This is a cool idea for how to do the origin again. Wouldn't want the whole movie in that fashion though
5) FF production and distribution rights: While they lost money on this franchise, they see potential and can hold it hostage while writing off the expenses associated with it as tax deductible. Fox also gets a percentage of the movie merchandise.
Thanks for the info!
Are you saying you think they'll actually make another movie or they'll just ride it out until 2021 and continue paying the maintenance fees before dropping it?
I can't imagine shareholders saying: "Another $70 million dollar loss and huge drop in stock value? Cool! That means less taxes!"
I mean, I could donate $30,000 to charity and reduce my total tax bill by maybe $5000, but I'm still writing a big check. It's not free money.
As for movie merchandise, that doesn't provide much incentive, because X% of zero is still zero.
I found a newer document and I might have been wrong. I will let you know once I read it.
You think it'd be easier, or cheaper, to get production and distribution rights to the FF where creative and financial potential is huge as opposed to some of those other distribution rights where creative and financial gains are limited? Because that's highly unlikely.
Furthermore, the extension period for FF is probably 11 months from the release of the previous film (based on release and production schedule of Fan4stic compared to FF: ROTSS which we all know was coming down the wire to be reverted to Marvel). Fox DEFINITELY paid the fee to Marvel by July 2016 otherwise Feige would have confirmed the rights reverted when he was asked about it in June 2017 and again in July 2017. Gunn would have also confirmed when asked about it.
FYI, the extension fee Sony had to pay Marvel prior to the 2011 deal was 5MM after 9 months from the previous movie release. It is a one time fee per movie and not a monthly or yearly fee. They then had to pay Marvel 10MM (going up for every movie going forward up to a limit) an upfront fee to start shooting the next movie. All that money, though, would be taken out of the royalty fee Marvel received from the BO gross, which was 5%. So, the extension fee and advanced fee are simply "down payments" to make the movie. Ghost Rider returned so fast to Marvel because Sony didn't pay the extension fee.
Even if Fox didn't pay that much, and only paid 30% of that value, that is still a significant chunk of change for someone not planning to keep the rights. I truly believe they plan to reboot it again, unfortunately.
FF contract is probably written as filming/photography must start 6 years after the previous film and released 8 years after the previous film, with an option from Fox to pay to extend the license within 11 months of release from the previous film, making the extension period 6y11m and 8y11m. If that is true, then Fox has until 07/2021 to start production on the next FF movie.
It's not a simple matter of this character could be used in Story X and that character can be used in story Y. From that point of view, Marvel doesn't need any of the missing characters. They have thousands of characters they could use to tell an infinite number of stories.
But Doom and Galactus are iconic characters that define the Marvel universe. Without them, the MCU will never feel right.
If I were Fox, I'd pay the relatively small fee to try to get something out of Marvel. If Fox offered to completely turn over the rights to Marvel right now for $10 million, Marvel would jump at the deal. Fox is almost certainly hoping for and holding out for more, but they know they can get more than their money back at any time over the next several years. So it would be a no-brainer to pay the fee.
Using your rationale, Sony should have done the same for Ghost Rider.
TBF, both Ghost Rider movies werent well received, so I dont know if it wouldve been worth it.
Yep. Marvel wouldn't have paid anything for Ghost Rider. Ghost rider doesn't have Doom, Galactus etc. and Marvel wasn't anxious to make another Ghost rider film, so there's no real comparison.
TBF, both Ghost Rider movies werent well received, so I dont know if it wouldve been worth it.
That's kind of my point. Fox paid the extension fee, so they obviously see value there to try again. Of course, Marvel can pay up or Fox could fumble again and miss the deadline like they did with Daredevil.
One thing you gotta remember when thinking "we why they keep trying" is that some point in the chain of command there's an executive who has to make the decision whether to continue with FF or let it expire. And you know the moment Marvel gets it, they'll turn it into a hit. Then the investors and chairmen of Fox Studios will look at that executive and say "why could you have made a hit with the same material?" and likely be very pissed off at loosing a property. It might be safer for that executive to make another film and blame another department, director, actor, analytics, etc. to keep their job.
It's all about money and corporate politics.
The FF rights have value. I would be willing to bet Marvel would write a check right now for upwards of $50 million for them (and they wouldn't have done anything like that for Ghost Rider).
But Fox wants to maximize any value they can get and since the primary value is tied to what Marvel is willing to pay, and since the amount Marvel is willing to pay would drop sharply if Fox made it known they won't be making another film, there's a large monetary incentive for Fox to at least go through the motions of planning for another film.
That's why the talk of potential films and small extension fees are so meaningless. Even if Fox has zero intention of making another film, they need to make the world and Marvel believe they're just that crazy.
And even within Fox management, it's probably not widely known what the real plans are, and real people are likely putting real time and effort into planning potential films. The few hundreds of thousands Fox is paying for that is peanuts compared to the tens of millions that ride on Marvel's belief that Fox will make another film.
But when it comes time to actually put real money behind those projects, I find it hard to believe Fox management really is that crazy/stupid.
And if, at that point, they look back and say: "Gee, we blew a few million bucks trying to make Marvel think we'd make a movie and that didn't work.", no big deal. Risking a few million with a reasonable likelihood of making tens of millions (and/or getting valuable concessions on X-Men rights) is a wise move. I would do the same thing if I were Fox management . . . though I might have blinked by now. But maybe that just means I don't have the balls it takes to play this kind of high-stakes poker.
You have a theory and I have mine. I think your theory is heavily flawed. You probably think the same of mine.
I'll just add this, Disney doesn't need any currently licensed Marvel property. I don't think they want to pay a dime for a property they don't currently need or have plans for. Put it this way, Disney is going to be the number 1 studio in NA BO gross this year. They will have released only 8 movies compared to everybody else in double digits, and number 2, WB, will have released 18 movies by the end of the year.
They don't need to purchase any of the licenses currently out. And, if they wanted to purchase or cut a deal for FF, they would have done so already, like they did with Ironman, Thor, Cap, Avengers, and Indiana Jones.
Yep. Marvel wouldn't have paid anything for Ghost Rider. Ghost rider doesn't have Doom, Galactus etc. and Marvel wasn't anxious to make another Ghost rider film, so there's no real comparison.

I'd argue that Marvel still have properties to mine. Namely, they can still put out Black Widow, War Machine and Thunderbolts on the big screen. (And with Zemo, Shocker, Ghost, Blizzard and Hyde in the MCU, T-Bolts are likely to happen.)
On the TV side, there's room for Moon Knight and Elektra on Netflix and Disney's new streaming service can accommodate Marvel Horror perfectly with Blade, Ghost Rider, Man-Thing and Werewolf By Night. Shang Chi should appear somewhere, I'm not particularly sure yet but I'd like to see something done with him.
Marvel's partnership with Sony is already producing Ultimate Spider-Man, Venom and Silver and Black.
I really feel like Marvel need to work with Universal on getting Hulk squared away, particularly since the Universal Monsters films keep failing after The Wolfman, Dracula Untold and The Mummy all bombed. Universal are sitting on a goldmine if they'd just work with Marvel and pay them to produce Hulk 2 and spin-offs for She-Hulk, Red Hulk and Totally Awesome Hulk. Marvel would have total creative control over Hulk which that lack with their partnership with Sony. Marvel would even have more control over Hulk than they do with the Netflix series. Universal need to stop being difficult and understand that Universal Monsters is a sinking ship but Hulk might actually turn a profit.
Fantastic Four don't need to return just yet considering how much the MCU can grow with current properties. X-Men would cause us to get half the Avengers material and half of what we're getting from the X-Men at this point in time. I don't want the X-Men reverting just yet. I'd rather see Marvel milk villains from the FF, particularly Kang and Annihilus in the same way that they did with Ego.
You have a theory and I have mine. I think your theory is heavily flawed. You probably think the same of mine.
I'll just add this, Disney doesn't need any currently licensed Marvel property. I don't think they want to pay a dime for a property they don't currently need or have plans for. Put it this way, Disney is going to be the number 1 studio in NA BO gross this year. They will have released only 8 movies compared to everybody else in double digits, and number 2, WB, will have released 18 movies by the end of the year.
They don't need to purchase any of the licenses currently out. And, if they wanted to purchase or cut a deal for FF, they would have done so already, like they did with Ironman, Thor, Cap, Avengers, and Indiana Jones.