The alien apartheid film likely to snag one of the newly expanded 10 Best Picture Oscar nominations did it in worldwide box office this weekend -- $115M domestic and $85M international so far (with China and Japan to come). And, remember, this indie prod's negative cost was only $30M. By the way, not only does QED Intl have dibs on the franchise, but Sony has first opportunity to lock down the sequel for their territories. Which is why Sony is pushing for a District 9 sequel since the studio is lacking in fresh franchises. But those close to producer Peter Jackson and director Neill Blomkamp say only it may happen "at some point" when the duo "figure out what the story is and organize their respective schedules". (Peter is booked, and Neil is very much in demand now.)
Besides producer Peter Jackson and director Neill Blomkamp, the biggest beneficiary has been Bill Block's QED Intl which was given first shot to finance foreign pre-sales. Block had to commit to fully financing the movie even before the American Film Market got underway. What a risk -- because there was no star, no budget, no script. Only Peter Jackson's name, which meant a lot in the marketplace. That enabled Block to organize the funding from Comerica back in 2007, well before the financial crsis. "I wonder if in the current climate those institutions wuld have stepped up," one of my insiders questioned. "On the other hand, every time something like this happens, it makes indieprods more attractive to institutional financiers."
Sony's Peter Schlessel acquired the pic from QED at AFM for domestic, UK, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Russia, Italy, Latin America, Korea, Hong Kong, China, and some other territories. Sony paid a $25M advance so the studio shares in the film's profits. Also involved is Metropolitan Films, which has France. MGM acquired Spain, Germany, Benelux and Japan. But distributing for MGM is Sony in Spain, Germany and Benelux, and Warners for MGM in Japan. All the backend is shared with the partnership of QED, Jackson and Blomkamp. "The good news is everybody in this wins," an insider tells me. "It's just one of these great stories where the movie came out of nowhere and has performed globally."
The secret of the indie's success, like Paranormal Activity, was that it was made outside the studio system and marketed outside the studio formula. The edgy and original content, the South African cast instead of Will or Adam or Brad, were thought to be integral aspects which the majors would have rejected during their own development process. "Audiences are driving the agenda and deciding for themselves what they want to see through Twitter and social networking sites," one insider explained to me. When District 9 was screened at Comicon, American Idol's Jordan Sparks alerted 220,000 followers how good the pic was. That's when the pic exploded in popularity. By the time it opened on a Friday, it was the #1 most tweeted topic. That followed the studio's viral marketing campaign which for a year bore no Sony/Tri-Star logo on purpose so the pic wouldn't have a big studio's PR machine feel to it. (Thus, making audiences feel like they had organically discovered it.)
Meanwhile, here's how the pic went down: Neill Blomkamp was supposed to be Peter Jackson's helmer on Halo, which went down in flames. But Peter and his partner Fran Walsh kept Neill in New Zealand to develop his short film, Alive In Joburg. Jackson then turned it into a hard-cover faux graphic novel. That book went to Peter's longtime manager Ken Kamins to arrange financing and set it up as a film. Ken made the decision to go indie, and hooked up with his former colleague Bill Block. That November 2007 at AFM, other studios kicked the tires but didn't buy. Finally Sony picked up the domestic through Tri-Star.


I love when a fresh and young talent comes to scene and shows the old farts how to do it.
Neill deserves every recognition.
“The alien apartheid film likely to snag one of the newly expanded 10 Best Picture Oscar nominations”
Nikki I’m gonna have to question this. “Likely” seems too good of an odds on Dist. 9. Possible, there’s a chance, in the running but not necessarily likely.
As an Oscar buff I can see it getting nominated and by the end of the year it could be one of the 5 best reviewed films of 09.
But for a likely Best Picture nomination we’re talking: Precious, The Hurt Locker, Up in the Air, maybe Nine and Lovely Bones.
Dist. 9 is definitely in the wild card area along with the yet to be released Avatar, Inglourious Basterds, etc.
It wasn’t an Apartheid film!!!! It had nothing to do with Apartheid!!!
They were kept in Concentration Camps and that has NOTHING to di with Apartheid!!!
Uh, dear, look up the definition of apartheid.
Arguing that a concentration camp scenario is somehow more appropriate to the plot than apartheid is just plain silly.
I’m well aware of the definition. The aliens in the movie were not segregated. they had no freedom of movement, policy, politics, life. They were kept locked up in a camp.
The aliens were segregated. They were not allowed to use human facilities. They were expected to stay in their camp.
That said, it seems to me that a District 9 sequel would very well have to examine what would be happening to the aliens in their new District 10 camp. One has the chilling feeling that the next “logical” step in human-alien relations would be a “Final Solution.”
PS, anyone who thinks this is about Israel is nuts. It’s clearly about modern day South Africa, the filmmaker is South African. And if there was a “Final Solution” depicted in a sequel, surely it would resonate more with the Rwandan genocide (virtually next door to South Africa!) than anything to do with Jews.
Excellent, stirring film with a strong apartheid message. I am looking forward to the sequel!
Good for Bill Block and QED. “District 9″ was the perfect revenge for him getting royally fucked in the ass by Relativity Media on “A Perfect Getaway”
Let’s not give Jordin Sparks that much credit, ok.
I get the sense (just judging by offhand comments from insiders on the film) that Blomkamp et al wrote themselves into a wee bit of a corner with District 9’s final scene… I hear some backtracking about what the last scene means. If they’re going to have a second movie with Sharlto Copley in it, they’d better convince viewers they didn’t see what they saw…
Dah, they didn’t write themselves in a corner. They wrote themselves an out to a sequel. You probably didn’t watch the film or paid attention to the last 30 minutes of it.
Best movie of the year, hands down. The smartest, most original, and most courageously relevant to current events shaping our world–a brave new branch in a long tradition of cutting-edge prophetic social critique Trojan Horsed into popular science fiction.
And we’re not talking about South Africa.
Looking at you, Bibi.
Film Biz 101
Corporations don’t make movies, people make movies.
Class dismissed.
Amen.
Somebody should run a competition for imagining just how bad this excellent movie would have been if it had been made in the studio system… as you say Will Smith in the lead role, some cute kid wondering what happened to his daddy, the Nigerians replaced by white supremacists…
All this and four times the budget for 1/2 the gross.
Can a movie with that many F-bombs really get nominated for Best Picture?
Pulp Fiction was nominated. So was Goodfellas. So why not?
Congratulations Neill. When I first saw “Alive in Joburg” in 2005 I was excited for this guy. I forwarded the link to that flick to everyone I knew with mixed reviews. I then looked at all his commercial ideas. First one to do lots of handheld compositing. Tetra Vaal is brilliant and also has dark overtones for our future robocop society. He deserves what he gets now based on TALENT and GOOD STORYTELLING. He also understands the technology and how to use the digital toolset. Glad that Peter Jackson saw this also. He gave him the clout to pull it off with the financing end.
The sequel will be easy. Don’t forget his alien buddy said it would take 3 years to get to his planet and come back in order to operate on Mr. Copley’s character and reverse the process…..just the right amount of time to get the sequel greenlit, developed and produced ; )
This film left me emotionally destroyed. My stomach lurched many times, not at the gore, but the emotionally charged scenes. I’m not sure if I can see it again, but everyone should see it once
jk but i was very dissapointed with the camera in this film other than that it was a decent movie.
Great film ,Political and Social situations very believable .Aliens arriving around 1982 to an already charged South africa where Apartheid exist,white minority rule the majority ,exploitation of the native’s labour, and where their basic human rights were denied.Also, the Nigerians eating body, parts for Mystical powers is happenning in Tanzania, albinos are mutilated and at times killed because the witch doctor says they have Mystical powers that can be transferred thru potions made with their body parts.
The main heading at the top of this article says “District 9 Crosses $200M” Try using the word Grosses and it will make sense!