Perhaps then it might be better to either
(1) resign oneself to the writing end of it all, and sell screenplays either for a flat cost or that plus a small percent of the gross?
This is why we members of the WGA are on strike right now. Many writers don't
see this as a resignation.
(2) be a filmmaker, but get paid up front as you say for services as writer, director, producer, editor, etc. (any or all) being paid out of the film's budget (perhaps procured from investors, or the distributors)-- the millions won't be rolling in, but one could pay oneself while making the film, have fun at film festivals, perhaps even see one's film at a box office.
Not a bad plan, really. You get paid to write, produce and direct movies. If the movie
doesn't turn a profit, you still have been paid. If you happen to make a film that
makes a huge profit, that looks pretty good to the investors of your next one.
I still think there is something fundamentally wrong about a film making $30,000,000 at the box office and the filmmaker seeing nothing back from that, if that is indeed the case. Theaters take 50% ($15M), distributors 35% of what remains, i.e. they take $4.5M of the remaining $15M). That still leaves about $10M. OK say the film prints cost $7.5M (3000 35mm prints at $2500 each [I do not really know for sure-- is $2500/print about right?). Now we are down to $2.5M. If the film was made for $500,000 there remains $2M. Not much, I suppose some of that could get eaten away as interest to investors. But if done right couldn't the filmmaker (indie studio) see perhaps $1M? The problem I see in all this is the 35% or in this case $4.5M the distributor takes-- that seems to me to be a huge cut, and I really think if that figure were negotiated down to maybe 2 or even 3 million there would actually be an almost certain $1M remaining for the indie filmmaker/studio, assuming the film was made for $500,000 or less. Thoughts?
If you feel it's fundamentally wrong for the theaters to take a cut, for the distributor
to have their expenses covered (and take a cut) and the financiers to see their money
(plus a cut) before the filmmaker does, then this might not be the business for you.
That's what happens. And it's not likely to change. If the ballpark 35% is what bothers you
then rest easy. That number is kind of high. Each distributor will make its own deal
with the filmmaker. If you have the clout to negotiate that down to 10% - do it. That
number isn't written in stone.
The film prints also seem to be a huge expense beyond the distributor-- if we could get digital distribution and projection in theaters, could that change the entire equation to slide a few million more to the filmmaker?
It does. But the prints are a very minor expense for the distributor - by comparison.
Advertising is 3 to 5 times more than the prints.
Getting a film out there isn't cheap. Most of the time the P&A costs are 2 to 5 times
more than the cost of the movie. And those costs are fixed. You can get an actor to
work for cheaper (or free), you can get crews to work for very little money, but you
cannot get TV stations to give away air time because the believe in the project, you
can't get newspapers to lower their fees and you can't expect a theater owner to
cut you some slack on their fees, either.