11th December 2013
[http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-lgxr-cvEO94/UqiZW6rOqnI/AAAAAAAADQ8/soqRVMDYaYw/s1600/UK.jpg]
Just 7% of films made in the UK turn a profit, according to figures
revealed by the BFI [http://www.screendaily.com/news/only-7-of-uk-films-
make-profit/5064187.article] last week.
The statistics relate to more than 600 British films released in cinemas
between 2003-2010.
They showed lower budget films - such as those made for less than
£2m - were less likely to make a profit (4%).
The figure improves as budgets rise - with 17% of films that cost more
than £10m making their money back.
But British film director Paul Greengrass says the figures do not not tell
the whole story.
Speaking at the British Independent Film Awards (Bifa), he described
the British film industry as a "success story" and predicted it would
continue to see international growth - especially in China.
Un secreto, sólo el 7% de los guiones ingleses que sefilman, dan dinero...
A BFI spokesperson said the 7% figure included "tiny
budget films that, while commercial success is always
hoped for, are successful and beneficial to the industry
for other reasons like skills and training development
and for artistic and cultural importance".
Greengrass told the BBC on Sunday night the 17%
figure for higher budget films was approximately the
same rate of profitability as Hollywood.
"I'm not saying it can't be improved, but it's always been the case," he
said. "In the heart of Hollywood, it's the big movies - the big franchise
movies - that pay for all the rest of the productions.
"No film industry in the world works on the basis that 100% of the
movies are going to make money."
He went on: "This is a success story. With success comes choices and
a need to continue to build growth and sustainability.
"We're nowhere near where we were in the '80s when we were trapped
in low budget British film-making, with films that no-one wanted to go
and see."
Paul Greengrass's films include The BourneSupremacy and United 93
Diana, which had a reported production budget of around £9m, has so far takenabout half that sum at the box office
Greengrass, whose most recent film is the US-backed Somali piracy
thriller Captain Phillips, said he hoped more could be done to get
British films in cinemas, with more promotion on TV and internationally.
He was also positive about a China-UK co-production treaty, which he
predicted would open up a huge new audience for British films.
"This is a big industry," he said. "It's right up as one of the leading
industries in this country in terms of revenue creation, and job creation
and growth and opportunity."
'Leagues ahead'
Also at the Bifa awards, best actor winner James McAvoy said he was
"really proud" that Filth, which he co-produced, had managed to make
£4m at the box office - more than twice its budget.
"An independent film managed to get people to come and see it
without a studio and without hundreds of millions of dollars of
advertising money. That's remarkable - it means British film can do it
on its own."
A Field In England was released in several formats simultaneously
He said $100m (£61m) movies that "sometimes aren't very good" had
an advantage over smaller films because they had a massive budget to
sell the film.
"Films like Filth can be leagues ahead of the $100m movie, but they've
got no money to get a poster in the paper. So who's going to come and
see them?
"Maybe VOD [video-on-demand] is going to change everything
because the distributor and the studio might become less important."
In July this year, Ben Wheatley's film A Field in England was the first
UK film to be released simultaneously in cinemas, on DVD, on TV and
through video-on-demand.
Wheatley's "psychedelic trip", set during the English Civil War,
tookmore than £21,000 [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-
23252045] at the box office on the same weekend it was available free
of charge on Film 4.
It also sold more then 2,000 copies on DVD over the same period. The
film was made on a modest budget of £300,000.
Wheatley, whose previous films include Sightseers, Kill List and Down
Terrace, said the release model was an appropriate way to maximise
audience figures for a film made on such a small budget.
John Giwa-Amu, producer of the forthcoming sci-fi thriller The
Machine, said VOD was one of the distribution options he was
investigating to accompany the film's limited theatrical release on 21
March, 2014.
His movie, which was filmed in Wales and stars Toby Stephens as a
scientist working on a top secret artificial intelligence project, won the
Raindance independent film award on Sunday night.
The movie's director, Caradog James, said: "The toughest thing is you
make a good film but can you get it to reach an audience? It's events
like this and individuals who champion independent cinema that give us
a profile and any chance of a mass audience."
In order to find investors in the project Giwa-Amu and James pitched
their movie idea to "Dragon's Den-style" gatherings of millionaires
around the country.
Money eventually came in from a Swansea-based backer along with a
job creation grant from the Welsh Assembly, while the Film Agency for
Wales funded some test footage to showcase the film's special effects.
'Tearing their hair out'
The BFI says the UK's export film industry is the second strongest in
the world after Hollywood.
Profitability figures, it adds, do not necessarily reflect the whole value
Films like Never Let Me Go (left) and Fish Tank (right) failed to make back theirmoney in cinemas, but helped promote new British talent
chain of a film's life and don't take into account the long tail profit and
life of a film which can "continue for decades".
It also says the commercial landscape is changing and the VOD
market has increased by 50% last year.
"I'm very excited by where we are," said Greengrass. "It's an endless
debate. You'll find people who say it's a nightmare in the British film
industry. I'm not one of those. I think that it's transformed from where it
was 25 years ago.
"I'm not minimising the problems. There will be producers and directors
out there tearing their hair out because of problem of access to
production finance or access to distribution.
"But what we've got in Britain that is unique on the global stage is a
vibrant domestic UK independent production arena which, for all its
difficulties, is still making very good films that are internationally
acclaimed year after year.
"We also have, on the other hand, tremendously vibrant international
film-making in the UK. You can't get a sound stage in this country for
Shane Meadows' This Is England tripled its £1.5m budget and generated asuccessful TV spin-off
the movies that want to come in here.
"The challenge of the next three to five years is to get those two
sections of the film industry to cross-fertilise in ways that generate
growth for our film industry."Fuente [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-25302988?
utm_content=buffer8eb61&utm_source=buffer&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Buffer]
Visita El Inquilino Guionista [http://elinquilinoguionista.blogspot.mx/]
Publicado 11th December 2013 por El inquilino
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