raidermatt
Be water, my friend.
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2000
- Messages
- 6,856
I honestly have no idea if that "rumor" was true or not, but the fact that the film succeeded is not proof that the rumor was not true. Its possible the rumor was false, its possible the strategy changed at some point, and its possible the rumor was true, and the film overcame.I remember prior to the films release certain posters claiming that Disney was trying to intentional sink Nemo in order to put themselves in a better position to bargain with Pixar. Sure looked like that happened....
Certainly I have no inside information, but there are are other major distributors who could handle this... If Fox can successfully distribute and market Ice Age and Star Wars, certainly they and others could handle Pixar.I'm not sure who is in the financial shape to take them on.
That's roughly my only somewhat educated understanding of the current deal.Are you all saying that right now, the deal is Pixar and Disney split the production costs 50/50, Disney funds the distribution, and they split the profit 50/50; and that the scenario that would be like Lucas has with Fox that would be most advantageous to Pixar is that Pixar pay all the production costs, Disney takes care of the distrubtion, and Disney gets only 10% of the profit?
As for what would be most advantagous to Pixar, there's a lot of variables. Certainly one is to simply assume more of the up front costs and keep more of the revenue. This of course would be advantagous to Pixar as long as their films were successful. Failures would hurt them more than the current deal would.
But other possibilities include Pixar retaining ownership rights, and then licensing the use of the movies/characters back to Disney (or someone else) for a fee.
But again, no matter what happens, Disney is going to see a negative move from the current situation. The only real questions are how much of a move and how it manifests itself.
My personal opinion is that they will do another deal because I still think that as long as both are willing partners, its a mutually beneficial relationship. Its just that Pixar has more options than Disney does, so Disney needs to be careful about "playing hardball" in this.