Valley Of The Duds Inside Hollywood'S Bad Movie Machine
Noah, Timothy
Inside Hollywood's bad movie machine VALLEY OF THE DUDS by Timothy Noah Feeling blue about widening trade deficits? One way to cheer up is to consider the beating the Japanese are taking these...
...Hollywood almost never makes movies like these today...
...He just happened to be Farrah Fawcett's manager...
...Instead, in all apparent sincerity, Zadan said, "Oh, no...
...Ryan, a friendly, self-effacing sort who's served as executive producer and even an actor in some of Meyer's movies, explained the modus operandi...
...Edison helped himself to Friese-Greene's ideas, and Friese-Greene died in obscurity...
...Aljean Harmetz recently observed in California magazine that in the past two years the chief executive officer of every major studio in Hollywood had resigned or been fired, save one...
...During the last 40 years, the oligopolistic old "studio system" has given way to the more frenzied and competitive world of independent producers...
...Vertical integration" proceeded to the point that by 1945 the studios controlled 70 percent of the first-run theaters in the major cities— those cavernous downtown movie palaces that today have been converted into multiplexes or concert halls or even, in the case of one mosque-like structure in downtown Beverly Hills, an Israeli bank...
...neither do many other independent producers...
...Edison once boasted...
...Rambo is a quality picture!' Even those on the creative side—actors, writers, directors—can succumb to a cynicism that chills the heart...
...In Final Cut, Steven Bach cites a survey that shows that in 1980 more than half the people in America had never heard of United Artists or, if they had, did not know that it made movies...
...To ensure that there would be a retail outlet for their product, the studios combined with many of the theater chains that were evolving in the teens and twenties...
...Jaglom is on fire with enthusiasm for the movies...
...The most fundamental change that's needed involves why people make movies in the first place...
...Hollywood certainly has both types, but judging from the final product, it's clear that it's the pool-fillers who now most often get to make movies...
...So why, when everybody's hungry for success stories about American business (and when America is being led by a former movie star), do economists and newspaper columnists fail to celebrate Hollywood...
...The reason...
...Jaws...
...Studios today are less manufacturers than service organizations that provide money to make films and operate the distribution networks that get them into theaters .) The actors, directors, and writers who work for these independent producers generally are no longer studio employees but free agents, who may sell their labor whenever or wherever they choose...
...Meyer avoids the studio overhead problem by renting or owning his own equipment...
...I told them, `Don't you know that an American boy like that will get down on his hands and knees and pray?' They listened...
...That's $12 million regardless of the film's success, which makes the studio even more inclined to stick to a tried-and-true formula...
...It cost about $1 million and lost all of it...
...On the record or even off, it was maddeningly difficult to get a studio executive to utter even a mild criticism of the competition...
...News and World Report, Barry Diller, chief of Paramount Pictures, received $3.4 million last year in salary and bonuses, making him the highest-paid executive in America...
...But in the age of the independent producer, that title often is also bestowed upon certain parties who need to be bought off before the cameras can roll...
...Hollywood is as short-term as you can get: once a film is done, everyone goes off to strike the next deal...
...Debra Hill, the film's producer, showed me around...
...High concept proposals are by definition easily grasped by the studio executive on the run and, further down the road, by the movie audiences, who are often given only a week or two from a film's opening to determine whether it will stay in the theaters...
...Above all is a culture of insecurity...
...He then started earning more money as an independent producer...
...MITI doesn't win every time...
...he must ask a `grip' to move it for him...
...Another large share of money gets siphoned off for the accoutrements that Hollywood is so well known for—the $200 restaurant tabs, the Rolls Royces cruising down Rodeo Drive, the yachts that huddle port to starboard at Marina Del Rey (the largest marina in the world...
...Ownership of theater chains meant that studios could turn out twice as many movies and be assured that the theaters would show them as double features, pairing "quality" pictures with cheaper, bottom-of-the-bill "B" movies...
...But Meyer also routinely gives away a piece of the profits ("percentage points") to key crew members...
...One of the company's directors answered, "That's not very important...
...That's why large corporations that recognize the importance of innovation and creativity encourage many of their best people to take chances that probably won't pan out...
...Now that studios are no longer manufacturers, they no longer bother to cultivate a corporate image...
...In other words, the solution will likely be more people and less work for them to do...
...as film historian Tino Balio has pointed out, dollars were more plentiful than things to buy, and movies were the most readily available entertainment...
...This in itself is not extraordinary...
...meanwhile, a real fire roared in the make-believe fireplace...
...After we spoke, I had a look at one of his more recent films, Can She Bake A Cherry Pie...
...In my travels through Hollywood, I didn't find anybody else who ran as tight a ship as Meyer, but a few notches up the respectability scale I did find Henry Jaglom...
...Bring back the studios Jaglom's route allows him to make the movies he wants to make...
...The norm is the dry hole, but there are enough gushers to encourage people to keep trying...
...The B pictures were not under much pressure to provide an immediate payoff, since it was the A pictures that drew audiences in...
...The appeal of "high concept" to the buyer—the studio—is that it makes a project more execution proof than, say, a hard to summarize but excellent movie like Places in the Heart, which is about small-town life in Texas, and about the Depression, and about race, and about farming...you see what I mean...
...To begin with, Meyer does not hire union crews...
...Into the service sector Paradoxically, the studio system began breaking up at the height of its own good fortune...
...Another site was quietly chosen...
...These can be stifling (and certainly the studios were), but they also can breed values that extend beyond the bottom line...
...The lack of profit in moviemaking leads to a second reason for Hollywood's insecurity: a short-term orientation...
...Adolph Zukor of Paramount, a former janitor...
...So do various work rules that apply to all IATSE locals—for example, a provision that says all overseas air travel must be first class...
...many sold off much of their land...
...When that gambit failed, he put in a claim for the loop that turned the film in the camera...
...Still, they had a certain zest...
...Sometime later Bach discovered that Heaven's Gate's producer, Joann Carelli, had billed the film for "exactly ten times what the documents showed she had paid" for the rights to the film's musical score...
...One explanation is that, as major American industries go, the movie industry has little effect on the overall economy...
...This cumbersome process makes the movie business very much like oil wildcatting...
...A grip, for example, may not move a lamp used to light the set...
...An example is what has happened to the title "producer...
...One of the best ways was to have your own business...
...Samuel Goldwyn, a former glove salesman, and so on...
...Movies these days really aren't very good...
...As in many aging industries, Hollywood's unions have driven wage rates up and insisted on a maze of work rules that undercut productivity...
...The IATSE agreement also defends turf lines among various locals...
...According to U.S...
...Who, Bach wondered, would see grass in the midst of horses and wagons and smoke...
...During my stay in California, Meyer was off in Europe scouting locations for his next film, The Breast of Russ Meyer...
...Apparently Friese-Greene was under the impression he was protected by a forthcoming patent...
...You're not going to get teeny boppers in the Valley going to Places in the Heart...
...The full potential of that arrangement may be reached only once in a while, as it was, for example, in Charlie Chaplin's films, in Frank Capra's populist movies of the thirties and forties, or, more recently, with the Godfather movies...
...he instead must ask a grip to move it for him...
...Instead, I spoke to Jim Ryan, an old Army buddy of Meyer's who looks after Meyer's business while he's gone...
...Why is Hollywood so insecure...
...Are they motivated primarily by their desire to produce a work of art or by a compelling urge to keep the pool filled...
...The proliferation of unions complicates work arrangements in two ways...
...For example, a production assistant may not move a stool three feet...
...In 1908, Edison joined forces with his biggest rival, the Biograph Company, to found the Motion Picture Patents Company, or, as it came to be known, the Trust...
...A visit to the set of Clue, a new movie being filmed on the Paramount lot, provided me with a useful lesson in taxonomy...
...One model for this kind of entrepreneurship can be found in a rather surprising place...
...But if a producer is to honor the IATSE agreement—and he must if he shoots at a major studio—then he must hire all four...
...Ordinarily, it would seem that the proper solution would be to make the movie business more entrepreneurial...
...In their book, The Movie Business, David Lees and Stan Berkowitz quote Jay Bernstein, the executive producer of Sunburn, on the responsibilities that earned him $50,000: "I didn't really have anything to do...
...After leaving Columbia in disgrace, David Begelman became head of MGM...
...Next comes the studio's turn...
...Inside, Spielberg works happily away on a variety of projects, many of them for competing studios...
...Edison's genius for asserting legal rights easily matched his genius for practical invention...
...As Lumet explained to The New York Times, it came out of frustration with "deals where you work for months and months but no picture gets made...
...But as deal-making becomes more important, so does making the "right impression...
...The studio heads who made these movies were mostly unschooled immigrants—Louis B. Mayer, a scrap metal dealer-turned-theater owner...
...Rather than serve their apprenticeship in TV or OffBroadway, for example, they could work on modestly budgeted movies, much as B players once did...
...Hollywood executives show a distinct proclivity for hopping from one corporate boardroom to the other...
...Motion picture companies fanned out across the United States to get away from thugs hired by the Trust...
...Meanwhile, a wartime hike in the personal income tax—the top bracket became 90 percent—left high-paid studio executives looking for ways to shelter their income...
...some even traveled as far as Cuba...
...One or two big flops can gobble up all the profits from a string of hits...
...At the same time, there's a growing ancillary market for movies in the form of cable and other TV outlets, including the video cassette boutiques that have become a new fixture on Main Street...
...A journalist friend who's dabbled in screenwriting told me that the process of selling out with a safe project before you can hope to make a film you care about has its own ritual phrase: "buying the pool ." And once you've bought the pool, of course, you have to keep it filled...
...If the unions seem greedy, the executives are much worse...
...This focus on where the next deal is coming from not only reduces the inclination for taking an artistic risk—one flop and your phone may suddenly stop ringing—but also helps drive up costs...
...With eight-man crews, remarkably low budgets (Supervixens cost $213,000 to make and brought him a personal profit of $4 million), and, perhaps most important of all, his own distribution network, Meyer is living proof that moviemaking can be reduced to something close to a one-man operation...
...The science project movies all bombed, suggesting that the Andy Hardy Gets Laid genre mercifully may have run out of steam...
...On Vixen, for example, the sound man deferred about $5,000 in wages, taking only about $200 a week in "walking around money" In return, he got his $5,000 back within a little more than a year and eventually realized a $25,000 profit...
...The proliferation of Hollywood unions complicates movie making because each local sets minimum staffing requirements and then all of the unnecessary employees have to be kept busy...
...But even when movies like these are entertaining, they are basically more of the same...
...A revived studio system—one where studios were once again manufacturers—could do the old system one turn better by borrowing one of Russ Meyer's concepts: profit sharing...
...The model for the new era was David 0 Selznick, who left MGM to become an independent producer...
...But individual films usually do not earn much back on the investment...
...That's only fair, of course, since the studio usually puts up the money and maintains the international network of distributors that gets films into the theaters...
...He is also an entrepreneur in the timeworn tradition of the basement tinkerer...
...Ebert, who has written the scripts for several Meyer films, is not the only one to have taken note of Meyer's efficient operation...
...Furthermore, since the ingredients for making a major hit were (and remain) mysterious, there was a strong incentive to roll the dice as often as possible...
...Each of Jaglom's movies after that successively cost less money and earned back more...
...The film, she explained, is based on the Parker Brothers game of the same name...
...A piece of the action How can Hollywood start to overcome the insecurity bred by its excessively entrepreneurial culture...
...This led Bach to wonder who owned the land...
...Things look bright for Hollywood on the domestic front, too...
...When it came out in 1980, Heaven's Gate quickly became a $44-million symbol of what was wrong with Hollywood...
...A few highly successful filmmakers like Francis Ford Coppola and Spielberg have tried, but they can do only so much...
...For example, Local 659, the cameramen's union, tells producers that they must hire for each film a director of photography, a camera operator, a first assistant photographer and a still photographer...
...Finally, there are the wage rates...
...When contracts came up for renewal, they were allowed to expire...
...his most recent movie, Always, was made for just under half a million...
...If you're not greedy about the money,' he says, 'you can do it.' For the past 30 years or so, Hollywood has been dominated less by "companies" of any sort than by powerful entrepreneurs...
...As I write, the local theaters are playing The Return of the Living Dead, Teen Wolf, Pee-Wee's Big Adventure, Summer Rental, The Bride (of Frankenstein), Fright Night, National Lampoon's European Vacation, and, of course, Rambo...
...The roaring demand for movies, combined with the opportunity to reduce the tax bite, led to unprecedented numbers of studio executives leaving to start independent production companies...
...Meyer's secret is that he is obsessed with keeping costs down...
...Russ is a living rebuke to every $22 million movie in history," says Roger Ebert, film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times and co-host of the television show, Sneak Previews...
...Teenager travels back in time and gets to see what his parents were like when they were teens in the 1950s (Back to the Future...
...It's useful to look at it this way: Hollywood is full of consultants and independent contractors...
...Sometimes a studio would buy the theaters: Famous Players-Lasky, for example, acquired the Publix theater chain and became Paramount.' Or the theaters might set up a studio: the Loew's theater chain bought three small movie companies and merged them into Metro-GoldwynMayer...
...Studio sound stages still bustled (though now more often to film TV shows than movies), but for all practical purposes the studios had departed the manufacturing sector and entered the service sector...
...To prepare for the scene, he ordered the installation of an irrigation system so that he could grow grass on the field...
...audiences may just be showing what they'll put up with...
...23 of the 50 were showing American films, compared to 20 showing Japanese films...
...He's since left...
...On the distribution side, he continues to bypass the major studios and works through about ten longtime business cronies spread across the country who get his films into the theaters for him...
...This creates a variety of problems...
...I thought I'd found a rebel against this mindset in Craig Zadan, a former writer for New York magazine who produced Footloose...
...When I visited Jaglom's dilapidated office in Hollywood, he was exultant because he'd just sold the film for a million dollars...
...that job is performed by the "gaffer," the stagehand responsible for lighting...
...That cost $800,000 and eventually broke even...
...Most of the famous producers of the previous era had been salaried studio employees: Warner Brothers' Hal Wallis, Twentieth Century Fox's Darryl E Zanuck, and, most famous of all, MGM's Irving Thalberg (prototype for Monroe Stahr, the hero of E Scott Fitzgerald's Last Tycoon...
...This kind of approach to movie-making recognizes that many talented, creative people work best by being on their own but others thrive within a larger structure...
...Alan Hirschfield, Columbia's chief executive officer and Begelman's main antagonist, left for Warner and then landed at Twentieth Century Fox...
...If he'd asked, we'd have allowed him the extra money...
...Our story begins with an inversion of what we all learned in school: Thomas Edison, heroic inventor of the light bulb, phonograph, and motion picture, was, in the development of the film industry, a villain...
...After blundering into an assignment editing Easy Rider, Jaglom managed to swing a deal for his first feature, A Safe Place, which starred Orson Welles...
...Since Zadan had agreed to be critical if he was off the record, I expected him to offer at least a slight roll-of-the-eyes in acknowledgement that, yes, sometimes exploitation will pay off in a big way...
...Granted, such excess has always been a fact of life in Hollywood...
...Owing to World War II, production had fallen off at the major studios...
...After that studio financed several flops, he was fired...
...If serious filmmakers made movies the way Meyer makes his smut, they could buy themselves considerable artistic independence...
...The studios took on the aura of ghost towns...
...Bach writes that Michael Cimino, the film's director, planned a battle scene to be shot in Montana...
...Col...
...Quick: Who made Star Wars...
...And no place knows excess like Hollywood...
...Most seem aimed cynically at a "target market" of adolescents whose tastes couldn't possibly be as predictable as the movie titles suggest...
...High concept" movies are movies with simple, gimmicky stories that can be easily summarized in one sentence...
...Paramount's earnings, for example, rose from $10 million to $44 million between 1941 and 1946...
...I met with Zadan in his office at Tri-Star Pictures, where he has a deal, and listened to him go through a list of derivative movies released in the last few years that, he argued, showed that cynicism doesn't always pay off in the movie business...
...Now that theater owners were free to do as they liked they weren't about to rent B movies that couldn't compete with Gunsmoke...
...The rise in independent production might have been just a passing fad if two much more powerful blows to the studio system hadn't followed soon after: the rise of television and several Supreme Court antitrust decisions that culminated in "the Paramount decrees," a series of consent decrees from Paramount and other studios that basically put the studios out of the exhibition business...
...Lillian Ross captured that odd mix of vulgarity and inspiration in a portrait of Mayer in her famous Hollywood book, Picture: "They make an Andy Hardy picture...
...Large-breasted women are sort of a Meyer trademark...
...In the lounge, a publicist (Local 818 of IATSE, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees) and a production designer (Local 847) chatted with a reporter from the New York Daily News...
...The Trust's failure to control the growth of the motion picture industry is one of American capitalism's most inspiring stories...
...Instead, Rambo is an enormous hit (and, more to the point, was released by Tri-Star, though Zadan had nothing to do with it...
...In Hollywood, the dealmakers—primarily lawyers and agentsget an enormous share of the cut, and these "transaction costs" mean less money to put into making good movies...
...Under the studio system, everything was geared toward producing films at high volume...
...When an industry is overrun with many small companies, the advantage of keeping competitors on their toes can be outweighed by too much unproductive duplication of effort...
...It is these latter people—especially if they're trying to get a start in the movie business—who would benefit the most from a restructured studio system...
...As in wildcatting, there's little comfortable middle ground between enormous financial success and dismal financial failure, and this breeds a certain desperation, reflected in the preponderance of derivative movies (many of the teen movies are knock-offs of the hugely successful Porky's), sequels, and "high concept" movies...
...A revived studio system would embody a value that Robert Reich has called "collective entrepreneurship ." This is not a contradiction in terms...
...Jaglom worked with a 12-man nonunion crew on Always, four of whom received a share of the profits...
...Among these was the hapless British inventor, William Friese-Greene...
...During my trip to Hollywood, I was particularly struck by the currency of the new catchphrase, "high concept...
...The "high concept" approach is favored by the seller—say, a producer trying to convince a studio to put up money for his movie—because it renders a proposal misunderstanding-proof...
...Forbes has also written admiringly of him, and an entire chapter in Lees and Berkowitz's Movie Business is devoted to Meyer...
...But in Hollywood, entrepreneurship has brought too much insecurity...
...Why aren't movies better...
...While it's true that large corporations are too often obsessed with their quarterly profits, it's useful to remember that most small companies worry about the present state of the books far more...
...Everyone, from the star down to the grips, is inclined to take as much as he or she can get in any given deal...
...Ryan, who has also worked as associate producer, assistant cameraman, and utility infielder, had a similar deal...
...There is even a substantial body of scholarship that argues that Edison didn't invent the motion picture camera...
...Today the assistant property master who earns a guaranteed $1,050 a week has no reason to take less, since he's not sure whether he'll even be working past the current picture...
...With the demise of the Trust, monopoly gave way to the oligopoly that came to be known as the studio system...
...Instead, there have been fewer movies, fewer good movies, and, particularly in the last few years, fewer movies that take chances...
...for example, The Maltese Falcon, the first film directed by John Huston, was a B picture...
...All but one of Meyer's films have made profits...
...The fire was tended by one of two firemen assigned to the picture (American Federation of Guards, Local Number 1): one lit the fires, the other stood by in case any of a less benign variety needed putting out...
...Observing my confusion, Hill helpfully provided me with a call sheet listing all the personnel that had been required on the set one day several weeks earlier in the shooting schedule...
...Steel, we'd expect a Hollywood dominated by small production companies to be less wasteful and more concerned about quality than a Hollywood dominated by a few big movie studios...
...It employs only about 200,000 people, from Sylvester Stallone to the high school student who tears your ticket at the door...
...Theater owners keep about half what they take in...
...Twentieth Century Fox's backlot, for example, became Century City, a large office and shopping complex...
...It was an effective system for nurturing talent...
...Primarily, it still means what it has always meant: the person who supervises production of the film...
...Thus it is a violation of the IATSE agreement to allow, say, a production assistant to move a stool three feet...
...In the billiard room, two drivers (Local 399, Teamsters) shot pool...
...There are moments when the sound is difficult to hear, or an improvised scene doesn't quite come off, but it has a nice, offbeat charm...
...Since most movies were profitable, more of them meant greater profits...
...Surprisingly, however, Hollywood is already very entrepreneurial...
...Even a very entrepreneurial industry like the computer business usually breaks down into identifiable organizations rather than individuals...
...Beverly Hills Cop...
...when America's steel industry led the world, management ignored many crucial innovations, labor jacked up demands, and resourceful (and hungry) foreign competitors moved in for the kill...
...rather, it's a recognition that sometimes people are at their most creative, not when left alone in a drafty loft or in a cramped apartment hunched over a typewriter, but when working in close association with like-minded people who share their enthusiasm for the product...
...A handful of movie studios were built in and around Hollywood...
...Universal's solicitude for Steven Spielberg illustrates this...
...Yet Hollywood makes fewer movies than it used to, and fewer good ones...
...As I write, the agreement has yet to be ratified by the locals, but it looks as though any easing of turf rules will be accompanied by stiffer minimum staffing requirements...
...After a few turbulent years, the studios settled into a new role, that of banker to, and distributor for, movies that were largely the creation of outsiders, the independent producers...
...Security is still probably the chief disease of American industry and entrepreneurship the best cure...
...If you've got a great idea and mediocre execution," one studio executive explained to me, "you can still have a hit movie...
...When I asked him whether he would have wanted to make Places in the Heart, which turned a modest profit, he said he doubted it...
...The industry finally settled in Southern California, which had the dual advantages of sunshine and being as far from Edison as possible, to say nothing of its proximity to the Mexican border...
...At the same time, Hollywood's managers have, like their counterparts elsewhere, fallen prey to "market-driven" strategies that undermine quality...
...But instead of frightening Hollywood away from huge budgets, as it should have done, Heaven's Gate seems mostly to have frightened it away from artistically ambitious movies...
...According to Time, "Spielberg says he doesn't know, and will never ask, the price tag, and [Sid] Sheinberg [president of Universals's parent company, MCA] won't snitch...
...In non-union features, they often are...
...In the study, two stagehands, or "grips" (Local 80), sat in overstuffed armchairs, engaged in conversation...
...Once it became clear that a new industry had been invented, Edison directed his efforts toward securing monopoly rights to all motion picture equipment...
...Compare novels of the 1930s to films of the same period, and it quickly becomes apparent how the movies fell short of depicting the richness of real life...
...The B movies became the training ground for contract performers, directors, and writers...
...Obviously, such studios would have to operate on a smaller scale than in Louis B. Mayer's day...
...But when people, no matter how much they celebrate risk, know that a false step or two may be the only thing standing between them and failure, they tend to lower their sights...
...Frequently, for example, a key agent will receive the title "executive producer...
...Sylvester Stallone asks for, and gets, $12 million for his next picture because Rambo has made him a valuable commodity these days...
...Andy's mother is dying, and they make the picture showing Andy standing in the door...
...After The Maltese Falcon, for example, Huston moved up to making A pictures...
...With the drop in demand and the elimination of a guaranteed market, the studios' old factory arrangement came to an end...
...Hoping to get a job working in Edison's lab, Friese-Greene sent Edison news of his invention, which film historian Kevin Brownlow and others now contend was the first motion picture camera...
...I counted 22 unions...
...David McClintick's Indecent Exposure drew much deserved praise for its vivid account of the corporate power struggle that resulted from the discovery that studio chief David Begelman embezzled from Columbia Pictures...
...The book is an account of the making of Heaven's Gate...
...Now and then he'll go fishing with one...
...Collective entrepreneurship" has its counterpart for consumers...
...Big organizations tend to encourage traditions of loyalty and the longterm commitments that go with them...
...In other words, the minimum wage rate, even before you figure in bonuses, comes out to the yearly equivalent of more than $54,000...
...In a pinch, all of these functions can be performed by one person...
...Timothy Noah is a contributing editor of The Washington Monthly...
...Like any large organization, studios, of course, could be somewhat stifling...
...Hi, concept One movie that did take chances was Heaven's Gate, and perhaps its failure is part of the reason so few imaginative films have appeared lately...
...He turned his powerful shoulders toward me...
...You know what I call a good invention...
...Movies are special, in part, because they reach a mass audience...
...Meanwhile, with the loss of the theater chains, the old double-feature arrangement could not continue...
...This becomes less puzzling when one considers that Hollywood might be that rare industry that suffers from an overdose of entrepreneurship...
...Russ" is Russ Meyer, the soft-porn king who almost singleHandedly created such films as Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, Vixen, Supervixen, and Beneath the Valley of the Ultravixens...
...he has far more freedom than his contemporaries outside the independent film movement, and more than his forebears in the studio system...
...Zadan has a reputation for being a hot young producer, and as I listened to him I began to think perhaps it had something to do with the idealism he was showing...
...By the time he turned his attention to moving pictures in the 1890s, the electric light and the phonograph were behind him, and the Wizard of Menlo Park had become an international celebrity...
...Studios make profits, and people receive more than adequate compensation in Hollywood...
...At the other end, the assistant property manager, who may suffer three months of unemployment after the picture is completed, has a strong interest in not only protecting his guaranteed weekly minimum but in hoping there's as much "golden time" on the project as possible...
...The biggest thing in the picture...
...Short of this fundamental change in values, there are some practical steps that can be taken to help encourage a different kind of entrepreneurship in Hollywood, one that might coincide with idealism a bit more often...
...Summer box office receipts are so important that it's possible that this year's total attendance will drop for the first time in five years...
...the set was a three-dimensional version of the familiar board...
...To Jaglom, the independence is worth it...
...No doubt Jaglom wastes a great deal of time and energy hustling financial backers, time that he can't spend on making movies...
...Instead of a job, one has a "deal" to work on a particular film...
...Lumet's arrangement suggests another option for creative and talented people: why not revive the studio system...
...The result should have been a golden age of moviemaking—more movies, better movies, movies that succeeded (or failed) by taking bigger risks...
...Later he went back to run Universal...
...One way to cheer up is to consider the beating the Japanese are taking these days from the American movie industry...
...But if you succeeded with a B picture, you graduated to the major leagues...
...Security, we all know, tends to breed laziness...
...If you are in the movie business, you do know this: your competitor today may be your meal ticket tomorrow...
...By comparison, the automobile industry employs nearly three million...
...In 1935, for example, Hollywood released 662 features, compared to 323 in 1984...
...But I suspect another reason: those economists and newspaper columnists have been to the movies lately...
...It is important to recognize that movies are ultimately more than just another commodity, that a good movie is different from a good automobile...
...Producers who are inclined to nurture talent over a period of years, with little or no hope of an immediate pay-off, aren't common...
...Another problem with Hollywood's dealMaking culture is that it's terribly inefficient...
...Detroit cop goes to Beverly Hills and wrangles with whitebread police force (Beverly Hills Cop...
...The monopolist of Menlo Park To understand how Hollywood came to this point, it is useful to review a little history...
...Needless to say, this thick web of work rules drives up costs...
...They settle for "high-concept" or a Rambo III...
...During the last five years, so has attendance...
...More broadly, the studio system bred some pride in excelling at certain kinds of films: Warner Brothers was the place that made film biographies and "social comment" films, MGM specialized in musicals, RKO-Radio made the elegant Astaire-Rogers dance pictures...
...These were all hugely successful movies, but unless you're in the movie business you almost certainly don't know...
...But when the potential is realized, the broad national culture is measurably enriched...
...Something so practical even a little Polish Jew would buy it ." But immigrant entrepreneurs, many of them, in fact, Jewish, were soon beating the Wizard at his own game...
...Hollywood, however, is a place where nearly everybody works for himself or for a production company that is the invention of the moment...
...In their own (albeit sometimes stodgy) way, the old studios showed some concern with quality in their willingness to film literary classics—movies like David Copperfield and Pride and Prejudice...
...Part of the reason is that the movie business is plagued by some of the same problems that plague other American industries...
...When he was unable to claim a patent for motion picture film, he did the next best thing and claimed a patent for the sprocket holes...
...Along with a number of other independent filmmakers (John Sayles is probably the most famous), Jaglom has attracted attention by bypassing major producers and studios and distributing films through small distribution companies...
...In addition, studios must be reimbursed for the cost of making prints and all TV and print advertising—another hefty chunk...
...Inventors around the world sent him their ideas in hope of recognition...
...Recently, Universal Studios built a Disneylandish adobe headquarters for the phenomenally successful director and producer, Steven Spielberg, right on the lot...
...A final problem created by Hollywood's heavy dose of entrepreneurship is the noticeable absence of loyalty to institutions...
...They also put the unions to shame in their pursuit of cash and studio perks...
...But give him the kind of job security that a studio can provide and throw in a real stake in the enterprise, and the destructive cycle could be broken...
...The lesson Hollywood offers is actually the precise opposite of U. S . Steel's: even entrepreneurship has its excesses...
...This past summer, however, audiences took some revenge on Hollywood's low estimation of public tastes: ticket sales dipped to $1.42 billion, compared to $1.58 billion in the summer of 1984...
...These can be hard to estimate, owing to elaborate provisions for "overtime," "night premiums," and "golden time" (a special overtime rate for long workdays that can be up to five times the normal rate), but the average basic rate for blue-collar workers— without any extras—is $16 an hour...
...Sure enough, UA's lawyers found out that the owner was Cimino...
...Jaglom then raised money from European distributors who had been enthusiastic about A Safe Place and made his second movie, Racks...
...The director (Directors' Guild) sat at a table in the dining room peering into a loose leaf book...
...Unfortunately, now most do not...
...An assistant property master hired on a weekly basis starts out with a guarantee of $1,050...
...But then a thought occurred to me, which I uttered out loud: with 20/20 hindsight, wouldn't he have predicted that Rambo, sequel to First Blood and obviously derivative of the Chuck Norris Vietnam-vet-as-lonesome-warrior pictures, also would have failed...
...You might argue that his good fortune has more to do with the nature of his films, which will always have a crude appeal in the marketplace, than with his belief in profitsharing...
...They brought Mickey Rooney down on his hands and knees...
...Explaining why he would not have made Places in the Heart, which turned a modest profit, one studio executive said, 'You're not going to get teeny boppers in the Valley going to Places in the Heart .' Henry Jaglom,an independent producer who makes high-quality, low-budget films, works with a 12-man non-union crew...
...A recent edition of the Japanese Economic Journal carried movie listings for 50 theaters in Tokyo...
...the people who appear in his movies (and have gotten fined by the Screen Actors' Guild for doing so) are often friends and relatives...
...In 1984, nearly 1.2 billion tickets were sold in the U.S.—more than in any year since 1961...
...Likewise, many writers, directors, and others on the creative side would find a strong appeal in such an arrangement, since it would free them from the frenetic pursuit of the next deal...
...After all, even those who try to make good movies often fail, just as other creative people (say, inventors) do...
...Standing...
...He'd known that these movies would fail, and they had...
...Sidney Lumet, the director, recently arrived at a different solution...
...Lumet signed a relatively uncommon exclusive, threepicture contract with a single production company, Lorimar...
...Moviemaking has gotten so formulaic that it is possible for there to be three comedies about teenage science nerds playing at the same time— Weird Science, Real Genius, and My Science Project...
...Mustard has a grievance What is most distinctive about Hollywood's unions is the sheer number of locals and, consequently, , work rules...
...He wasn't...
...They were, in effect, factories, employing all the actors, directors, writers, and assorted blue-collar workers needed to make movies...
...Thanks mostly to the development of "multiplex" cinemas sprouting up in shopping malls across the country, the number of movie screens in America has increased in recent years...
...At least half a dozen Columbia personnel followed him there...
...But how many people have the kind of stamina it takes to remain creatively independent in Hollywood today...
...But Meyer's stock in trade is arguably as much a hindrance as a help...
...But even when attendance figures have climbed, that hasn't necessarily been a vote of confidence...
...This wouldn't be such a problem if most films turned a profit, as they did under the studio system...
...It would be like telling how much the birthday present cost,' he says" Featherbedding exists within management ranks just as it does within labor...
...By the time we entered the library to watch the cameraman (IATSE Local 659), sound man (695), script supervisor (871), prop man (44) and actors (Screen Actors' Guild) shoot a scene, the jurisdictions seemed as tangled as the cables that lay at my feet like spaghetti...
...With so much pressure to make a killing on any given movie, it's no wonder that long-term thinking is the rare exception...
...Too much entrepreneurship Clearly, entrepreneurship thrives in Hollywood...
...The second problem is that once all these people are present on the set, they must not be permitted to seem superfluous...
...If you're not greedy about the money but about the quality of the work, you can do it," he says...
...Meanwhile, Frank Price, an executive from Universal Studios, moved over to head Columbia's studio...
...Not having seen all these, I have to concede that some may be surprises...
...Among the companies offering a small-scale alternative to the big studios are Cinecom, Island Alive, and Circle Films, a subsidiary of a local theater chain here in Washington, D.C...
...The gap between supply and demand sent profits soaring...
...The most important reason is that people do not work for companies...
...Reasearch assitance was provided by Jonathan Zasloff...
...many theaters refuse to show X-rated films, and those that do often tack on a charge for protection money for the local sheriff—according to Ryan, about $200 a week...
...Actors, directors, producers, and even most of the blue-collar workers became freelancers, working not for studios but for individual films...
...After the studio gets its share, the producer must pay off investors, actors (who may have guarantees for a piece of the profits, or even the overall take), and everybody else involved in making a film...
...I couldn't get through to anybody who was willing to tell me what the building cost (though I was delighted to note that the phones played a Brandenburg Concerto when I was put on hold), but Time estimated it to be at least $4 million...
...The first is that each local demands minimum staffing levels...
...The presence of the latter is required for taking publicity shots, even though the studios use much fewer of these than they used to...
...Indecent Exposure gives some flavor of this...
...Producers must wait their turn until both the exhibitors and the studio have taken their share...
...The predominance of movie sequels (Rocky IV is due out soon) bears further testament to Hollywood's failure of imagination...
...Mayer leaped from his chair and crouched on the peach colored carpet and showed how Andy Hardy had prayed...
...arguably, they are the highest form of art in America to reach the greatest number of people...
...Steven Bach, former senior vice president of United Artists, shows in his new book, Final Cut, that those on the creative side can be just as guilty of reaching into the till...
...Just as America's mini-mills have proven more nimble than lumbering, oligopolistic companies like U.S...
...According to McClintick, during one board meeting, it came up that Begelman had stolen $35,000 to supplement the $22,000 Columbia had already given him to build a screening room in his home...
...This past summer the producers negotiated an agreement to make these jurisdictional lines more flexible...
...But the more revealing story was not that Begelman broke the law but that he didn't have to...
...But they would fill a void that now exists in Hollywood: the lack of well-heeled institutions that view their purpose in larger terms than just making the next deal or trying to corner the market on next season's hits...
...By 1915, when the Supreme Court invoked the new Clayton Antitrust Act to dismantle the Trust, competition from these outlaw companies had already rendered it a dead letter, and the motion picture industry had been permanently chased out of New Jersey...
...This helps explain a somewhat mystifying phenomenon that I experienced when I was in Hollywood—one that I don't think would have occurred if I'd gone, say, to Detroit to interview executives from the three major automakers...
...They did not have finely developed tastes, and in some ways the movies suffered because of that...
...At the same time, attendance rose to its highest levels in history...
Vol. 17 • October 1985 • No. 9