A
Amaris
Guest
Well, if we go by Hollywood accounting, no film has made money ever, so I take it with a grain of salt. 

Fair point! Accountants are deeply creative individuals!!!Well, if we go by Hollywood accounting, no film has made money ever, so I take it with a grain of salt.![]()
I can't see how you can "factor out" marketing costs? Where would you divert that investment in the accounts? Unless Paramomt have an overall annual marketing budget for all releases, which could be accounted for separately.You factor in a $100 million dollar advertising campaign and the theater share and it may not even break even at $400 million.![]()
When talking about a 'what a film has cost', advertising campaigns are not factored in, just like dvd/bluray sales are not factored in the film's 'total gross'... I am right about that..![]()
I guess I'm finding it hard to understand how a Trek film that (potentially) does $400mil is disappointing. Especially since it cost $180mil to make.
It is a bit depressing how the numbers don't seem to be adding up at this stage but Trek 09 was a very unexpected success, it did far better than Paramount or any of us were expecting. I think the freshness and novelty had a big part to play, sequels may do well but this film could be seen as Trek 12 by the masses. If it gets around the same as Trek 09 I don't think it should be considered a failure, regardless of inflation/3D etc
You have a popular villain like Kahn and you choose not to market him and you cast a pretty much unknown British actor to play him. That hurt the marketing and box office. If they had cast the more popular Benicio del Toro and marketed the movie around him as Kahn things would've been different.
You have a popular villain like Kahn and you choose not to market him and you cast a pretty much unknown British actor to play him. That hurt the marketing and box office. If they had cast the more popular Benicio del Toro and marketed the movie around him as Kahn things would've been different.
Benicio del Toro is not a marketable actor, and most average filmgoers have no clue who he is. At best you might get a, "Saaaayyy... isn't that that guy from that film" kind of reaction.
Yancy
You have a popular villain like Kahn and you choose not to market him and you cast a pretty much unknown British actor to play him. That hurt the marketing and box office. If they had cast the more popular Benicio del Toro and marketed the movie around him as Kahn things would've been different.
Benicio del Toro is not a marketable actor, and most average filmgoers have no clue who he is. At best you might get a, "Saaaayyy... isn't that that guy from that film" kind of reaction.
Yancy
Even "John Harrison" wasn't well known, even if he appeared on the posters. The marketing seemed a bit all over the place to me.
There should be a sequel, but there probably won't be a budget increase at all. It's more likely there'll be a budget decrease.If there is a sequel it'll probably only have a marginal budget increase though. There should be a sequel however, Trek is a huge franchise as far as merchandise, DVDs, rights etc go and even if it doesn't do 500m+ world wide it should limp beyond 400m+.
You have a popular villain like Kahn and you choose not to market him and you cast a pretty much unknown British actor to play him. That hurt the marketing and box office. If they had cast the more popular Benicio del Toro and marketed the movie around him as Kahn things would've been different.
Benicio del Toro is not a marketable actor, and most average filmgoers have no clue who he is. At best you might get a, "Saaaayyy... isn't that that guy from that film" kind of reaction.
Yancy
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