Okay, but what's the breakeven point for a $150 million production plus promotion? A 1991 article in The New York Times mentioned $100 domestic gross required to break even on the original $41 million production budget proposed for TUC, which was trimmed to $27 million, with the stars agreeing to a piece of the action instead of up-front salaries.
Article
Okay, but what's the breakeven point for a $150 million production plus promotion? A 1991 article in The New York Times mentioned $100 domestic gross required to break even on the original $41 million production budget proposed for TUC, which was trimmed to $27 million, with the stars agreeing to a piece of the action instead of up-front salaries.
Article
Okay, but what's the breakeven point for a $150 million production plus promotion? A 1991 article in The New York Times mentioned $100 domestic gross required to break even on the original $41 million production budget proposed for TUC, which was trimmed to $27 million, with the stars agreeing to a piece of the action instead of up-front salaries.
Article
It used to be something like double production cost. Nowadays it doesn't even really matter since a lot of movies don't break even until DVD sales. But I would think that around $250 million may be enough to be close to breaking even assuming at least $50-75 million in promotion, which may be on the low end. But it also depends on how much each production company contributed to the movie.
For example, WB will make a decent profit on T4 just because they only paid $50 million + promotion for the domestic rights.
Okay, but what's the breakeven point for a $150 million production plus promotion? A 1991 article in The New York Times mentioned $100 domestic gross required to break even on the original $41 million production budget proposed for TUC, which was trimmed to $27 million, with the stars agreeing to a piece of the action instead of up-front salaries.
Article
It used to be something like double production cost. Nowadays it doesn't even really matter since a lot of movies don't break even until DVD sales. But I would think that around $250 million may be enough to be close to breaking even assuming at least $50-75 million in promotion, which may be on the low end. But it also depends on how much each production company contributed to the movie.
For example, WB will make a decent profit on T4 just because they only paid $50 million + promotion for the domestic rights.
But I thought it was 3 times the production cost to break even as studio gets less after each passing week on a sliding scale.
which means £450 million to break even.
But I thought it was 3 times the production cost to break even as studio gets less after each passing week on a sliding scale.
which means £450 million to break even.
$3.5million overseas. Overseas total $119,000,000 - Worldwide total $351,000,000
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/world/news/e3ie636164bd8df42b4158c228eeb1eb078
There is no need to crunch the numbers. This movie is going to make shitloads of money for Paramount. It's going to be huge on home video.
I have my reservations about the movie but it is a fantastic reinvigoration for the franchise. I hope the next movies manage to be substantive as well as exciting, I kind of fear that the success of the movie might lead the suits into thinking they know what the series needs and start getting their hands in it.
Still, it's crazy numbers, on a personal selfish note I feel vindicated by my long-held position that a break would only strengthen the franchise not kill it as some thought when Enterprise went off the air and that such a thing was only a few years away.
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