zombie wrote:Foo wrote:zombie wrote:Foo wrote:Don't believe the published budgets for some of those movies. I suspect Deadpool was indeed a budget friendly movie, but the production budget is very deceptive and I highly doubt the $58m number.
And no, I am not interested in saving multi-billion dollar businesses that do nothing but exploit people. I would rather give ten dollars to a bum than go to a theater.
if you include advertising and such, the budget is really more than the "production" budget. but maybe that's even a lie too. i don't know.
there is nothing intrinsic in a movie theater that is exploitive. it's all about the management in charge.
Published budgets are never accurate. Just a bunch of bullshit. If Ryan Reynolds makes $30m on the back end, but the line item on the budget is only $2 million, that is just an example. If the initial budget that gets published does not include $20m in additional shooting is another. Advertising, increased post-production expenses, etc.
There is also accounting across multiple films that make it difficult to assess. We don't know how things get bundled. Some services get bundled, plus talent often has multi-film contracts that can be deceptive. Let's say you give a relative unknown a lead part in a big movie. It almost always comes with the catch that they are gonna make you a star but also control you for a couple films. If they are paying you $250k for this one and $2m for the next one, and $5m for the next one, that can be manipulated.
isn't back end something based on a percent of the movie's success? or merchandise success if it's something with a toyline or clothing line or whatever. that's different than the production budget. but i'm not disagreeing that it's manipulated to look less expensive than it is.
Yeah, it can be based on a variety of numbers. Think of it like this though, at some point, you become aware of that rough number and it counts just the same as a pre-production number. There is also the issue of how difficult something is to obtain. If Ryan Reynolds is being paid a percentage of the gross from the first dollar and they know a likely range in which a movie will perform, they can use that as part of the estimated production budget if they want. Or they can leave it out.
When they made Superman Returns, do you believe they spent that much money on it? Hardly any money spent on cast. Filmed outside of the US. Are they counting the ten times the movie went into pre-production, paying writers, directors, producers, and cast over and over?
Or when they knew Jack Nicholson was gonna make tons more for playing the Joker in Batman, it would be disingenuous to claim the low production budget that has floated out there for years.
And to be fair, this is not the studio, this is industry "news" sources taking tidbits of information and running with it.