. That opens up a whole new can of worms though. Trying to get a great director attached is harder now than getting “names” because there are so few great directors. With Frozen River you’re right, great film with no “names” so it is possible. There are a lot of talented directors/writers out there, but most agencies will push directors with bigger quotes on you so they can make more money on the commission and a lot of new and exciting talent is often pushed aside. It’s sad, but I’ll continue to fight the good fight! Thanks for the reply.
Bill forgot to mention that Chernin brow beat him into bifricating the cost of Titanic with Paramount most of the way through production. That decision cost Fox a billion dollars of International BO. Chernin pushed Bill into a lot of bad decisions.
Great speech.
I love the part about the proverbial sheep going away. This town is simply populated by idiots, and by that I don’t mean stupid or less intelligent people as those who jump to conform.
One of my favorite things in this town is to listen to some “producer” — often one who makes inferior films, i.e., one that makes a Dane Cook film, etc — explain why a certain script/book wouldn’t work. It’s like listening to a homeless person give stock tips. Again, they’re not lacking intelligence. They simply do not understand the concept of creative thinking.
Imagine no bad films made. It’s easy if you try.
Amen, Mechanic!
Great speech. Bill is one of the few stand up guys in town. Always nice to me, when he never needed to be. Always returned my call, even when I was working out of a cubicle at a new company as a lowly executive.
RnsW
IIRC wasn’t Bill Mechanic one of the DivX villains back in the day?
Wonder how many billions in DVD sales he made by losing that battle?
Ironic that Pandemonium’s hugh money raise fell apart because Mechanic insisted on taking out an eight figure cash bonus as soon as the money was wired. He felt entitled to it based on his track record.
Good read. Thanks
+1 on festivals. Festivals, all the big/worthwhile ones at least, want big names attached to an indy now – that means a big name in it or a big name producing it. They’re about as interested in real independent film as Fox Searchlight is.
Mechanic is right. And the current level of aversion to risk is astounding. That makes little sense to producers whose careers exist on a high wire, or artists who take risks every time they create something, but the people saying ‘No’ want their investments guaranteed, 100%. It’s a banker’s mentality, or an accountant’s, and it’s leading us to a dull, homogenized film industry. Kind of embarrassing, isn’t it? I just hope there will be a backlash from the creative community and the producers with the balls to follow their instincts.
Mechanic wanted to pull the plug on Titanic many times why doesn’t he admit to that? He had zero faith in the film he thought it would be a disaster.
I think in everything I’ve ever heard from Bill Mechanic he has taken a moment to speak poorly of Murdoch/Chernin. It’s both odd and distracting.
He had some interesting things to say within this piece, but he was not particularly good at his job. Two of the movies he mentioned as being the reason he was shown the door were actually greenlit with Chernin at the helm.
Also that’s just a strange “joke” with which to kick off a speech.
I agree about the joke. Unsettling.
Great writing. Clear and easy to understand, with a point of view based on facts and experience.
Hopefully the people that matter will read it.
I was a beneficiary of Bill’s tenure at Fox. It was a great place to work back in the day.
What we are seeing here is the “capitaization” of Hollywood. The values of runaway capitalism that sank our economy are alive and well in the biz. An indy film is now a misnomer and within the studios, everything is run by fear.
And to solve these issues we need good bright people but Mechanics’ gallantly put legacy issues in terms of personnel are in the way. He means, I think, the persistent racism, sexism, nepotism and cronyism that rule the hiring practices in Hollywood. We have the idiots of idiots running this show and everyone holding on, waiting for some kind of saviour so they can continue to get paid for doing nothing.
All in all the kind of insightful piece you’d expect from Bill. Right up there with Katzenberg’s now prophetic memo from the 90’s.
that was a great speech. surprised not more people have commented… this was about the future of this industryafter all! but it certainly made me glad i got out of it in 2004 and am doing something else somewhere else now! good luck, it has been a rough year…
This is just a flat-out great speech. Very well argued and persuasive. I have one question for commenters or Bill, if he’s reading. What impact will the continuing push of Netflix streaming have on the business? Now that Netflix has to pay to license films (unlike with DVD, where First Sale doctrine enabled it to simply buy at wholesale and rent out), will that open up new doors for independent producers? Are they already in active discussions?
Do you mean will Netflix do more rental deals with indie product since they are getting lower margins on streaming the major product?
Well he really didn’t say much of anything, did he? The first 1/3 of the speech is basically an I-told-you-so/How-Great-am-I speech to his former employers, Fox and Disney. And like any executive would, he glosses over anyone else’s contributions to what made the successful films (such as X-Men and Ice Age) successful.
And what, exactly, was groundbreaking about Ice Age anyway?
The second 1/3 is essentially a regurgitation of what is wrong with the marketplace, but with little if any explanation of why things are going wrong. Sure, you can say price drops on dvd’s killed the value of the dvd in the consumer’s eyes, but weren’t we talking just a few years ago that the reason that dvd’s were selling so well vs. cd’s was because they gave consumers so much content for not much money? Sure, you can say indie films are just carbon copies of other content, and that’s why they fail, but isn’t Twilight just a knock-off of Buffy? Isn’t Never Back Down just a carbon copy of the Karate Kid, but with MMA instead of Karate? Clearly, copies often work.
And the final 1/3 is the typical “if you want it badly enough, if you’re smart enough, you will succeed” uplifting crescendo. Was this a commencement speech? Knock the JD/MBA number-crunchers all you want: they succeed often for a reason.
Bill’s comment are really on the mark. He gets it. Too bad there are so few of him in this town.
Highly interesting read because Mechanic is such a smart, extremely experienced guy, although the conclusion is a bit thin/self-evident: “movies that work” will continue to be financially successful, even in this climate.
It seems like the thing that links all his success stories is that the executives, try as they might, were not able to screw up Slumdog, District 9, Coraline, etc.
What most seem to be missing is that the entertainment distribution system will not be the same in five to ten years that it is now. If anyting more independent product will be out there. It will be distributed via the internet. Those with a burning desire to make a movie will do so and then post it on the internet rather than selling it to distributors. Movies that will be distributed by the multiplexes will be IMAX and 3D types the only reason why people will bother to leave there comfortable home to see a movie with J Q Public who’s on his/her cell phone next to you or hacking up phlegm.
Movie distribution today can look at what has happened to Record stores, Newspapers and Magazines. Nikki you of all people are well aware of this new model of distribution.
BTW these film festivals will serve no real purpose in the future except for those looking for an ego massage. The writings on the wall folks in this case the internet.
I want to work for him.
Roger, what about Frozen river or Slumdog, there were no “names” in those movies.
fear itself is quite fearsome.
Only guy to run a studio who also went to film school…and it shows.
If the town was run by a bunch of film school idiots no one would make money. It’s really that simple.
If only every exec in town had a clear and rational mind such as Bill Mechanic’s. Tough economic times indeed. And most of it could have been avoided, had studios tried to take some risks.
I’m of the mind that the first priority of any business is NOT to make money. It’s to make a loyal consumer. Money is the prize that comes with that. If you treat the consumer like a cog in the Matrix, it’s bound to eventually break free and try something new. No wonder film revenue is down.
If a studio treats the consumer like a dog in order to make money, it deserves to suffer financially. That’s one of the reasons I haven’t invested heavily on Blu-Ray, despite my passion for high def pictures and surround sound.
amazing insight. thanks for putting it up.
Most of this has been said by others, but no one has said it so well.
Mechanic is not very smart. “Entitlement” cannot be fought — piracy is a reality for the film industry as it is for the music industry. The only way to combat it is offering movies so cheap that no one quibbles buying it.
Price points of $20 are unsustainable. Particularly with really BAD entertainment, given that most of it is elitist self-regard and not actual entertainment worthy of people’s dollars.
Stuff will be available over the internet, for reasonable downloads (likely through Amazon) at affordable prices, or advertising supported streaming video.
If we only studios got guys like Bill Mechanic, Mark Gill, and anyone else with the balls of a Robert Evans and the savvy taste that comes with having attended a top film school, people who’ve actually attempted to make one of these celluloid beasts, not just brown-nose their way to and exec office with a view, well then, better films would be projected and more people of ALL demographics would be in attendance.. . oh, and the moron-movie-makers (ie “the studio”) would get to count MORE money…
Makes You Wonder, Huh?
Wait, seriously? Mark Gill? That has to be a joke, right?
Great speech by Bill Mechanic.
One thing that popped in my mind while I was reading it was that he could have given this speech to any number of industries and changed only a few things.
For Example, he touched on the auto industry which is failing because the industry is producing cars nobody wants.
Other examples:
* The movie industry is failing because they are producing movies that fail to find an audience, and is compounded by the fact that there is too much video in the pipeline and on the shelf. Only idiots are buying the blu-ray stuff. I will get back to the movie and TV industries a bit later in this post.
* The Toy Industry is failing because people aren’t getting what they want though LEGO is thriving because they know their audience. Don’t get me wrong, the industry is doing ok, but it is because of new kids entering the world everyday. For the most part, a lot the older companies are producing is crap, and then they slap branding on it hoping it would sell.
* NASCAR is failing because people want to see passing and racing, not pacing and parades under green.
* The postal service is failing because they raise stamp and shipping prices.
* The comic book industry is failing because of rising prices.
* The NHL is failing because the product is stretched too thin in the United States.
I could go on and on, but the meat and potatoes of the speech is that if you don’t produce a good product you will die, and that is the exact problem with the movie and television industries. If the moguls continue down the current path, there will be takeovers and buyouts, but there will also be new companies springing up and they will likely succeed because they will give people what they want.
Sorry to be negative here, but this guy comes off as just another bitter fired studio executive whose tale is nothing more than “my choices were better than the new guys.” He wants to crow about ICE AGE? That 2002 film was just FOX trying to get into Pixar’s business. Not bad but hardly the product of a “visionary” studio head. He wants to claim credit for TITANIC? Please! And that intro story about the heart surgeon losing a patient then comparing it to indie production. Fuck off.
I’m no insider, so don’t put stock in this, but this guy sounds spot-on, and what he says sounds remarkably similar to David Simon’s criticisms on the journalism industry. At the same time, I don’t know how you stay on top. In almost any industry, massive companies become more risk averse over time, not less. That’s just natural if not unavoidable. Media companies have been struggling with these problems a little longer, and we’ve still seen no major changes from them. Perhaps this is the beginning of a long and slow death march that will end with smaller, more interesting companies picking up the baton somewhere in the future. And then it’ll start over again.
What self-serving nonsense. The movies he lists — Slumdog, Coraline (which he has a credit on)– paled in profits to the big tentpole movies. We may like those more, but to call those a successful business model? Well, I see why he hasn’t been able to get anything made since he left the house of Rupert.
Slumdog cost 15 mil and made like 450 mil worldwide. Thats relative profit tent-poles can’t claim.
Terrific points being made here! One other thing I might mention – the social networks out there (including this one with its posted comments from the peanut gallery) have helped consumers immensely in making better choices in their consuming; i.e. avoiding slick marketing gimmicks, and knowing first-hand from a friend if a movie sucks or not, so that now, even opening big isn’t guaranteed.
And the bottom line shouldn’t be what the stock holders want – the bottom line should be an excellent product — that ENTERTAINS! Damn, it is the entertainment business afterall. Sadly, Hollywood has failed entertaining us. Entertain us well, and we’ll pay you!!
One doesn’t choose a heart surgeon because that heart surgeon has a glitzy P.R. person who can spin a good advertisement campaign — one would only go to a heart surgeon with excellent credentials, a proven track record and patients that were alive after surgery and hearing about it first-hand is usually the best advertising.
I mean it’s a life you’ve got in your hands – in this case the life of many Hollywood industry types who desperately need some better leaders with true vision and GUTS, damn where’s Cagney & Bogey when you need them!!
Awesome! A clear headed a statement EVERYONE IN THE INDUSTRY SHOULD READ!
It’s the product stupids. If you don’t know what you’re selling then in all likelihood you will fail. Period. Again the problem stems not only from a lack of cojones, but the people in charge don’t care about the products they are pushing. Yeah I’m looking at you Tom Rothman…scumbag!
Man, I see in fight club the strongest and smartest men who’ve ever lived. I see all this potential, and I see squandering. God damn it, an entire generation pumping gas, waiting tables; slaves with white collars. Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy shit we don’t need. We’re the middle children of history, man. No purpose or place. We have no Great War. No Great Depression. Our Great War’s a spiritual war… our Great Depression is our lives. We’ve all been raised on television to believe that one day we’d all be millionaires, and movie gods, and rock stars. But we won’t. And we’re slowly learning that fact. And we’re very, very pissed off.
In Bill Mechanic we trust. Brilliant address man, brilliant.
Sorry to be negative here, but this guy comes off as just another bitter fired studio executive whose tale is nothing more than “my choices were better than the new guys.” He wants to crow about ICE AGE? That 2002 film was just FOX trying to get into Pixar’s business. Not bad but hardly the product of a “visionary” studio head.
===============================
FROM BOXOFFICE MOJO
On the foreign front, Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs has officially become the third highest-grossing movie of all time. The animated comedy edged out Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone to rank behind Titanic and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King. Worldwide (which combines both foreign and domestic grosses), it currently stands at No. 18 on the all time chart, just shy of Finding Nemo, which it will soon surpass.
The third Ice Age has made over $667 million thus far, accounting for a whopping 77 percent of its $862 million worldwide total. That’s the greatest foreign ratio for an American blockbuster on record, exceeding such foreign favorites as the Harry Potter and The Da Vinci Code movies.
What a great take on the present situation. Can’t you get some of those GM or bank billions and get some great American movies made again. They must be a great export earner.
I love all the “write a great script” suggestions. Ha! Since when did that have anything to do with grosses and/or profits?
The truth is that the film business is following in the exact same footsteps as the music industry. When everyone said it would take decades because of the “file size” of a movie versus a song, they were wrong. It’s happened already. In two years, not in 15.
And what happened to the music industry was that it became a tour industry and a download industry.
The film industry will be a theme park business (i.e. Michael Bay you should do fine) and a download industry (i.e. all other movies will have 75% chopped out of their budgets).
The DVD business is done. Put a fork in it. No one is going to buy a DVD when they can download at will or know that they will soon be able to. You can do that now illegally. When the movie business reduces the cost of downloading below the moral/fear of litigation cost of stealing, it will make some money off of downloading too. But it will be a pittance of what it is making now.
If you are over 30 and/or have a mortgage and a car payment, like to make “good” movies, and don’t have $10M in the bank, you should move movie making to the hobby column and get a real job while you can.
I suggest getting certified as a vibrating theater seat installer.
He makes some good points. Yes, there are way too many pictures out there – BAD ones. Who wants to go & see these? Only the executive in charge of production, maybe? Or the development exec? Who is picking the stuff we see today? They’re paying too much attention to the National Enquirer and TMZ and can’t connect to real audiences out there. And yet we see success stories that still happen: Little Miss Sunshine, Slum Dog, Juno, District 9. Any magic recipes for these successes? No, just good casts – not celebrity-driven, and a good, solid story. This is the formula that made Hollywood and it would work again if only people in “the business” would remember.
right on the money, mb2009! I thought the exact same things reading this post. I’m surprised more people didn’t get that same feeling. So arrogant. He’s not as enlightened as he thinks.
Wow!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Someone in Hollywood who can not just talk about their feelings, but this Mechanic guy: he actually can think, have thoughts! Amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I can see now why the brain-dead pushed him out.
Went something like…..
“Oh, yes this Mechanic guy. He can think.”
“He wa?”
“He sent this note. It was full of thoughts.”
“Why?”
“Made me feel strange too. Trying to read it.”
“……”
“Thoughts. He can produce them.”
“But what does he feel about it.”
“I don’t know.”
“What are thoughts?”
“I feel…difficulty…when trying to create them.”
“Me too when trying to understand them.”
“Hmm.”
“Hmm.”
What film seems out of place? Twilight, District 9, Slumdog Millionaire, Coraline.
I know I saw three of them.
So he had some successes at the studio. He takes credit for a few things. Fine. Wasn’t that his JOB to attempt to make interesting product in a competitive marketplace? Wasn’t he compensated well to do just that? He’s touting himself because he didn’t ONLY churn out a bunch of hack crap?
And was Fight Club and a few other bold choices really the reason he was forced out? Seems odd. Not that I know.
I also find it odd that he suggests that everyone who can should make another Titanic. Who really knew that Titanic would be the success that it is? Did he? If so, then why did James Cameron have to give up much if not all of his salary and point participation? Or perhaps Mr. Cameron volunteered to give it up, I can’t recall. In any case, I believe James Cameron was given something like eighty million dollars by the studio, as a “gift”, as the right thing to do, after the film was such a huge success. Didn’t everyone think Titanic was going to be a collossal disaster at the time? So how is that to be duplicated?
What interesing films has Mr. Mechanic participated in making, since leaving his studio post where he was such a “maverick?” He doesn’t mention anything, does he?
Thanks. I appreciate your insights.
Good point JayV. He didn’t MAKE ANY.
Again, we have to endure a “bubble speech”, through the blog, for someone who doesn’t have any alternative plan to offer, or to reveal, other than the usual BS “hire-me-to-save-you”…
He takes credit for films other people created…(like evrerybody in Hollywood does from the cleaning lady to the security guy to the SAnta Monica masseuse)…
Uhm, didn’t Mark Gill say pretty much all of this eighteen months ago…and haven’t lots of other people been saying this for the last two years? What’s new here?
This guy is a jerkoff, buffoon and a moron, I learned this from my brother long ago who was a VP for an oil guy worth 20 billion
“long drawn out speeches bore the troops and they will lose respect for you”
“keep them short and to the point or you could have a mutiny and lose face”
“Bob mechanic” should have done just that, lets see if he can now even get one decent film made in the next year, I think he just sank his own ship with this speech,
end of story
Former Fox employee through much of Bill’s tenure. Smart, great executive, with excellent taste. And such a nice dude—he sent every single employee on the lot a birthday note with a personalized paragraph. No joke.
Bill Mechanic is a genius. He knows more about the industry than so many big studio execs. He also really CARES about movies. He has a passion for good movies – not budgets and making money. Or putting stars in movies. He wants to make good work! Such an inspiration for telling it like it is and having the gusto to tell it like it is.
He forgot to mention than millions of people like me no longer go to the movies, because we don’t want to give a dime to the anti-American trash that populates the movie industry.
the speech was mostly self-serving. don’t you wonder what peter chernin or rupert murdoch have to say about the “facts” presented in the speech. don’t you wonder why he isn’t running a studio now? there is no conspiracy to keep creative people out of those positions. the only conspiracy is to make money.
To French:
“Over the last six months, Mechanic has shelled out his own coin in acquiring scripts and other material for Pandemonium. The former now has about 25 projects in development (Daily Variety, Oct. 8), with two pics set to begin pre-production in early 2002.”
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117857060.html?categoryid=1043&cs=1&query=Bill+Mechanic
“So no one asked what impact dropping the price on their existing DVD’s would have. I mean if I can buy TITANIC for under $5 in some stores, why am I so eager then to rush out to pay $30 or so when it’s released on Blu Ray? Is the quality difference that great? How many formats are yet to come?”
_Thank_ you. If people are sick to death of upgrading every time Microsoft twitches, why on earth would Hollywood think folks are willing to essentially throw out comparitively recently-bought DVD players and DVDs just to upgrade to Blu-Ray? Glad to see I’m not the only one who thought the insane hype on this made no sense.
“It also seems the best movies appear when studios are at their worst, economically. “EASY RIDERS AND RAGING BULLS” and of course, Evans’ “KID STAYS IN THE PICTURE” make the collapsing backlots sound like a wonderland of creativity and opportunity. We’re almost in a worse position today, so I can’t wait to see what results from the current chaos.”
Agreed–it’s going to take that kind of wipe-the-slate clean action because the current system is proving not only unsustainable, but critically unworkable.
pacRim Jim, please come back to reality. It’s not millions, it’s about 20 people who don’t go to the movies because of their irrational hatred of Hollywood, most of the people who don’t go to the movies don’t go because they don’t have the money to spare. There are maybe a grand total of 3 relevant actors who you could make an argument are anti-american. The rest love america, no voting for Obama doesn’t make you anti american. Perhaps you don’t realise how much the rest of the world hates us. Simply speaking speaking your mind doesn’t make you anti american either.
Oh and Pacrim Jim, if you hate Hollywood so much why are you on a site based entirely on Hollywood ongoings ?
By the way try to remember that the movie industry pumps billions into the economy and creates millions of jobs, be thankful.
If you want to really know about Mechanic’s tenure at Fox, read Art Linson’s book “What Just Happened?” No, not the movie, the book, where Art named NAMES. He had a great story about running into Mechanic on the Fox lot after the studio chief had just watched a cut of FIGHT CLUB and was in a full freak out, cursing the day he ever greenlit the film or trusted Fincher. But now, he takes credit for it. What chutzpah.
If you want evidence of what great taste Bill Mechanic has and what an effective indie exec he is, go to Imdb.com or some other film web site and look up how many successful films Pandemonium has made during his tenure (other than CORALINE, of course.)
So any chance Iger will give him the keys to the Disney studios?
Great speech. Lots of truth. Too bad Bill Mechanic has brought in some of the worst pitches I’ve ever heard. Different doesn’t necessarily mean it’s good
I work in scripted TV. Have never worked in film, have heard of Bill Mechanic but know very little about him. But so much of what he says rings true in television as well. People are afraid of their own shadows, things that are good rarely get made, studio and network intervention consistently ruin product — and that’s assuming you can get anything past the idiotic gatekeepers who run things in the first place. To the guy above who posted and put it all on the writers: I understand the sentiment, but you’ve missed the mark. You’re presuming the shit that gets made (that you are criticizing) is the only stuff that is written in the first place. You couldn’t be more wrong. You could have the most genius, smart, castable, commercial, intelligent script in the world, but it’s only ever going to see the light of day if someone is smart enough to make it. I see it happen in TV constantly. And the meddling! Jesus Christ! My favorite are network notes. “Bla bla ba, you need to do this and that… trust me!” Trust you???? Seriously? You work for fucking NBC!! What, exactly, am I putting my trust in? Your ability to supersize Will & Grace? Your laugh riot comedy development team? Those scintillating dramas you’ve been programming? Yes, there are a lot of overpaid, hacky writers out there. Way too many. Talentless nebbishes whose only skill was knowing how to be politic in a writers room (and take credit for others’ work). But there are just as many talentless execs out there — gutless, stupid, beaten down, political animals who have no taste of their own, and arrogant upstarts who have no fucking clue what they’re even talking about half the time, other than parroting tired old cliches and “work lingo” they’ve picked up from their bosses. And every once in a while there is someone who is smart enough to see something good and ballsy enough to have an opinion and push it through. But those people are few and far between. The same types of people who pick movies are also picking TV shows, and people are turning off their sets in droves. Even I can’t watch it anymore.
I don’t know the man from Adam but I am impressed with his evaluation and his integrity to own it openly. To desire a flawless personality before credit can be extended to a rational argument is to hide behind one’s own fear to represent an opinion. I find it most revealing the number of critic’s that choose to remain anonymous. What is the fear; Studio Security wisking you away in the dead of night?
If you mean what you say, stand by it. It’s better to be absolutely wrong than vaguely correct. An absolute wrong can be addressed. A timid truth will fade into the ether.
Michael N.J. Wright
Chicago
First Mark Gill now Bill Mechanic.
You don’t see Lawrence Bender complaining about the state of independent film.
Of course, he’s not trying to felch seven-figure producing fees out of seven-figure movies and claiming ‘independent film is dead’ when he can’t.
There are simply more producers making more content than ever and the archaic power structure is changing so that you have to make better content for less and these old farts are sitting there, asleep at the wheel of gas guzzling ideals held over from the ’80’s.
Sorry fellas. It’s our turn and me? I’m doin’ just fine.
Also. Nice try Bill. But you’re not a GENIUS as you try to anonymously declare above me.
Having worked for Bill at Disney, he’s a no bullshit kinda guy. It takes a strong man to stand up and speak the truth and I think he could be right. All he ever wanted to do was make good movies and unfortunately got caught up in the politics of the studios and he hated it. Through it all he remained and still is a good guy.
I would assume at least 2 of the Majors to be sold or consolidated by the middle of the decade.”
As an attorney who wants in as a screenwriter I disagree. Attorneys can think out the box. As for financial analysts well, I’m sure the bean counters at MGM have broken their calculators trying to save that Lion. Red Dawn may never be released. I predict bankruptcy by Jan 1 over the holidays as the debt is wrote off in 2010 to save the other parts of MGM.
As for Detroit, well we are revving up for the three new studios, the five week shoots with Jennifer C and Red Dawn wrapping up its shoot. When I ate lunch in the basement of GM’s bldg the other day, they like the studios have that arrogant swagger after going through bankruptcy thinking they are indestructible, you would think they would be laying low.
But Detroit is trying to change the studios don’t want to change their model of destruction.
As for the majors well they are owned by conglomerates and will be down to three by 2011 at this rate.
The studios, agents and production companies are locked into this game of we work with our friends and others from the beginning of the process in pitching, accepting scripts, renting equipment and crews.
Without new blood, new processes and a new way of acquiring material I see only three sub corps Fox, Disney and Universal remaining in this old game. CHANGE IS GOOD. Extract was good it made $10,707,897, a slight profit. Is a two million dollar profit good for independent film. Will their be an Extract 2. I doubt it.
So perhaps copies are good if they generate more profit for the film industry, which might lead to more studio films like their Will be Blood and the Dark Knight.
Having read BM’s speech and the various comments on here, I thought I’d better say my 2 cents worth. I’m not gonna spend time phrasing this into a masterful piece of prose but instead I’ll fire off a series of bullet points that I hope the discerning reader will understand.
1. entertainment is not synonymous with creativity/originality – one can be entertained by generic but well made genre fare. Example: most teen comedies. Not every “successful” movie need be original but an original AND entertaining movie takes you to the next level.
2. this is the movie BUSINESS – films have to make money. If artists want to show of their creative freedom then better to do it at a low risk/low budget level or in another medium that doesn’t require millions of dollars and where there is less at stake (other people’s money, jobs etc).
3. studios are corporations – corporations have hierarchies – hierachies breed politics. When you add the subjective nature of picking movies for production based on a series of unknowns where so many variables can derail even the most promising of projects, you have the perfect recipe for mis-management through fear and risk-aversion. In many ways, you have to give some of the studios some credit that they actually take any risks at all and manage to make the meagre profits they do.
4. Studios are slow moving beasts. Most of the visionary leaders who relished the looser, faster moving environments of yesteryear have moved on to pastures new e.g. Diller into TV at the time then new media. Those left in power are clinging on for dear life, hoping that they roll the dice, get lucky and stay on top of what is a relatively comfortable existence of over-indulgence and inflated self-worth. As history has shown, most execs ave been dragged kicking and screaming into embracing new technologies that have ultimately grown their businesses exponentially e.g. the invention of sound/color, cable TV, DVD etc The well known prejudices of nepotism and sexism within the industry only exacerbate the problem.
5. the old studio model rewarded risk taking directly without too much downside risk – studio-produced features have seen severe budget inflation over the last 15 years, to the point that an adult skewing drama with limited appeal to anyone under 30 can cost $90m just to produce. Additionally, gone are the days where a studio production head could get a 10% profit participation in the moves he worked on like Katzenberg did in his Disney days. Hollywood accounting has had the same effect for all but a handful of independent producers. The incentive for the individual to take risks has diminished.
6. a chronic disconnect between consumer demand and supply(producton)- simply put, studios, indie producers and creators don’t listen to their customers enough. Furthermore, they often overspend in relation to their potential audience. In any other industry, listening and gaining feedback through your value chain is a worthwhile and very crucial part of the business (youth TV stations such as Disney Kids or MTV spend fortunes on their own proprietary market research e.g. focus groups) – conversely movie studios often view testing and research as post release affimation of hunches or at best as a steer for their marketing strategies. I think its rare for green light committees at studios to really give much credence to the thoughts/feedback from their distribution divisons or research parts of their business i.e. the parts that are closest to the end consumer. I’m not saying that films be created by committee but there should be a balance and perhaps even some sort of feedback loop.
6. a plethora of consumer choice – in a media saturated world where everybody suffers from A.D.D., how can a studio justify spending $50m marketing an unbranded film with no built in awareness. Market forces dictate that each major film needs to stand out from the crowd, and if you can’t guarantee the quality of your project from the outset (no matter how good the talent you attach) then your best bet is to go for a proven brand/ genre/ intellectual property.
While the list above is by no means exhaustive, it serves to illustrate an important point – namely that a series of long gestating factors have led us to this point in time where the studio system is churning out generic product at relatively low risk to ultimately please an ever demanding Wall St and an impatient, option-rich, mass market consumer. Market forces have led true content creation and originality to move to lower risk fields such as books, music, video games (although this is rapidly going the way of movies) and most promising of all, internet produced and distributed content.
From the low water mark of 1990, there has been a 50% increase in the number of pictures and even since 2000, nearly a 25% increase. And most of the influx came from non-Majors, rising from 150 in 1990 to 450 in 2008. That, my friends, is insanity.
This is a big problem. People love to make movies. And when there are too many of them, people either can’t get out to see one in the 3 weeks its in theatres, or they just plain get confused. This makes marketing so expensive as well, it is too difficult to break through the clutter. Theatrical releases have largely become loss leaders for ancillary income. The release is the marketing campaign. I don’t see how you can reduce marketing costs with so much media outlets to support, the place to cut costs is fewer films in the marketplace, more digital distribution and above the line talent, which is over priced since stars aren’t putting folks in the seats like they used to.
Very well said.
Amazing that this passes for “clear headed analysis” in your world. Mechanic may well be a nice guy, but this speech is basically:
1. I was an unappreciated genius
2. To make great movies make great movies
3. Everyone else is a moron.