Saturday, July 25, 2009

New era of 3-D begins at Comic-Con

Hello All,

Trying to decide what the audiance will want when it comes to a 3D horror film. I remember meeting with a company 5 years ago who made the 1st 5 minutes of Star Wars in 3D and it was amazing! Is it financially viable for an indie horror film to go 3D?

Jean-Luc Martin
San Diego Comic-Con 2009 blasted into high gear Thursday morning with its first-ever 3-D panel that included Robert Zemeckis ("A Christmas Carol"), Tim Burton ("Alice in Wonderland") and Sean Bailey and Steve Lisberger, the producer and writer of "Tron 2.0."

To kick things off, moderator Patton Oswalt introduced Robert Zemeckis - the biggest name behind performance-capture technology - to talk about 3D and his new performance capture venturen A Christmas Carol. When asked by Oswalt why he was diving into the world of 3D, Zemeckis declared that "3D is the future... it's an immersive way to see movies." He also said performance-capture technology freed him from the rules of live-action films.

Zemeckis then presented the first footage from "A Christmas Carol." A visually impressive crowd-pleaser, it seemed somewhat slow paced in its first few minutes.

Burton, who received rousing applause upon his arrival, was affable and seemed very much at home with the full house of Comic-Con fans. Unfortunately, the "for Comic-Con only" footage was essentially the same "Alice in Wonderland" trailer posted to IGN yesterday, only set to a popular MGMT track. Oswalt even seemed to be left wanting more, asking Burton, "Is that it?".

Nonetheless, Oswalt then begged to play the trailer again, and again, for a total of three plays. When Oswalt again asked if that was indeed all Burton brought with him, Burton nearly brought the house down by bringing out his Mad Hatter, Johnny Depp. While only a brief cameo, it proved enough for a salivating Comic-con crowd

Finally, the cast and crew for "Tron" were introduced along with an appearance by the original Tron, Jeff Bridges, and Olivia Wilde. While the only new filmed footage was in 2D, the cast and crew spent most of their time showing new concept images from the film as well has reminiscing about the "Tron" of 27 yrs ago.

Steve Lisberger, who also worked on the original Tron, declared to the new generation of fans, "You made cyberspace real."

And with that, the panel ended and a new era of 3D films began. Let the buzz begin.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Louisiana ups credits to lure filmmakers

I am looking forward to going into production in my home state some time soon.

Best, Jean-Luc

New incentives hope to up production

Louisiana is keeping the good times rolling with a 5% hike in its transferable production credit to 30% -- upping the ante in the competitive production incentive market.

New to the program is a state buyback of the credits at 85% of their face value -- in effect, "the state has created a floor of 85% on the dollar," said Micha Haley, deputy director of the New Orleans Office of Film & Video City, a strategic measure that will substantially increase the amount of the money that filmmakers get when selling the credits. Haley said that not only does the buyback program give Louisiana a huge boost over competing states, but that the entertainment industry has specifically asked for that component.

Before July 1, Louisiana offered a 25% incentive with a local spend of $300,000 plus 10% for local labor; the new law keeps that same ratio: 30% for production with 5% for local labor.

The production tax incentives were backed by Gov. Bobby Jindal, who signed the bill July 9 along with several others intended to boost everything from the entertainment industry to sound recording to digital media to hybrid cars.

But it was not all smooth sailing, given that states have been pounded by the recession and are desperate to make budgets work. Haley said that Jindal's team went over the program's numbers and was convinced. Indeed, in 2008, the film biz was responsible for an estimated $230 million in direct economic impact on the New Orleans area. To date in 2009, New Orleans has seen more than $100 million in direct economic impact. "These numbers speak powerfully for themselves," said Haley. "Our program works, it's reliable ... (and the) turnaround time is as soon as two to three months," he said.

To attract more long-term investment, the new law also stabilizes the program by making the incentives permanent.

Monday, July 20, 2009

New distributors, promising pix inspire indies

"Changing" is a charitable word to describe the situation in the indie sector these days. Studio specialty arms have been contracting, with smaller, less seasoned companies entering the fray. Box office has been blah.

So when Summit's "The Hurt Locker" — with the kind of Iraq theme that had been anathema to the indie biz two years ago — took in a promising $1.3 million in a few weeks from only 60 locations, it signaled a degree of hope amid a challenging year.

Still, the Kathryn Bigelow film, which benefited from stellar reviews, is one of a few indie films that is really feeling any summer heat.

With just a handful of bright spots this summer, indies are deferring their hope to late summer and fall, traditionally the harvest season for smaller films after studios pack up their tentpoles and go home.

A few other recent releases have broken out of the pack, including Sam Mendes' "Away We Go" ($7.6 million) from Focus, Duncan Jones'-directed Sony Pictures Classics release "Moon" ($1.8 million) and Magnolia's "Food, Inc." ($1.7 million).

Still, it remains to be seen whether these titles and newer pics like "Humpday" and "500 Days of Summer" have the staying power to broaden and grab the attention of auds glued to ever-splashier studio titles.

The indies and studio specialty arms have been suffering seismic shifts for several years. Every time the dust begins to settle, there's more change. Not only are distribs shuttering and merging — another change that could affect indies is the Academy's decision to expand its best picture category to 10 nominations. The move could be a bonus for smaller films, but with more studio titles also in the mix, indies will need to rise above the studio cacophony.

The retrenched studio specialty arms, meanwhile, are turning to wider releases, many of which are genre pics. Whereas before, specialty divisions were seen as the place for studios to house their arty pics with awards potential, they are now increasingly devoting their slots to more commercial titles.

Another factor in the shifting landscape: Smaller indies continue to launch, vowing to provide theatrical homes for orphan films and fest titles.

In the first half of the year, box office results for limited releases have been sluggish, save the rare breakout.

Just five 2009 specialty releases (opening in fewer than 800 locations before June 30) have crossed the $3 million mark so far, while only one — Overture's "Sunshine Cleaning — cracked $10 million (it cumed $12.1 million). The combined gross for the top five is $29.1 million.

That's down 28% from the same period last year, when the limited top five grossed a combined $40.5 million.

But all is not doom and gloom.

Distribs were encouraged by Overture's April 2008 release "The Visitor," which turned out to be a big winner, grossing $9.4 million. "The Hurt Locker," the Baghdad-set bomb-diffusing actioner now in its fourth week, held onto a strong $10,686 per-location average, even while expanding from nine theaters to 60. On July 27, Summit plans to add another 30 theaters. Two years ago, the indie biz was slammed for turning out one downer after another, and there were a number of Iraq War-themed pics that tanked, but now auds appear more open to these themes.

Approaching the fall season, always top-heavy with specialty pics, distribs start flexing their muscles. Late summer entries include Focus Features' Cannes competition entries, South Korean horror pic "Thirst" and Ang Lee's "Taking Woodstock," while the Weinstein Co. bows Quentin Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds."

A few themes emerge when looking at the remaining 2009 indie titles.

Femme pleasers populate the slate. They include Roadside Attractions' docu "The September Issue," about the production of Vogue's big fall edition; National Geographic Films' "Amreeka," a Sundance fave about a mother who seeks a better home for her son in the U.S.; Sony Pictures Classics' biopic "Coco Before Chanel"; Drew Barrymore's directing debut about a girls' roller derby team, "Whip It," from Fox Searchlight; and, on the same Oct. 9 weekend, Sony Classics' femme coming-of-ager "An Education," starring Sundance darling Carey Mulligan.

A raft of environmentally themed docus are waiting in the wings, taking cheer in the B.O. performance of Magnolia's hard-hitting "Food, Inc." Released June 12, that title is the top specialty docu of the year so far.

Among upcoming pics are Roadside's "The Cove," the award-winning fest docu about dolphin trainers who try to expose atrocities among fishermen in Japan; Zeitgeist's "Earth Days"; First Run's "Crude"; and Oscilloscope's "No Impact Man."

The year-old Oscilloscope is one of a slew of theatrical aspirants — old and new — gunning for opportunities in the shifting indie landscape.

While finding a breakout title is still tricky, a gaggle of new or repositioned distribs hopes to fill the shoes left by specialty divisions now concentrating on wide releases. Neo Classics, Here Films (formerly Regent Releasing), Anchor Bay, Image Entertainment, Screen Media, Vivendi Entertainment and New Films Intl. are among the companies throwing their hat in the ring to release smaller titles.

Even in a difficult indie climate, they're banking that the shifting sands might throw a few grains their way.

Monday, July 13, 2009

As the Hollywood machine abandons L.A., its supporting workers struggle

An associate pass this article to me late last night and because I have been researching tax incentive states and countries like Quebec and co-pro deals that Canada has with England and I found it interesting. Competing with international deals are difficult because our dollar is strained and their incentives are amazing. State incentives are good but when you run the numbers (and pending the size of the budget and script needs) Los Angeles favors at times. The main issues is that if a production does stay in Los Angeles then everyone has to give a bit. Yes .. everyone and that includes the unions, producers, vendors, etc. If Los Angeles wants to bring work back home then don't drive the cost up. Simple .. no?

Have a great week!

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, Line-Producer, UPM

Small, blue-collar businesses that sustain California's entertainment industry -- prop houses, studio equipment shops -- fight for business as film production migrates to incentive-rich states.


Los Angeles Times, By: Richard Verrier

In an industrial yard behind Burbank's Bob Hope Airport, dozens of orange forklifts and 135-foot-high booms stand idle, gleaming in the afternoon sunlight. As recently as two years ago, the yard was largely empty because the equipment was busy being used to hoist cameras, rig lights and build sets for "Iron Man," "Get Smart," "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" and other movies shooting throughout Southern California.

"I've been doing this for 25 years and I've never seen such a sustained downtime," said Lance Sorenson, president of 24/7 Studio Equipment, who recently had to lay off two of his drivers and has imposed three- and four-day workweeks for the rest of his 44 employees.

Across town in Culver City, at the landmark studio where "Gone with the Wind," "Citizen Kane," "The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet" and "The Andy Griffith Show" were filmed, there's a similar story. Now an independent production facility known as the Culver Studios, the soundstage complex just lost one of its largest tenants, the syndicated game show "Deal or No Deal." That program will tape future episodes in Waterford, Conn., a suburban town known for its nuclear power plant, large state park and assortment of shops and family-owned restaurants. The chief draw: Connecticut's 30% production-tax credit.



"It's a huge blow to us," said James Cella, president of the Culver Studios.

Others also have been hard hit by the outflow of production to other areas, known as runaway production.

At Modern Props, also in the Culver City area, nearly half the employees have been laid off, and those remaining are on 20- to 40-hour workweeks. John Zabrucky, the company's founder, thought he'd gotten ahead by opening a satellite office in Vancouver, Canada. But now so many states are offering tax incentives to film and television producers that he can't keep up.

Hundreds of small blue-collar businesses like these sustain Southern California's entertainment industry. Many are struggling amid a sharp drop in local film and TV production triggered by the recession, a rise in runaway production, and the fallout from a writer's strike and a yearlong contract dispute between studios and the Screen Actors Guild. According to the state Employment Development Department, jobs in movie and television production were down 13,800 in May compared with a year earlier.

On-location feature film production in the area has fallen to its lowest levels on record. Student films generated as much activity on the streets of Los Angeles in the first quarter of 2009, when only a few movies, including "Fame" and "Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel," were shot there.

California's share of U.S. feature film production dropped to 31% in 2008 from 66% in 2003, according to the California Film Commission. That largely reflects a falloff in the Los Angeles area, where feature filming activity in 2008 was nearly half what it was at its peak in 1996.

Television production, which recently has been a more reliable source of jobs in the region, is also declining. A recent survey from FilmL.A. Inc. found that 44 of 103 TV pilots this year were shot in such disparate locations as Canada, Illinois, Georgia, New York, Louisiana and New Mexico.

More than 30 states have sought to outbid one another with tax credits and rebates aimed at luring productions away from California. Sacramento has responded with its first-ever film-tax credit program, but most analysts think the credits are too small and restrictive to have much effect.

"L.A. is at risk of losing a good part of one of its signature industries, just like it did with the aerospace industry in the early 1990s," said Jack Kyser, chief economist for Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp.

Few know that better than Cella, of Culver Studios. He previously ran Steiner Studios in Brooklyn, N.Y., and was tapped to run Culver in 2006 after a group of investors including Lehman Bros. acquired the 14 soundstages from Sony Pictures Entertainment for $125 million.

But the studio's business took a big hit recently when NBC Universal and Endemol USA opted to move "Deal or No Deal" to Connecticut.

The show brought in more than $1 million in rental income to Culver Studios, Cella said, adding that there was little he could do to keep the producers from leaving.

"I could give them this space for free and it still wouldn't compete with Connecticut," he said.

The studio, which still hosts "The Bonnie Hunt Show" and others, has seen its occupancy rate slide to 46% from 85% in the last year.

Most of "Deal or No Deal's" 250 crew members lost their jobs in the move.

"It's a crying shame," said Lindsay Hovel, an associate producer on the prime-time version of the game show hosted by comedian Howie Mandel. "There are so many talented people, and they're just not able to work in the [entertainment] capital."

The relocation was doubly bruising for Cella because it was announced just after California approved its film-tax credit program, which Cella lobbied heavily for and helped craft. The credits, however, don't cover game shows.

Still, Cella predicts that the tax deal will attract some TV shows back to California.

"If we don't do something now, there's going to be nothing left," he said.

Sorenson, of 24/7 Studio Equipment, also is pinning his hopes on the state tax credits to spur business. A major studio film can generate $75,000 in rental income for a company like Sorenson's. But this year, 24/7 has worked mostly on a few low-budget films such as Screen Gems' "The Roommate." His company's feature film business has plummeted 50% since 2007.

Sorenson made up for the shortfall by renting out equipment to TV shows, but even that is no longer a sure bet.

One of his customers, the HBO series "Hung," filmed three months in L.A. and two months in Michigan, which offers a 42% tax credit. Another customer, the TNT series "Leverage," has opted to film its second season in Portland, Ore., which offers a 20% cash rebate on qualified expenses.

"It would be a lot different if we were smoking busy," he said. "But . . . every rental right now is like a precious jewel."

Local prop houses also are struggling from the downturn. Some have recently closed and others have cut their payrolls.

Modern Props laid off 17 workers last month. The company owns a 120,000-square-foot warehouse that contains 80,000 props.

"I was in shock," said Luis Peniche, 21, a former sales assistant who lost his $25,000-a-year job after two years at Modern Props. "I really loved working there. It was like family."

Unable to pay his rent, Peniche moved into his sister's apartment in Van Nuys. He also stopped taking classes at Santa Monica College because he couldn't afford the books and tuition. "I'd love to work in the entertainment industry, but it's just so bad out there."

Zabrucky launched the company 32 years ago, specializing in leasing furniture, lights and electric control panels to sci-fi TV shows such as "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century" and eventually to some of the biggest movies in Hollywood, including "Die Hard," "Ghostbusters" and "Men in Black."

Modern Props became one of the largest prop houses in Hollywood, employing 50 people in its heyday in the late 1990s. But the business has eroded through much of the last decade, squeezed by the growing use of digital effects; the growth of reality television, which spends little on props; and especially the departure of shows to other locales.


"We know how to do what we do very well," Zabrucky said, "but we can't fight the fact that everything is just being sold right from underneath us."

Last summer, Modern Props lost one of its clients, the ABC series "Ugly Betty," to New York. "Their set decorator was in every week placing orders. That's $14,000 a month we lost," lamented Ken Sharp, vice president of sales and operations for Modern Props.

To highlight the plight facing his business and others, Zabrucky recently designed skateboard decks that show a pictograph of the country, with California highlighted, and distributed them to hundreds of Hollywood executives as well as city and state politicians. The deck shows arrows pointing away from the state and the words "don't run away."

Thursday, July 9, 2009

LOUISIANA INCREASES TAX INCENTIVE

Hello All,

Below is the official announcement of Louisiana's incentive upgrade!

All the best,

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer - Line Producer - UPM

Governor Jindal has just signed HB98, increasing Louisiana tax credits to 30%, with an additional 5% for local hires (capped at the first $1 million), and eliminating the planned phase-down of the tax credit program. The bill provides also for an 85 cent buy-back of certified Louisiana tax credits.

Additionally, SB277 was signed, permanently providing for a 25% tax credit on Digital Media, plus an additional 10% for Louisiana residents.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Massachusetts Says Film Tax Breaks Flop

Tax incentives, Tax incentives ... Attorneys and politicians! Incentives are there to bring jobs to the state and as much as Louisiana has had some rough times with bad judgment in the past, the state is bringing in films and building their work force. Go Georgia, Texas and all the other states who are trying to do it right.

Have a great day!
Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, Line-producer
Follow me on Twitter and Facebook

From Deadline Hollywood: By Nikki Finke's
Massachusetts lost $95.5 million last year, and is on the hook for another $250 million over the next two years, because of film tax breaks. The Bay State also has to make good on up to $130 million in tax credits in the coming fiscal year, and $117 million in the next, at a time when the state is facing a revenue free fall. That's according to what the Boston Herald calls an "astonishing" report quietly released on the Bay State's Department Of Revenue web site just before the July 4th weekend. The film tax break program has delivered only 15 cents in revenues for each dollar the state gave away to moviemakers. And, of the $289 million in wages paid on the productions last year, only 18% went to local workers. Presently, Massachusetts is building a proposed $500M studio in Plymouth. But some lawmakers want to put a $2M cap on how much a movie star’s salary can be used toward the credit. The DOR study is the most comprehensive look at the local moviemaking since lawmakers expanded tax incentives for films in 2007. But the Boston Herald also pointed out that backers of the tax breaks disparaged the DOR research as authored by ex-employees for New York movie interests.

Monday, July 6, 2009

HD pic stream still limited - Bandwidth will instead augment Blu-ray


By JENNIFER NETHERBY

With millions of devices in homes now connecting HDTVs to the Internet, online movie services are poised to send a flood of high-def movies down those digital pipes. But the flow may be less than smooth, given limited broadband connection speeds in U.S. homes and the superior video quality on Blu-ray discs.

Vudu, Apple iTunes and Amazon Video on Demand have all added high-definition titles in the past six months. This fall, Microsoft (via the Xbox 360) and Roxio CinemaNow are each planning a major high-def push. In addition, almost every service is offering high-definition viewing via instant streaming so consumers no longer have to wait hours for large HD files to download.

But few expect digital downloads to be a serious competitor to Blu-ray discs anytime soon. That's because most consumers don't have broadband connections fast enough to stream HD video and, even if they did, most companies say HD streams can't yet match the quality of Blu-ray.

The average consumer has only a 2.5-megabit-per-second broadband connection, said Mark Ely, VP of strategy for Sonic Solutions, which owns Roxio CinemaNow. To stream HD content in the standard MPEG-2 compression quality requires an 18-20 mbps connection.

Vudu's well-reviewed HDX streams, which it touts as the highest-quality HD streaming, require a 10-mbps broadband connection, while its standard 1080p HD streams need a 4.5 mbps connection.

Because of broadband limitations, most companies in the space are positioning HD downloads as a complement to Blu-ray. That's not surprising, since many are planning to offer their services through Blu-ray players in an attempt to expand their reach into the home. Sonic and Netflix, for instance, already have deals with LG Electronics to offer their services on BD players coming this fall.

Also limiting the potential growth of HD streaming and downloads is the amount of content studios make available and the terms under which they do so. So far, studios are releasing almost every new release, but since most HD new-release downloads and streams are available as rentals, they are available only in the VOD window, sometimes debuting after DVD and only available for a limited time.

Microsoft Xbox 360, which has been offering HD rental downloads since launching its video service in late 2006, will begin offering nearly every film it can in HD with instant-on streaming after it migrates to Zune video in the fall. Currently, the Xbox Live Marketplace has 5,000 HD titles, compared with 18,000 in standard definition.

Vudu says it now has 2,000 rental titles in HD and 200 more available as download-to-own. (Jennifer Netherby writes for Daily Variety sister publication Video Business.)

Thank you Variety.

BROADCASTERS DOMINATE VIDEO AD SALES ONLINE

When it comes to selling advertising on web video, the traditional broadcasters have YouTube beat by a mile. According to media researchers Screen Digest, more than half the ad revenue from online video was produced by CBS, NBC, Fox and Hulu (the joint venture between News Corp's Fox, ABC Disney and NBC Universal).

Together they pulled in $448 million in 2008, the report said. It predicted that the figure will rise to $1.45 billion by 2013. Nevertheless, it noted, that amount would only represent 2.2 percent of all U.S. TV advertising revenue in that year -- slightly less than what the TV ad marketplace is expected to lose by then.

Thanks AP

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Goldman Sachs: A must read/listen: The Great American Bubble Machine: Matt Taibbi on how Goldman Sachs

Hello All .. this is a MUST read article and there is a short series of videos with Matt Taibbi. The truth hurts!

Happy 4th America!

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, UPM

In Rolling Stone Issue 1082-83, Matt Taibbi takes on "the Wall Street Bubble Mafia" — investment bank Goldman Sachs. The piece has generated controversy, with Goldman Sachs firing back that Taibbi's piece is "an hysterical compilation of conspiracy theories" and a spokesman adding, "We reject the assertion that we are inflators of bubbles and profiteers in busts, and we are painfully conscious of the importance in being a force for good." Taibbi shot back: "Goldman has its alumni pushing its views from the pulpit of the U.S. Treasury, the NYSE, the World Bank, and numerous other important posts; it also has former players fronting major TV shows. They have the ear of the president if they want it." Here, now, are excerpts from Matt Taibbi's piece and video of Taibbi exploring the key issues.

Go to: The Great American Bubble Machine

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Studios ignore niche pics: "Film companies dubious of specialty pickups"

Interesting Article for the niche film makers ... this is why a strong marketing strategy is needed!

Be well,

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, Line Producer, UPM


by: Sharon Swart: With the first half of the year in film festivals behind us, it's hard not to notice the nearly complete lack of specialty film pickups by studios.

Even Fox Searchlight, one of the few remaining studio specialty divisions, has been somewhat quiet. Since picking up "The Wrestler" at Toronto last fall, the label has made just one fest purchase: "Adam," a small indie drama that played in Sundance's competition in January.

The consolidation of the indie and specialty-division landscape is alarming to filmmakers and sales agents, but Searchlight isn't happy about it, either.

"We don't want to be the last man standing with the entire burden of specialized cinema resting on our shoulders," Searchlight's acquisitions head Tony Safford confided as he headed out for his late-June vacation. "Without New Line and (Paramount) Vantage really being in the game, and without Warner Independent, suddenly there are 20-30 films that aren't being distributed. Maybe half shouldn't have been distributed, but half should have."

John Sloss, who is repping domestic sales on two Cannes fest entries still looking for homes -- Terry Gilliam's "The Imaginarium of Dr. Parnassus" and Alejandro Amenabar's "Agora" -- said the specialty biz may be facing a sea change.

"I've been an optimist and a defender of the core elements of indie distribution, but it's hard to explain the lack of presence of specialized distributors in the market," Sloss said.

The indie divisions need movies to feed their pipelines. Yet, at every fest this year, they seem to be sitting on their hands while Sony Pictures Classics, IFC Films and Magnolia basically just back up the truck.

At Cannes, about a half-dozen deals were inked by smaller Stateside distribs, and a few more pickups from the fest are likely to close in the coming months. But these deals barely cross the six-figure mark and rarely go into multimillion-dollar advances.

When it comes to the studio arms, these days it's all about inhouse production, prebuys or, most typically, doing nothing.

"Unless we have control and can take the world on a film, we're not going to go out on a huge limb," said one studio buyer.

But even on prebuys, it's not the studios stepping up to grab the more obvious titles.

Bob Berney and Bill Pohlad acquired Jane Campion's Cannes competition entry "Bright Star" well before the festival's start. When Berney was in Los Angeles this week, taking meetings with investors, he said prebuys may be the emphasis of his still-to-be named distribution company. But it's not a new tactic for Berney. At Picturehouse, he boarded films like "La Vie en rose" and "Pan's Labyrinth" well before they were completed.

Sales agents and producers seem to be waiting for the right offers from the right distributors. But finding those has become appreciably trickier.

"There are always too few good films," Safford said. "But now we're in a place where there may be too few distributors."

The distrib pool is being replenished -- to some degree -- but not at the major studios. Aside from Berney-Pohlad and mainstream aspirants such as Summit and Overture, a few indie newbies have entered or ramped up in the arena recently.

Oscilloscope, headed by Beastie Boy Adam Yauch, is now handling 10-plus theatrical releases a year, for example. And homevid company Image Entertainment has broadened its scope to theatrical releasing.

But as many films remain unsold, producers will have to look to other options. And these days that means short or no theatrical windows and VOD plays through smaller distribs such as IFC, Magnolia and Oscilloscope.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Transmedia storytelling is future of biz

When we look at a project we always like the franchise possibilities because it helps the longevity of the ROI. But it all really depends on the audiences excitement and one (studio/producer) has to be a forward thinker. I found this article interesting.

Enjoy,

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, Line-Producer, UPM

Studios create mythologies, multimedia worlds

Now that the franchise has replaced the blockbuster as Hollywood's holy grail, a new tool has emerged to help those who want to extend film and TV properties across multiple platforms.

The tool -- transmedia storytelling -- is capable of performing such feats as the recent revival of the Batman franchise, which helped propel "The Dark Knight" to the second-highest box office numbers in history, after "Titanic."

"They resurrected a dusty old brand that ran into trouble in the early '90s," says Jeff Gomez, co-founder of Starlight Runner Entertainment, which specializes in applying the transmedia approach to studio tentpoles. "The filmmakers were able to go back to the essentials -- the true, deep conflict that the character faces -- and they managed to make it resonant with our current conflicts as a society."

Transmedia takes the concept of the bible -- a document containing backstory information that film and TV writers rely on for building plots and characters -- to an extensive new level.

The idea of developing a piece of intellectual property in a consistent manner across multiple media platforms was pioneered in its modern form by George Lucas, who turned his first "Star Wars" film into five more features, multiple TV shows, a panoply of books and an onslaught of toys and games. The feature films alone have generated a cumulative worldwide box office of more than $4 billion.

What Lucas did went several steps beyond old-style character licensing and brand extensions. He created a unified body of work with an extensive backstory and mythology, and he determinedly guarded its canon while simultaneously opening up peripheral parts of his universe to exploration by other contributors.

And today, as the industry struggles to maximize auds and revenues, many producers consider transmedia a key to extending franchises across the additional platforms that have emerged in the three decades since the first "Star Wars" film.

"I grew up on 'Star Wars' and experimented with that stuff on my shows. It helped build a loyal fan base, connect with them beyond primetime and reach them in other parts of their lives," says Jesse Alexander, co-exec producer on "Lost" and "Heroes," and exec producer on NBC's 2010-debuting skein "Day One."

For "Day One," an hourlong drama set in the aftermath of an unspecified event that destroys the global infrastructure, Alexander says he's working with NBC Universal to develop ancillaries like a comicbook, a prequel novel and online content to be available on or before the show's debut. "It helps to build out the franchise at launch," he says.

"People are realizing that this kind of concerted implementation is one of the most powerful ways to convey messages," says Gomez, who worked with Disney on "Pirates of the Caribbean" and "Tron," and with Fox on James Cameron's "Avatar." "For them, as for most of our clients, we make sure the universe of the film maintains its integrity as it's expanded and implemented across multiple platforms."

Starlight Runner typically got involved with projects toward the end of their development, but more recently has been jumping aboard at an earlier stage, Gomez says. And producers are building the costs of creating a transmedia plan into the production budget rather than leaving it as an afterthought paid for by the marketing division.

"We're now working with writers, producers and directors who are devising these worlds from scratch, rather than with the marketing people figuring out what to do with something that's already completed," he says.

Starlight Runner was founded in 2000 and has built a client list that includes Acclaim Entertainment, Coca-Cola, Microsoft, Showtime and Hasbro.

The company's work "goes beyond your typical bible," Gomez says. Starlight Runner creates "megabibles and mythologies" contained in oversized binders full of images, chronologies, storylines, character profiles and descriptions of such details as geography, vehicles and weapons. "We teach the studio, other divisions of its parent company and its licensors how to bring these characters to life in a way that's true to the original platform."

For example, Starlight's mythology document for "Avatar" facilitated the extension of that property to the vidgame arena via publisher Ubisoft, which plans to release an Avatar game that, like the movie, will be available in stereoscopic 3-D.

Starlight began its relationship with "Avatar" via an introduction made by a senior studio exec with considerable franchise familiarity just as production on the film was getting under way.

"We always try to extend a property to other experiences," says the exec. To do that, he adds, it's important to "look at what the essence of the property is, what people are responding to, and re-create that in other ways."

Another believer in the transmedia concept, scribe Danny Bilson, who's steering production and marketing at vidgame publisher THQ, takes as his mantra the old Microsoft advertising slogan "Where do you want to go today?" "That's different from 'What do you want to watch?' " he notes.

Bilson's main mission is to create successful games, but he's always on the lookout for extensions that can be supported by the original vision. "Once I have the concept, I'll talk to the movie guys about it," he says. "Even before that, we'll be looking to books for inspiration, or even to revitalize a movie that's a dormant classic."

Action figures and online components are launched at the time of the game's release.

One Hollywood talent agent who works in new media says his clients "who own a piece of intellectual property that will be replicated on different platforms need to be intimately involved in extending that mythology" in order to preserve the property's integrity.

"They can't just let anybody do it," he says. "It may not be just fanboys who are going to see a film like 'Spider-Man,' but those fanboys become your evangelists if you pay close attention to the mythology and make sure it sticks to the original thrust of the story. If you don't, you can have problems."

Another danger, says the agent, is that success can blind a property owner in a way that leads to missed opportunities.

"Once a property becomes big, you might not even realize you're making a mistake. Your film is successful, but could you be doing more? Could you have extended it onto more platforms had you adhered more closely to the mythology? Probably so."

Examples of franchises that have been hurt by the lack of an adequate mythology, or enforcement of a mythology, are legion, Gomez says. He singles out "The Crow," the comicbook series that became a Brandon Lee starrer helmed by Alex Proyas.

"Efforts were made to extend that franchise, and the fanbase was game," Gomez says. "But the sequels that came out either ignored or contradicted the set of rules established in the first film."

To some degree, per Gomez, similar problems afflicted portions of the Terminator and Batman franchises.

With Terminator, there were issues as to who owns which rights to various versions of the property. "Without a central clearing house for the intellectual property, you had different groups pursuing different visions," Gomez continues. "In the TV series and the new film, a number of core elements that people truly connected with were missing, resulting in products that didn't maximize the brand's potential."

Says Alexander: "Revenue generation is a goal of all these initiatives. Beyond exposing the property to an audience, I try to find ways to build value for it.

"We're all challenged to find new ways to make money," he adds. "A cross-platform approach to narrative exploitation is a gr

eat opportunity for those who know how to do it right."

Thank you:

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Louisiana Tax Incentive Update

Louisiana Tax Incentive.....And here is the latest .... Adley's Bill SB-245 passed as well in the legislature today!

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, Line-Producer, Production Manage

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Louisiana is on its way to a 30% tax incentive!

Louis Herthum wrote me this morning about the latest on the Louisiana Tax incentive: " HB-898 was CONCURRED and PASSED in the House today! GREAT NEWS FOR US ALL! It now goes to the Governor's desk where we have no reason to believe it will face any problems. Thanks are in order to so many of you who helped this cause! You are all awesome!"
Be well,
Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, Production Manager

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Producer calls indie world to task - Jim Stern touts careful budgeting, more

Film Indie world .. a must read! I love this article in the Hollywood Reporter! We have been preaching this for a while!!!!

Read on .. be well ..


Producer Jim Stern issued a warning call to the indie business Saturday, saying that if it wanted to endure, it needed to stop working at cross purposes with itself and its financiers.

Speaking in the high-profile slot at the Los Angeles Film Festival where Mark Gill last year gave his now-famous 'The Sky is Falling' speech, Stern told the audience that the indie world needed to more deeply consider marketing and financing.

"It's been hip to disrespect the money," he said. And "most businesses have a complete plan from the start of a project, which includes the whole chain, from manufacturing through distribution. Ours typically does not."

Instead, he said filmmakers needed to develop marketing plans and work more closely with financiers. "We need to cut costs, mitigate risks, target our audience," he said.

The Endgame Entertainment principal, the producer behind such pics as "A Chorus Line" documentary "Every Little Step" and Mark Ruffalo con-man movie "The Brothers Bloom," spoke during the Finance Conference at the festival. The address has become a kind of barometer for the state of the indie business.

Last year, Gill gave a keynote in which he warned that financing models, distributors and other part of the indie world were on the brink of collapse. Less than a week later, Paramount Vantage was consolidated; a year later, the indie world finds itself in a far bleaker place.

Given the market travails, Stern faced a tough task with his address: He couldn't simply underscore the misery, but he also couldn't risk sounding overly optimistic about the indie world's future.

So he walked a fine line, acknowledging the brutal realities but offering several ways out.

"We're upside down on the mortgage and it's time to mail in the keys," he said, citing the stat that nearly 10,000 films were submitted to Sundance last year, but only three so far have been released theatrically.

In parts sounding like the second coming of Gill, Stern described a climate in which studio tentpoles are flourishing but the number of indies that have made even $1 million this year has dwindled from 16 at this point last year to six.

But he also prescribed several solutions. He highlighted what he called "smarter movies" -- those that were careful about budgets and conscious about audience.

Filmmakers who followed their own heart at the expense of the market, Stern said, were due for a rude awakening.

"I love Sundance," he said. "But it gave rise to a sense of entitlement to personal films," adding that filmmakers are at a point in the business cycle that "if you make a personal film, don't be surprised if it doesn't get an audience, or, even much worse, if it doesn't get sold."

Greater attention to marketing from the earliest stages of development has been a major theme in the indie world recently, though naysayers have noted that some of the best indie and specialty pics in the past year -- such movies as "Slumdog Millionaire" and "The Wrestler" -- were driven by intensely personal visions that didn't explicitly consider marketing until after they were made.

As part of his solution, Stern singled out entities, including Hulu and iTunes, that were exploring and peddling on-demand and streaming video. "These are the once and future friends of independent film," he said.

Stern also suggested that producers stop worrying about casting pricey A-level talent, which he said in most cases ceased being a factor for international sales and domestic boxoffice. "I don't think stars drive people to the theaters in small movies," he said.

He warned against the temptation of concentrating on such areas as special effects and photography, that should be the province of tentpoles. "Movies can look terrible and get an audience, and movies can look terrific and not," Stern said.

But making successful indies also required a complex series of traits, he said. "You need to be as sly as a fox, as slippery as an eel, as thick-skinned as a hippo, and as rich as Sidney Kimmel." He added: "But if you don't meet those qualifications, don't worry. It works just as well to be crazy as a loon."

PRODUCTION INCENTIVES ALERT

Hello all,

A friend of mine who owns location talent , Louis Herthum told me about the latest Louisiana update: "SB245 did not make it to the vote. So will be voted on tomorrow and needs a 2/3 vote to move forward. HB898 goes back to the House for a concurrence vote. Should be fine. More coming!"

Be well everyone!

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer / Production Manager
PRODUCTION INCENTIVES ALERT
June 19th 2009

LOUISIANA PROPOSED 30% INCENTIVE
SB245 and HB898, which both increase the production tax credit to a 30% transferable tax credit with 5% additional for resident hires, have passed the committee and are moving to the Senate for vote.

MASSACHUSETTS CAPS SALARIES
Massachusetts, which has been the location-of-choice for many larger budget projects because of the lack of any caps on production, salaries, or yearly allocation, has today instituted a $2 million dollar salary cap for all hires. The cap is retroactive to January 1, 2009, except for films that have filed a sales tax waiver prior to June 1, 2009.

The $2 million cap includes per diems, housing and other allowances.

This leaves Alaska and Louisiana as the only states without hire caps (except for residents) or production credit caps. Georgia has a wage cap of $500,000, but no cap on loan-outs and no cap on production credits.

Friday, June 19, 2009

SAG talks to start early ...

SAG to start early in the next round of negotiations -- you think!

"An unprecedented but little-noticed provision in SAG's hard-fought new contract requires that the guild must initiate six weeks of negotiations on Oct. 1, 2010 -- a full nine months prior to the expiration of its just-ratified feature-primetime contract." ... to read article:

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, Production Manager

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Visual Effects Studios, VFX Houses

Recently I had to look into getting a bid from Visual Effects houses on a film which I hope to announce formally very soon. I have found that a lot of companies have gone Belly-up from my last R&D 9 months ago on another project because as Ray Ellingsen say, "So much is being done in-house because of advances in technology and of course education" A colleague passed this article on to me which I found interesting.

Enjoy the read,

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer - Line-Producer - UPM

Bredow upped to CTO as retooling continues

Sony Pictures Imageworks continues to retool its management team. In the latest move, visual effects supervisor Rob Bredow is set to be bumped up to chief technical officer July 1, replacing George Joblove.

Amid one of the grimmest periods in memory for the post-production and visual effects business in Hollywood, rumors have been swirling that Sony might shrink or shut down Imageworks.

But Imageworks execs say flatly that they're being asked to make sure the company remains a leader in vfx and animation, even in a market that's more competitive than ever.

"We've always been known as one of the very few studios who can do the impossible in vfx," Bredow said. "We're not changing our agenda there."

However, he's also looking to help contain costs for the company by "making the easy stuff easy" -- to make sure artists resist the temptation to add complexity in pursuit of perfection. "That means more on the screen for less money," he said.

Exec VP for production Debby Denise said that while Imageworks now has to compete against small shops all over the world, many with much lower labor costs, "The studios and filmmakers have to weigh the cost advantages against the risk of the small shops not being able to deliver large numbers of shots in time for the release date." Imageworks' advantage, she said, is "They can depend on us."

The irony is that just a few years ago, some of Imageworks' competitors would complain that Sony was trying to corner the market on visual effects by overpaying artists and bidding for work at a loss.

In those days, Imageworks wasn't required to turn a profit. Sony's plan was for Imageworks to do animation production for Sony Pictures Animation as well as vfx. The two would be tied together under the umbrella of Sony Pictures Digital, which would be the profit center, due to expected big grosses from its CG animated releases.

But Sony's animated features haven't delivered those big returns yet. As a result, Imageworks is under performance pressure. It's given up leases in Culver City and has flattened its management structure.

It's also shifting from employing artists full-time to a production crew model, in which most are hired on a project-by-project basis, and only key people are kept on permanently.

"It's part of the maturation of the vfx business. It's become more like physical production," said Imageworks exec VP-general manager Randy Lake.

Lake said Imageworks is also striving to make itself more of an asset to Columbia, consulting with the development team to avoid unexpected costs. "We've actually become more important to the studio under the new model than perhaps in the past."

Imageworks is also strategizing with other studios earlier in production, Lake said. "To the extent we can help them design projects that work for their budgets and work creatively, it makes it easier for us to be successful in working with them."

Lake said Imageworks will continue to support Sony franchises like "Spider-Man" with visual effects and do the animation production for SPA.

Bredow said the mix producing animation and vfx helps Imageworks give clients better bang for their buck. "We've seen a huge win from being able to leverage our technology in (both vfx and animation). The level of complexity we can put on the screen for a dollar in an SPA movie is greater than if we were just doing animation," he added.

And while speed and cost containment are priorities, "Our mission is not to be a huge moneymaker; our mission is to make it possible to make the best pictures possible," Bredow said.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

SAG: TV/Theatrical Negotiations

Finally! We can all put negotiations to rest with ALL unions and guilds for a couple of years (we can only hope)

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, Production Manager



Screen Actors Guild Members Overwhelmingly Ratify TV/Theatrical Agreements

Los Angeles, (June 9, 2009) – Screen Actors Guild announced today that members have voted overwhelmingly to approve its TV/Theatrical contracts by a vote of 78 percent to 22 percent.

The two-year successor agreement covers film and digital television programs, motion pictures and new media productions. The pact becomes effective at 12:01 a.m. June 10, 2009 and expires June 30, 2011.

The contracts provide more than $105 million in wages, increased pension contributions, and other gains and establishes a template for SAG coverage of new media formats.

Approximately 110,000 SAG members received ballots of which 35.26 percent returned them – a return that is above average compared with typical referenda on Screen Actors Guild contracts. Integrity Voting Systems of Everett, WA, provided election services and tonight certified the final vote tally upon completion of the tabulation.

The vote count in the Hollywood Division was 70.70 percent to 29.30 percent in favor. In the New York Division, the vote count was 85.74 percent to 14.26 percent in favor. And in the Regional Branch Division, the vote count was 89.06 percent to 10.94 percent in favor.

Screen Actors Guild President Alan Rosenberg said, "The membership has spoken and has decided to work under the terms of this contract that many of us, who have been involved in these negotiations from the beginning, believe to be devastatingly unsatisfactory. Tomorrow morning I will be contacting the elected leadership of the other talent unions with the hope of beginning a series of pre-negotiation summit meetings in preparation for 2011. I call upon all SAG members to begin to ready themselves for the battle ahead,” Rosenberg added.

Screen Actors Guild Interim National Executive Director David White said, “This decisive vote gets our members back to work with immediate pay raises and puts SAG in a strong position for the future. Preparation for the next round of negotiations begins now. Our members can expect more positive changes in the coming months as we organize new work opportunities, repair and reinvigorate our relationships with our sister unions and industry partners, and continue to improve the Guild’s operations.”

Screen Actors Guild Chief Negotiator John McGuire said, "I want to thank the SAG members and staff who dedicated their time to the negotiations process. We emerged with a solid deal that the members have now voted up. The negotiating team worked tirelessly, building on the work of the first negotiating committee, to deliver these improvements to members.”

Screen Actors Guild began talks with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers on April 15, 2008. Guild Chief Negotiator John McGuire, Interim National Executive Director David White, and Deputy National Executive Director for Contracts Ray Rodriguez, working with a 10-person negotiating task force comprised of Screen Actors Guild board members and officers representing the three divisions, reached the tentative agreement on April 16, 2009 after 12 months of periodic negotiations with the motion picture studios and television networks.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Five Reasons to Be Terrified of Google Wave

Very interesting Article about the Google Wave. If you liked Twitter and other instant messengers this will make you a very happy person. Video below is very long but you will get the idea in the first 15 minutes after the introductions. Here is the link to the Article in FAST COMPANY



Best,

Jean-Luc Martin
Producer, Line-Producer, UPM