So bad ''Letterbox'' - Rotten Tomatoes Gatekeeper attitude, where they decide what worth or not, are you not angry about it ? see each film the same ''empty meaning'' , Toughts ?
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While it's much easier to make a movie today than it was 40 years ago it seems it's
even harder to get people to see it and even harder to get people to pay to see it.
In the '80's I was working on 4 to 6 movies a year that were getting a theatrical
release - budgeted in the $250,000 to $800,000 range. Most would make a profit.
At the same time working on another 3 to 6 movies a year made in the $2,000,000
to $7,000,000 range and getting paid good money.
In the '90's I was making 3 to 5 DTV movies a year - average budget; $30,000. They
would all make money because of video stores that needed content on their shelves.
I could make a movie today for $10,000 (far less if I used AI) but I don't know how to
get people to pay to see it. I would be making a couple of movies a year if I could
answer that question.
So how do we...
...tear down THAT wall?
This is related to the Adpocalypse.While it's much easier to make a movie today than it was 40 years ago it seems it's
even harder to get people to see it and even harder to get people to pay to see it.
In the '80's I was working on 4 to 6 movies a year that were getting a theatrical
release - budgeted in the $250,000 to $800,000 range. Most would make a profit.
At the same time working on another 3 to 6 movies a year made in the $2,000,000
to $7,000,000 range and getting paid good money.
In the '90's I was making 3 to 5 DTV movies a year - average budget; $30,000. They
would all make money because of video stores that needed content on their shelves.
I could make a movie today for $10,000 (far less if I used AI) but I don't know how to
get people to pay to see it. I would be making a couple of movies a year if I could
answer that question.
So how do we...
...tear down THAT wall?
This is the real answer nobody wants to believe. It's absolutely true. People always look at me in horror when I tell them. The day you win isn't the day the company succeeds, or when your product launches, not anymore. In the Silicon Valley Tech boom, you won the day you got the investment. Whether you succeed or fail after that, you will never be as rich, or as happy, as the day that light turns green and you stomp your foot on the gas pedal.That was an interesting read.
It seems these days, it's more about getting netflix or hulu to pay for your film instead of getting viewers to pay for it.
Exactly. I recognized this as soon as I finished my first short film.I keep mentioning, to no avail, a pattern I've long recognized. In all my case studies, all the winners got paid BEFORE they did the work, not after.
The garage band culture I grew up in had people in the community joining together, each with skills, and pitching in to create a greater chance of success for all involved. In 2025, it's virtually impossible. Everyone has their hand out, people are generally too impatient, egotistical, or self involved to gain skills, and if they do gain skills, they simply trade them for cash instantly, via job or merc work. Few who grew up on social media have the long game necessary to simply work together for a while without compensation in order to achieve a shared goal.
If you look back, that communal garage band formula was responsible for almost every breakout success story in history. Now it doesn't work anymore.
here is the real way you make money in film now. The only real, proven way. It's the same way you make money on any investment portfolio. Strategic diversification. You don't make a film. You make a hundred films
The whole AI argument is CGI all over again, as well. Fake explosions? Why? Why not a real one? This means anyone can create one. Now we'll see inferior action movies saturate the webs... what's next, CGI actors? CGI bad! BAD!We have had that access for decades. Made easier and cheaper with
videotape in the '80's and even easier and cheaper with digital in the '00's.
Good point. When video started being accepted for DTV movies the moviesThe whole AI argument is CGI all over again, as well. Fake explosions? Why? Why not a real one? This means anyone can create one. Now we'll see inferior action movies saturate the webs... what's next, CGI actors? CGI bad! BAD!![]()
More resourceful, yes, not always more creative. And not always "better" movies people want to see.When it was more costly and more difficult filmmakers needed to be more creative.
And more creative leads to better movies - movies that people want to see.