hammerhedd11
OHaiMark
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Considering the second campaign only exists because of this delay; how could you argue then that the delay did not cost them money?
Considering the second campaign only exists because of this delay; how could you argue then that the delay did not cost them money?
Then I'll throw down the same gauntlet to you:
Provide evidence from whichever source that clearly claims that to purely hold onto a film to release at a later point in time costs money. Not talking double marketing, or any costs of that nature. That just holding onto it costs you money.
That was what Evil Twin was saying and only thing I raised issues with. I'll be happy enough to say it does. But in order to say it does I'll need some form of evidence whether that be a journal or from your own experience. I can't be any more open than saying with the evidence I'll happily admit to being wrong.
You're saying the same thing I am then -- to me that's all marketing costs. To throw another example in, getting a spot in a magazine.
I'm saying purely holding onto the film itself. That outside of marketing, reshoots, 3D there is no additional costs.
And kudos.
It's why films are typically timed so that they're released and they start collecting revenue shortly after they're finished rather than 2 to 3 years down the line, because delaying the payback costs money. Three quarters of a year of interest and inflation does cut into the bottom line.
That's like saying, "Besides the cost of shooting the film, as well as the cost of post production, the film didn't cost anything." You can't disregard a major cost of the entire enterprise as no additional cost if you do it twice.
Provide evidence from whichever source that clearly claims that to purely hold onto a film to release at a later point in time costs money. Not talking double marketing, or any costs of that nature. That just holding onto it costs you money.
That was what Evil Twin was saying and only thing I raised issues with. I'll be happy enough to say it does. But in order to say it does I'll need some form of evidence whether that be a journal or from your own experience. I can't be any more open than saying with the evidence I'll happily admit to being wrong.
A more apt example, due to get rid of marketing for a second would be 'Old Dogs.' We had no idea that film was coming out. It came out years after it was completed. As far as I know there were no intensive re-shoots and there was not a marketing campaign. So simply holding onto this film -- without those things -- cost them money? Just to hold onto it?
Interesting. That might explain MOS marketing (or rather lack thereof).I don't work in the film industry or anything but there does exist such a thing as a "holding fee" in business in general whenever you hold onto an asset. In economics, it is called an "opportunity cost" and in finance, it is called a "cost of carry". Look into it.
A movie like Old Dogs doesn't come out with a major ad blitz or a toy line. But a movie like GI Joe...that has a whole expensive marketing campaign that becomes more expensive when you have to movie it, especially moving it at the last minute like GI Joe was.
But a movie like that can lose money over a delay. Are its stars still popular? Is the topic still culturally relevant? Sometimes it works in the opposite direction because it stars someone who wasn't popular two years ago, but is now.
In principle, considering the time value of money, the type and kind of movie is irrelevant. Unless there is some sort of convenience yield (hidden benefit like the one you mentioned about movie stars' future popularity) to holding onto an asset, technically anything that can earn money now but isn't is losing money.
Fenrir was the only person here who nailed the only thing I was commenting on. Fenrir, how does that relate to film however?
Actually, Dan if you look back from my very first post I said that it would have to make up for having two marketing campaigns. It's just that some people have very poor reading comprehension and keep on skipping over that. I picked 'Old Dogs' to stop people thinking marketing and move over to the only thing I was commenting on -- "opportunity cost" and "cost to carry."
Fenrir was the only person here who nailed the only thing I was commenting on. Fenrir, how does that relate to film however?