What in the world does that mean? It doesn't matter if it's a "normal production" the point is, that was the money that was raised, that people gave. So they either have to earmark the original Kickstarter money for the gifts and shipping and so on, or they have to get that money from the PROFITS of the film. The point is this: for a film to be considered "successful" it must make more money than was spent to make it. That includes ALL costs, including promotions and gifts and shipping and so on.
Nonsense.
First you forget that WB didn't put up the kickstarter money and those who did expect no return so there is absolutely no need to make any of that money back. People paid for that.
Second, what I mean by normal is that for most movies nobody just sucks away 5% of the budget (I made a big mistake with the 20% figure though, it seems it is 5%) and they don't have to ship out all sorts of posters and t-shirts and so on and so forth. (I think where I came up with 15-20% is that is what they said the costs of kickstarer's take plus handling all the doodads took out of the $5.7mil) Anyway, none of those costs matter. They are totally irrelevant. So you can't count those expenses as money that needs to be made back in tickets sales or VOD or whatnot.
So the actual films budget is something like 20% less.
If they made a new one under normal circumstances none of that stuff would have to be made back since none of it would exist.
(although depending upon whether they count the backer DVDs/VOD money and to what degree you may or may not need to add that money back in)
There basically was no advertising. I heard one commercial was shown one single time on the CW and that was it. They probably did have to pay some staff to help with talk-show bookings and such. Maybe a tiny bit to have it somewhat featured on iTunes.
Firstly, as far as the future of the Veronica Mars franchise continuing, it's a little bit more important than "it would have been nice". The movie being successful was absolutely critical for the franchise to continue. The movie tanked, it's that simple. So, the books may happen, but beyond that, Veronica Mars is dead.
Way early to be so definitive about it. It certainly didn't do it to the point they could be instantly certain it's on. It's probably very borderline. I certainly am somewhat worried.
Secondly, where in the world do you get that "it did better than predicted"? By whom? Naysayers? Maybe, but not the production team, not Warner Brothers!
There was some little talk that supposedly WB didn't have much faith and expected only about $1mil for the opening weekend. That was not rumored to be the number they wanted, but rumored to be what they pessimistically expected. Supposedly. May or may not be the truth.
Haha! Do you actually think that the people that made Veronica Mars (including Warner Brothers) went into this predicting it would make less than 3.7 million dollars at the box office?! What producers would consider spending 7 million dollars on a movie that ultimately earned 3.7 million a success?
Duh, why do you think they never agreed to make it all those years? Precisely because they had no faith and didn't think it could even manage close to $3.7mil to this point (keep in mind the grand total isn't here yet).
They didn't spend $7mil to make it. Probably $4.5-$4.8 or so to start. Unless of course you think they spent $2.5-$2.8mil on re-shoots for a sub $5mil movie?
Although it would have had to have been very bare bones, it sounds like they felt they could scape a movie together, for VM, for maybe $3mil total, if they had to.
Sadly, it's hardly guaranteed now, but it's not impossible yet either, but it definitely is on the more worrisome side of things. There is also probably a lot of tricky calculating to see how VOD on day 1 affect box office and how box office in turn boosted VOD on day 1. Maybe a half week or week delay for VOD would have brought in more.
Also it is certainly not a flop for WB since they put what like $2milish total into it including rentals, re-shoots, flying them around on the jet, etc. So they will more than break even. Of course that is a different story than breaking even had they paid for everything and plus they don't care about breaking even they want profit and then a comfort margin on top. It could work out that a minimal movie might give the numbers for likely profit with nice safety margin. Not sure if they want to back such a minimal movie though. If we are lucky maybe it adds up in the end to just enough to just make a movie large enough for them to go for.
Even if they had more expenses somewhere else, it's hard to see how $3.7mil plus blu-ray/DVD/VOD won't end making them some millions profit. Already $3.7-$2 leaves $1.7 ahead and even if somehow, somewhere that all went to something else that would still leave all the DVD/blu-ray/VOD as profit. It's hard to see how they are going to have lost an money on this and hard to see how they won't have ended up making some. Heck, in that sense it will have made more for them then many giant budget flops where they lots tens of millions on each.
Oh and don't forget that since that profit would never have occurred without the fan input since they would've never decided to make it otherwise it wouldn't wrong to count whatever profit they get out of this as free money to produce and count against a sequel, so they'd have a head start on it. Granted, they probably won't think of it that way, but it sure would not be wrong from any angle to think of it in that way and thinking of it this way they need to pull less money in on the second film to have it make a profit for them (of course looking at THIRD film they'd have to take that back out).
It certainly didn't instantly hit the safe number to make a full-on, no compromise sequel to this point.
It was a tough thing, limited release and no advert means less people and far less people, but kept marketing costs radically down. It's a tricky balancing act, how many theaters, what marketing, when to time VOD. It seemed like news about it was everywhere and it had tons of free advertising, but that is mostly because the fans were hunting all the stories down. If I talk to people who knew nothing about the movie before, most hadn't heard even despite what seemed like all the free press and such.
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