Jon Reiss: Think Outside The Box Office by Jon Reiss (November 4, 2009)
Jon Reiss, selling preview copies of his new book at the IFP Market in September. Photo by Eugene Hernandez/indieWIRE
As some of you know, I have written a book called “Think Outside the Box Office.” It’s purpose is to help filmmakers release their films in today’s marketplace – especially in the collapse of the festival acquisition model. The book is being released on November 16th. indieWIRE has offered to release a few advance chapters of the book to give a sense of what is inside. For the first week it seemed to make sense to release the introduction which explains why I wrote the book in the first place. I’ve also included the Table of Contents so please post a comment to this article and let us know which chapter you would like to see next. I’m also available on Twitter and Facebook where I post about distribution and marketing for filmmakers. You can sign up for a $5 off coupon for the book, on my website. Think Outside The Box Office Introduction The independent film world is abuzz about the collapse of the traditional independent film distribution model. In recent years, more than 5,000 feature films have been submitted to the Sundance Film Festival annually, and only a few hundred get the golden ticket. Of those accepted, perhaps a handful at best will make a sale that might cover at least half of their production expenses. Another handful might be offered a 20-year deal for all rights to their film — with either a token advance of about $15,000 or no advance at all. No longer can filmmakers expect someone to come and take their film off their hands and guarantee them theatrical release and full recoupment. Any filmmaker who doesn’t understand the current state of affairs is going to have a rude awakening. I had my own rude awakening in 2007 when I brought my film Bomb It (a documentary about the global explosion of graffiti art and culture, and the resultant worldwide battle over public space) to the Tribeca Film Festival. We did our festival launch the old-school way: o We saved our world premiere for a top U.S. film festival that had a history of acquisitions. o We got a top-class sales agent to marshal the distribution world and get people excited about our film.
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AFI Fest
AFI Fest '09
BROKEN EMBRACES
A Film By Almodovar, Starring Penelope Cruz Opens New York 11/20, Opens Los Angeles 12/11 Opens additional cities 12/25 Where is it opening by you? www.sonyclassics.com/brokenembraces/dates.html "Astonishing! A Masterpiece!" Jeffrey Lyons, KNBC Weekend Today "Cruz with Almodovar makes BROKEN EMBRACES soar!" Richard Corliss, TIME Written and Directed by Pedro Almodovar www.brokenembracesmovie.com www.facebook.com/brokenembracesmovie |
I really look forward to reading this book! I just want to know though, does this much more independent method of working mean you have to be a one man band? Or does it still leave room for collaboration with more ‘traditional’ industry folk (in the form of producers or executive producers?) I am a writer/director, and want to retain some sense of autonomy with my work, but I also don’t want to do the whole lot myself!
As it stands now, I talk to producers about this kind of approach and they either don’t really know about it, or their eyes glaze over… What to do??
I would love to read the chapter on “TRANSMEDIA,” as well as the one called “TRANSMEDIA2.”
I know, I’m asking for two! :-)
Looking forward to this book. Like said above, a theatrical release is the easy part. If you have the money, just 4-wall it, but it doesn’t make it a smart strategy.
There are alot of tough issues:
* If you are trying to sell to a distributor: how to organize your festival “strategy”? what are fair theatrical terms? what are fair dvd/tv/vod terms? how much pr is “enough”? should you get a sales agent or a producer’s agent? who’s a good enterainment lawyer?
* If you are trying to self-distribute: what could/should/can you do without pissing off potential future opportunities? how much are you willing to work to “sell yourself” and commit to that strategy? if you’re not an online ace, are you willing to spend the time and resources to become one? what’s the opportunity cost of doing all this when you could be working on another project?
I’m hoping this book lends insight into these areas and more!
I’ve heard too many stories of people selling to a distributor and not realizing (until it was too late) the realities of the “partnership” for better or for worse.
I’ve heard too many stories of people celebrating their own self-distribution and people bow down to them like gods until you discover all the dirty details, spending months and months on the road to create a lot of “buzz” but only little $.
Putting films in theatres is not rocket science. But attracting an audience in a compettitive envrironment remains very difficult. One has to carefully separate the economic functions of theatrical from the ego functions.
There are a few outstanding examples of self distribution (at least at the start) but few producers are financially perpared to assume serious distribution.
That remains the province of distributors who can take a 20 year perspective.
All producers can benefit from knowledge of the distribution machine.
Having read a preview copy of this book, it has become my distribution bible and I will use it for the upcoming release of my movie, Rejouer, the first feature length HDSLR movie. Jon’s book collates so many real world examples of alternate distribution strategies, it’s not only an inspiration but also the antidote to the one trick pony of “Star” driven releases.