If only 1 out of 10 movies actually turn a profit, that means that that one movie has to support the production and distribution of the other nine + profit, correct?
The old saying around town is that once you begin to see how Hollywood works, you no longer how ask how the studios can turn out so many bad money losing movies. Instead the question becomes how do any good movies get made at all.
Yes, that's still about right. Thanks to home video the "one in ten" hit makes a lot more money than "hits" in the past used to, but the overall increase in costs have offset all those new found revenue streams. Occansionally you see where someone has written that "new media" has made it so that no movie every looses money. That's pretty much a lie, designed to increase shareprices and sell studio junk bonds. No one disprove it thanks to Hollywood accounting, so no one fears being caught. Besides, so many people along the way
do make money that, on the surface, it seems plausable.
Hollywood accounting is...is anyone familiar with the works of H.P. Lovecraft? The characters in his horror stories, the more they learn of ancient lore the more they are driven insane for sheer evil of what they know.
Movies are a unique business in that they rely exclusively on the talents of individuals to create a sellable product. People go to see "a Tom Cruise movie"; no one goes out to buy a "tire engineered by Herman Nurcle, occupant of cube 118836 in some glass tower in Detroit". A corporation makes and sells the products and, for the most part, the people of the corporation are the most replaceable parts of the operation. The corporation has all the power.
But Hollywood knows that stars - actors, directors, producers - drive the entire industry. You can't 'engineer' a profitable movie like you can engineer a refrigerator or other consumer product. Movie making is an art form that requires the work of artists to create (or at least to make a semi-okay movie). People in town know that. And they sell their talent for the highest price possible.
The entire money chain is designed to funnel money to
people instead of to corporations. The guilds have a large part in this as well. So the studios developed elaborate schemes to hide the money. These schemes have been found out so that more money would flow to individuals, creating new and more complex schemes...it's an arms race.
Worse, the corporations themselves are in on the act. Remember Jeffrey Katzenberg's clause that let him, personally, collect money from all the movies he oversaw while he was working for Disney. All that money came out of the corporate ledgers and into his private bank account.
On a movie like
Pirates of the Caribbean, deals are written so that individuals involved take a percentage cut of everything the movie brings in. Jerry Bruckheimer gets a Big %, Johnny Depp gets another Big %, the director gets a % and so on and so on down the line that the studios can be left with a fraction of the box office take. Studios take those small cuts because 20% of
The Dark Knight's cut is still a lot of money.
It's an insane business - one of the reasons why the town has always been awash in scams and trickery. It's not a stable enough business to base a large corporation on and there are lots of shareholders who are going to discover that very shortly.