Posted on 12/24/2014 10:03:43 AM PST by PJ-Comix
so? who was going to watch it before the so-called hack?
Isn’t Sony Music onboard trying to convince musicians that music should be available for free and they’ll make it up in volume/celebrity?
Separate but equal topic, why do studio heads sabotage films (especially if they were green light approved before the current board of directors came in)?
See the Battle For “Brazil” for a textbook example.
Additionally even if a little film gets to market and starts to show a nice profit, those profits can be covered up if someone in the studio has a vendetta against you. Hollywood’s creative accounting where the production costs of someone else’s film (or their catering budget) are written off against ‘your’ film. Have to protect the privileged celebs when one of their films is a turkey.
Plenty of films and albums are buried (figuratively) by studios/labels every year. Just because they are completed on budget doesn’t mean that the studio cares to bring them to market (with a big distribution push).
There’s a big difference between not wasting more money marketing a film that there is no demand for, and just releasing for free a film that there is a demand for.
Was there a demand for this film last month? Or was it just the exploitation of “world events” that built up demand?
Since the filmmakers had been in dispute with the studio for awhile over the edit (tone down the exploding Kim Un head etc.) the studio was nervous long before the hacking story broke.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.