I think you're conflating two separate issues:
Assuming a film gets made, I'll leave it up to the backers to determine if they got their money's worth, and I have no interest in defending AP on this point.
I think what @Valenti is actually asking is something along these lines:
"If a franchise spends obscene amounts of money creating a film that the fans hate, and someone else comes along and creates a better film that costs a tiny fraction of the price to produce and is fan funded, should it matter to fans if the film maker makes a profit in that situation?"
Now, I have no doubt that you could fill an entire page telling us why it should matter to fans, but I think that question is far more interesting than "Is AP a crook?".
There's no "there" there. Alec Peters lost that studio a year ago after sinking nearly three-quarters of a million dollars into it and never filming a single frame of Axanar in it.Star Trek is dead. Long live something like Star Trek.
They're 150 million away from being good and dwindling and are you really gonna compare Alec Peter's budget for his project to theirs? They pocket more money than he'd ever see in his lifetime. I'm glad he got a studio out of this. Now maybe he would consider doing and crowd funding original things from now on. He should be looking through scripts and have an open submission policy for another kickstarter if he ever wants to topple Trek and/or Wars for that matter.
Those crowdfunding numbers are documented at AxaMonitor. Those numbers don't include people who donated directly to Axanar via its website, PayPal, etc. However, they do represent the largest share of donors.Do we know how many people donated to Axanar?
Thanks!Those crowdfunding numbers are documented at AxaMonitor. Those numbers don't include people who donated directly to Axanar via its website, PayPal, etc. However, they do represent the largest share of donors.
It doesn't matter if the project started before the guidelines were issued. There is no grandfather exemption for projects started before the guidelines were issued. The guidelines simply help producers understand what might or might not get you sued. As I mentioned before (somewher in the deepest bowels of this thread) there's really nothing that would stop CBS from suing someone who met all the guideline standards. It's the LAW that counts in court, not the guidelines. I also noted that it would be a dick move on their part. I don't think van Citters is that kind of guy. In fact, I think he's been remarkably tolerant about things other IP holders have been really hard-assed about. However, there's nothing to say that A) he won't get fed up and decide that dealing with the whole issue isn't worth his time and decide to adopt a zero tolerance policy or B) that he quits, dies or gets fired and his successor decides to go a different direction.What's gonna happen to First Frontier? That was started before the guidelines. I hope it blows up the internet.
"If a franchise spends obscene amounts of money creating a film that the fans hate, and someone else comes along and creates a better film that costs a tiny fraction of the price to produce and is fan funded, should it matter to fans if the film maker makes a profit in that situation?"
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CBS RELENTS, allowing fan production Temporal Anomaly to be released in three parts later this year. The movie’s original trailer had at least four instances where producer Samuel Cockings (Trekyards) failed to follow CBS’ fan film guidelines. Read the update at AxaMonitor »
I guarantee that non-public release will be on YouTube, probably within calendar year 2018.The Facebook post linked to by AM is fascinating and should be read. Interestingly, CBS is allowing a non-public release (just to backers, crew, cast, and backers’ DVD perks) of the 50 minute film as it was when it was about to be released before CBS called. Then there will be a public release split in 2 or 3 parts, with a different soundtrack and with different opening and closing scenes.
However, I do think a lot of people would be outraged if they realized exactly what was going on if that were to happen.
- No permission to use ST IP to raise $$
- Does so anyway
- Creates a for-profit business
- Makes $$
- IP holder sees $0
The Facebook post linked to by AM is fascinating and should be read. Interestingly, CBS is allowing a non-public release (just to backers, crew, cast, and backers’ DVD perks) of the 50 minute film as it was when it was about to be released before CBS called. Then there will be a public release split in 2 or 3 parts, with a different soundtrack and with different opening and closing scenes.
You can conflate two topics and express your own point at the same time. They're not mutually exclusive.No. I'm really not. I'm making a point.
AP is obviously a less than ideal representation. Thus, we end up talking about his specific failings rather than whether or not a film like the one he promised is something that should be done in the first place. In my opinion, the former is a dead horse topic.How can I compare what Peter's has done with his million dollar budget and what Paramount does with theirs? He hasn't made a movie, they have.
I guess it's a matter of point of view. Will he make "Axanar", the version of the film he pitched to everyone that got them to donate? No. Will he produce a fan film called "Axanar"? I don't think anyone but AP can say for sure.It's not going to get made.
You're being a hypocrite. He doesn't need you to speak for him anymore that he needs me to. I simply articulated what I thought he meant, and explicitly labeling it as such, so no one was misled. If I'm wrong, he's fully capable of correcting me himself. A conversation need not be hamstrung perpetually waiting for a particular party to clarify what they meant.You can let him post for himself and not put words into his mouth.
I suspect you're just using these questions to deflect further conversation and you're not genuinely interested in answering them, but I'll bite...The very question lacks a foundation: how do you determine the fans hated something? How many fans does it take? Who determines who a fan is?
The fans themselves, I guess. A better question would be "How do you determine who a fan is?" It's entirely possible, of course, that the term "fan", as defined by the public, is not a useful term of business for a franchise owner, but as far as I'm concerned they can always make up their own term. "Evangelizing Customer", perhaps?Who determines who a fan is?
Through some sort of polling, or perhaps a user review aggregate. How else would you realistically determine that?How do you determine the fans hated something?
How may fans would it take for something to matter to the majority of them? A majority, I'd presume.How many fans does it take?
You seem to be the one standing in judgment of who is a "fan". That's understandable, though, given the lengths you'd go to defend guidelines that explicitly redefine the word "fan" to mean "amateur".I don't really care much what those that wrap themselves in cloaks of being a "Fan" think. "Fans" are, whether they know it or not, bound and determined to ruin any enjoyment of every franchise because it's not what "they" want.
You misread my message. I said that you were capable of filling a page on why people SHOULD care if fan film makers make a profit, not whether they actually DO care.So, no. I'm not going to spend a page saying what "fans" want, what matters to the "fans."
So, I put this question to you: If you personally felt that a franchise you loved were being mismanaged and that those producing crowd funded fan films where doing a better job producing quality content and respecting the franchise, would you personally care if those making the films made a profit? Or would you just be glad they were making the content you wanted?I honestly don't really care. I just want compelling stories. And that is speaking as myself and not for "fans."
Would that be Axanar getting the same treatment, or fan films in general? Because the former is bound by a settlement they agreed to, whereas the latter are not.Cue axafans going "we should get the same treatment"
I guess it's a matter of point of view. Will he make "Axanar", the version of the film he pitched to everyone that got them to donate? No. Will he produce a fan film called "Axanar"? I don't think anyone but AP can say for sure.
You're being a hypocrite.
I suspect you're just using these questions to deflect further conversation and you're not genuinely interested in answering them, but I'll bite...
The fans themselves, I guess.
A better question would be "How do you determine who a fan is?" It's entirely possible, of course, that the term "fan", as defined by the public, is not a useful term of business for a franchise owner, but as far as I'm concerned they can always make up their own term. "Evangelizing Customer", perhaps?
Through some sort of polling, or perhaps a user review aggregate. How else would you realistically determine that?
How may fans would it take for something to matter to the majority of them? A majority, I'd presume.
You seem to be the one standing in judgment of who is a "fan". That's understandable, though, given the lengths you'd go to defend guidelines that explicitly redefine the word "fan" to mean "amateur".
You misread my message. I said that you were capable of filling a page on why people SHOULD care if fan film makers make a profit, not whether they actually DO care.
So, I put this question to you: If you personally felt that a franchise you loved were being mismanaged and that those producing crowd funded fan films where doing a better job producing quality content and respecting the franchise, would you personally care if those making the films made a profit? Or would you just be glad they were making the content you wanted?
Yes times infinity! No take-backsies!Nope.
Huh? How does this even make sense given this later comment I made in the same message?:Will it be like a Congress of Fans? They'll get together decide that you have to have watched X and Y or your not a fan? That if you like A but not B, then you're a fan?
Oh, I see, I forgot the word "not". Fair enough.For me, if someone says they're a "fan" of something, I see no reason [not] to take them at face value.
So your point is that the True Scotsman Fallacy exists???Go over to a Star Wars thread... Or a Star Trek thread... there's lots of fans accusing other fans of not being a "real" fan.
Depends on what you're trying to do, but I'm not sure how relevant that is from the perspective of whether or not fans should object to certain practices by fan film makers.Why would determining what fans exclusively thought of something tell you? Wouldn't you be more interested in the audience as a whole?
When you poll them, you ask if they're fans. Or you could just poll the audience and not worry if they're fans. Now I see where you're going with this.How do you know you have a majority of the fans when you can't define who is a fan?
Yes, but you seem to have injected that arbitrarily into the conversation. It seems unrelated to the message you were replying to.I'm standing in judgement of uber fans who scream to high heaven when decisions are made they don't like. That cling to a fiction universe like it's fact.
Fair enough. I think I may have mistaken you for someone else. I apologize.I don't think I have ever said that the guidelines say that the word fan somehow means amateur. [...] Fan, amateur and professional are not mutually exclusive.
/me looks at the length of Professor Zoom's comment.I'm not capable. I don't care enough. I wouldn't make a few sentences.
Did you not understand that this is the kind of stuff I was saying you could write pages of?!?I would care if fan films are making a profit. Sure. They are stealing something that's not theirs. They are operating on the backs of OTHER people's work without permission or license. I don't like theft. I believe in copyright law. So, yeah, it would bother me.
Lawsuits cost money, and on something like this, the lawyer will bill by the hour as it's just not enough money to put resources behind. In other words yes, a bunch of people gave $60 - $75 per person on average. Overall, it'll probably cost more money from those same people to pursue and litigate such a case.
Plus, even if the Plaintiffs got an award, it's up to them to collect; and if Alec peters already spent the money, at worst he declares bankruptcy; and at best the Plaintiffs turn it over to a collection companies and get pennies on the dollar (IE the Collection company pays out a portion of the settlement, and is entitled to the rest as a fee and they use their resources to make Alec Peters pay the rest.)
Overall, just not worth it to most folks, and no real guarantee given Kickstarter's TOS either.
Backers do NOT need to sue Alec themselves. They do NOT need to spend their own money to hire lawyers. All they need to do is spend 5 minutes, 1 time, filling out this web form at the FTC website. If 50 to 100 or so out 10,000+ backers can manage this task, the FTC will look into this. They sued a $122k kickstarter rip-off, so a $1.2M+ rip-off would certainly interest them. If they do look into it, I don't see it going any other way than legal action resulting in years of injunctions and an order for restitution. All of that would cost backers $0.
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