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Author Topic: Tolkien Trust sues New Line. Haven't received a penny from the films.  (Read 8739 times)
shiznitz
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on: February 11, 2008, 02:04:48 PM

http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUKWNAS045720080211?rpc=44

The trustees want to seize back the rights to The Hobbit.

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Simond
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Reply #1 on: February 11, 2008, 03:58:28 PM

Did NewLine seriously think that they'd get away with what they tried to pull?  swamp poop

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Morat20
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Reply #2 on: February 11, 2008, 08:53:31 PM

Did NewLine seriously think that they'd get away with what they tried to pull?  swamp poop
Probably. I'm sure they were shocked as shit when Jackson sued them. From what I've heard and read about the way production companies do their books, taxes, and routinely shaft everyone and everything involved in creating a film, I'm not really surprised.

I mean, the AMTP claimed to the WGA that they didn't make a penny off the internet, while openly bragging of 10 billion+ in online revenues. They're used to lying and not getting called on it.
Abagadro
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Reply #3 on: February 11, 2008, 08:58:45 PM

I'm sure they'll claim they made no profit on those films.

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stu
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Reply #4 on: February 11, 2008, 10:14:04 PM

The Tolkien Trust seems to be missing the bigger picture (har har). What about all the merchandising capital created by the movies?

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Dtrain
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Reply #5 on: February 12, 2008, 03:54:40 AM

Merchandising may not have been part of the contract.

If this isn't unusual for the motion picture industry then I'm kinda shocked. I thought they would have had things a little more together than that. After all, after something like this, who would be in a hurry to work with newline if they had other options?
Nevermore
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Reply #6 on: February 12, 2008, 05:57:32 AM

I'm sure they'll claim they made no profit on those films.

Because of all those evil internet pirates, I'm sure.


Over and out.
DraconianOne
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Reply #7 on: February 12, 2008, 06:24:01 AM

It would be unfair to think of any malicousness on the studios part.  It's highly unlikely that they made any profit whatsoever on the films.  The actual figures are quite likely to look something like this:

Revenue of 3 films: ~$1000m
Budget of each film: ~$95m x 3 = $300m (if we round up to 100m per film for easy numbers)
Extra marketing cost for each film = roughly £50m which at today's exchange rates would be $100m which we add onto the flim budget and don't forget to multiply by 3 for each film means that marketing costs are $300m + $100m x 3 = $1200m
DVD Manufacturing is not as cheap as the Writers would have you believe and actually costs about $10 a unit which is more than the current price of a single unit in the bargain bin of shops at the moment so in fact DVD sales constitute a loss of about $3 per unit.  Every other household in the world has a copy and there are 3bn households so 1.5bn * 3 = $4.5bn lost on DVD sales
Expenses*: a mere $100m but we shouldn't forget them.

So the total cost to make the films was 300 + 1200 + 4500 + 30 = $6100m - let's call it $7000m to be sure - but the films only made $1000m (and that's before the theater chains took their cut of the ticket price) which means that the films didn't make a profit and cost New Line over $10bn (converting 7 thousand million to the equivalent billions and not forgetting to take into account the state of the US economy, inflation and global warming)  to release.  It's amazingly unfair of the Tolkien Estate to demand money from New Line when they should actually be paying New Line in the first place.

*Being the combined salaries of Robert K. Shaye and Micheal Lynne

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Sky
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Reply #8 on: February 12, 2008, 07:01:03 AM

It would be unfair to think of any malicousness on the studios part.  It's highly unlikely that they made any profit whatsoever on the films. 
ACK!
Triforcer
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Reply #9 on: February 12, 2008, 07:38:51 AM

New Line's lawyers will have forty pages of briefs explaining why they don't owe anything.  The lawyers will be paid millions of dollars for this.  A clerk will receive the aforesaid 40 page brief, laugh, and ream New Line.  Businesses would save a lot of money if their lawyers would tell them when to simply pay up instead of stringing together a lot of technically non-frivolous but complete bullshit arguments. 

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stu
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Reply #10 on: February 12, 2008, 08:10:15 AM


random numbers


Was that meant to be green? Since you included global warming into your argument, I'll just give you the benefit of the doubt that it was. There's no possible way those flicks cost $400M each to produce.

In other news, New Line is planning on throwing away more dollars the world over by filming back-to-back Hobbit prequels.

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DraconianOne
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Reply #11 on: February 12, 2008, 08:39:52 AM

Was that meant to be green?

Are you really asking that question?

It's not highlighted green because I reckon a deaf, dumb, blind and illiterate chinchilla could gauge the veracity of those numbers.

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stu
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Reply #12 on: February 12, 2008, 08:42:28 AM

 Ohhhhh, I see.

edit: BTW, don't run the family business.
« Last Edit: February 12, 2008, 08:45:05 AM by stu »

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HaemishM
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Reply #13 on: February 12, 2008, 08:47:53 AM

Was that meant to be green?

Are you really asking that question?

It's not highlighted green because I reckon a deaf, dumb, blind and illiterate chinchilla could gauge the veracity of those numbers.

Admit it. You're the New Line lawyer and that was your rough draft initial discovery brief.

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Reply #14 on: February 12, 2008, 09:27:55 AM

Wait... so they spent a billion dollars making those movies?
SnakeCharmer
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Reply #15 on: February 12, 2008, 09:42:40 AM

Businesses would save a lot of money if their lawyers would tell them when to simply pay up instead of stringing together a lot of technically non-frivolous but complete bullshit arguments. 

Then the bloodsucking lawyers wouldn't make any money.  Ain't gonna happen.
Venkman
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Reply #16 on: February 12, 2008, 09:43:23 AM

Revenue of 3 films: ~$1000m
Budget of each film: ~$95m x 3 = $300m (if we round up to 100m per film for easy numbers)
Extra marketing cost for each film = roughly £50m which at today's exchange rates would be $100m which we add onto the flim budget and don't forget to multiply by 3 for each film means that marketing costs are $300m + $100m x 3 = $1200m
DVD Manufacturing is not as cheap as the Writers would have you believe and actually costs about $10 a unit which is more than the current price of a single unit in the bargain bin of shops at the moment so in fact DVD sales constitute a loss of about $3 per unit.  Every other household in the world has a copy and there are 3bn households so 1.5bn * 3 = $4.5bn lost on DVD sales
Expenses*: a mere $100m but we shouldn't forget them.

Some serious (as in, non-green) questions/comments:

  • Each movie cost less than half of Titanic? I can't see how that's possible based on what was shown.
  • $100m in marketing for each film (or 100% of the production cost) seems steap.
  • The revenue take you sight for the movies is only for box sales, which stands at $3bn worldwide. That is way more believable than the $1bn you have listed.
  • DVD costs ammortize down over time and it's been years since the first runs were complete. No way it costs $10 a disc now. However, I do agree $10 a disc is accurate for launch. People forget that the $10 not only includes the act of pressing, but also the packaging, distribution, RMO and the rest of the pipeline. But eventually you devolve down to pure hard costs, which I'd estimate are probably closer to $4 for each disk.
Nevermore
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Reply #17 on: February 12, 2008, 09:43:35 AM

Businesses would save a lot of money if their lawyers would tell them when to simply pay up instead of stringing together a lot of technically non-frivolous but complete bullshit arguments. 

Yeah, but then the lawyers wouldn't make a lot of money.

Edit: @Snakecharmer  Shaking fist

Over and out.
Stormwaltz
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Reply #18 on: February 12, 2008, 10:38:38 AM

  • Each movie cost less than half of Titanic? I can't see how that's possible based on what was shown.

As I recall, Jackson was given a lump sum to make all three movies. By doing them back to back to back, he could consolidate and save filming costs. Weta invented and polished many green screen techniques, and he shot entirely in New Zealand. I'd guess the latter lowered costs, plus he probably got tax breaks for being a native.

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shiznitz
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Reply #19 on: February 12, 2008, 11:40:08 AM

From other articles I have read on this, the Tolkien trust believes they are entitled to 10% of gross worldwide box office receipts. The profitability games that Hollywood plays shouldn't factor in.

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Samwise
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Reply #20 on: February 12, 2008, 12:54:51 PM

Quote
The trustees of the writer's charity, and News Corp's HarperCollins cited a failure to pay a contractually agreed 7.5 percent of gross profit for the three films based on the "Lord of the Rings" novels.

What does "gross profit" mean?  Serious question.  I thought "gross" was the money you took in and the "net" was that minus the money you spent (i.e. the profit).
Nevermore
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Reply #21 on: February 12, 2008, 01:21:00 PM

You're thinking of gross revenue.

Quote
Gross profit or sales profit or gross operating profit is the difference between revenue and the cost of making a product or providing a service, before deducting overheads, payroll, taxation, and interest payments.

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Reply #22 on: February 12, 2008, 01:54:48 PM

Is there a difference between "gross profit" and "net profit"?
Nevermore
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Reply #23 on: February 12, 2008, 02:09:58 PM

Gross Profit minus all expenses results in Net Profit or Net Income.  Gross Profit is the first line on an Income Statement, Net Income is the bottom line.

Edit: Gross Revenue will be your first line on the Income Statement.  Cost of Goods Sold will be subtracted off that to get your Gross Profit, then you subtract off all the expenses for Net Income.

Where I work we don't have CoGS so Gross Revenue = Gross Profit.  The 'funny accounting' the studios use likely is in playing with the CoGS.  I never looked at any studio financial statements, but I imagine at the very least they include anything having to do with the making of a movie as CoGS.
« Last Edit: February 12, 2008, 02:18:54 PM by Nevermore »

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Johny Cee
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Reply #24 on: February 12, 2008, 02:43:22 PM

Sales - Cost of Goods Sold = Gross Profit or Gross Margin

Gross Profit - General & Administrative Costs (overhead, administration, sales, etc.) = Earnings before Interest and Tax

EBIT - Interest - Tax (current & deferred) = Net Income

Basically, Cost of Goods Sold is the money paid to directly produce the items you're selling.  So, usually this is raw materials, the labor used, and some amount of allocated overhead (portion of equipment/machinery depreciation directly used in production, utilities used to power production machinery, etc)


The film industry has their own bastard subset of accounting,  much like Health Care and Defense industries, so I don't know about them.


If I had to take a wild stab,  I'd bet that they have special rules relating to the recognition of revenue allowing them to defer or accelerate revenue recognition to better offset it against the multi-year nature of film production.

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Reply #25 on: February 12, 2008, 08:22:23 PM

I would bet that the definition of Gross Profit is a 3 page provision in and of itself in the contract.

If you want to see how Hollywood tries to do its accounting, look up the dispute that Art Buchwald had with Paramount over Coming to America.

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Morat20
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Reply #26 on: February 12, 2008, 08:33:18 PM

New Line's lawyers will have forty pages of briefs explaining why they don't owe anything.  The lawyers will be paid millions of dollars for this.  A clerk will receive the aforesaid 40 page brief, laugh, and ream New Line.  Businesses would save a lot of money if their lawyers would tell them when to simply pay up instead of stringing together a lot of technically non-frivolous but complete bullshit arguments. 
According to a few of the WGA folks, that's pretty much the exact reason the writer's strike happened. The AMTP's lawyers talked a fucking big game, and then couldn't follow through.

But look at it from New Line's perspective -- they're paying those fucking lawyers millions, and they don't want to hear "Yeah, you fucking owe those Tolkein guys a shitload". That's not what they were hired to say.
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Reply #27 on: February 12, 2008, 08:34:22 PM

Is there a difference between "gross profit" and "net profit"?

They answered your question pretty accurately, but the short answer is that nobody calls it net profit to avoid confusion.

The best terms to know are simply Revenue, Costs, and Net Income. The breakdown on the Income Statement are different subtotals relating to the types of costs.

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DraconianOne
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Reply #28 on: February 13, 2008, 04:00:49 AM


Some serious (as in, non-green) questions/comments:

  • Each movie cost less than half of Titanic? I can't see how that's possible based on what was shown.
  • $100m in marketing for each film (or 100% of the production cost) seems steap.
  • The revenue take you sight for the movies is only for box sales, which stands at $3bn worldwide. That is way more believable than the $1bn you have listed.
  • DVD costs ammortize down over time and it's been years since the first runs were complete. No way it costs $10 a disc now. However, I do agree $10 a disc is accurate for launch. People forget that the $10 not only includes the act of pressing, but also the packaging, distribution, RMO and the rest of the pipeline. But eventually you devolve down to pure hard costs, which I'd estimate are probably closer to $4 for each disk.

Some non-green responses:

1. Estimated budget for each film was about $95m.  Remember that they were a) filmed back to back which will generally keep costs down as they don't have to keep striking/restriking sets, b) there was no 3/4 scale model of the titanic to build nor was there a huge water tank to build and fill, c) lots of the sets were CGI rather than practical, d) it was filmed largely on location in New Zealand which is generally in the US.  Also, Jackson's filming style compared to Cameron's is more economically efficient (e.g. the first encounter with the Riders of Rohan in The Two Towers was flimed in one take with 3/4 hand held camera rigs.  The important part is one take.)  (EDIT - Stormwaltz already said pretty much the same thing)

2. 100m does seem steep for marketing for each film.  I made it up.  No idea what the real figure is - this is something they never release to the public but I'd be surprised if it was even that much for all 3 films.

3. Not only is the revenue I gave solely for Box Office sales, it's for US Box Office sales and ignores all other territories.  Hell, all 3 films took somewhere near $350m in the UK alone (by today's conversion - more like $280 when they were released).  Worldwide revenue for rentals for FOTR alone is estimated at $500m (according to IMDB so don't know where they got their figures from)  Combining DVD sales, box office sales and DVD rentals will net you probably something in the region of 1 - 1.5bn per film worldwide to date.

4. DVD production costs on the scale that we're talking about are marginal.  You could probably lower the total cost to something like $2 a disc and that's being very generous.  Most of the original cost is paying an agency to do design the menus, box art, do all the technical gubbins at the beginning.  The actual physical trappings - disc and case - cost fuck all to produce in builk - something like 50c.  (This figure is from a discussion with a very close friend of mine who is head of DVD distribution in europe for a major company.) 

I reiterate - while some of the numbers I originally quoted were based in fact (the cost of the films) the rest were entirely made up and totally fictitious. They're not there for analysis. 

BTW, don't run the family business.


Too late - I already do.  I spent the entire weekend working on my company accounts, setting up payrolls and figuring out how to pay as little income tax as possible.  I make Al Capone look like a fucking amateur (although to be fair, I don't deal in drugs, alcohol, protection rackets or gambling - just the usual extortion rackets that comes of being a freelance consultant.)
« Last Edit: February 13, 2008, 04:08:15 AM by DraconianOne »

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Trippy
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Reply #29 on: February 13, 2008, 04:28:55 AM

The major movie studios have designed their business expressly so that they can claim little to negative gross profits on individual movies and still make millions and billions as a whole. They do this by charging themselves fees for production costs that they pay to themselves. E.g. a studio movie will rent production studio space from the same studio. For that movie it's a cost. For the studio as a whole it's income. One of the reasons they do this is to screw over their stars, producers and directors and people like the Tolkiein estate many of whom have a percentage of the gross profits in their contracts. Only a very small handful of stars, such as Tom Cruise, actually get a cut of the gross *revenues*. He made $150 million on MI:2 because he (and his production company) got a cut of the revenue.
DraconianOne
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Reply #30 on: February 13, 2008, 04:38:07 AM

If I had to take a wild stab,  I'd bet that they have special rules relating to the recognition of revenue allowing them to defer or accelerate revenue recognition to better offset it against the multi-year nature of film production.

You're not wrong about this.  It's a fine fucking art all in itself.  A lot of contracts that are set up - particularly for above the line talent (so writer, director, cast) etc that basically state that they get paid a nominal fee for the film* and then a percentage of profits afterwards.  Below the line costs (set builders, grips, gaffers, wardrobe etc) are generally a fixed rate cost and salary.  Where it starts getting tricky is when people (normally producers etc) start deferring salaries.  These figures don't generally get included in the production cost that you'll find on places like IMDB and are suitably vague for auditing purposes because they'll be something like "x amount per month for the duration of the film production lifespan" but without necessarly defining what the lifespan of the film production is (bearing in mind you have pre and post as well).  

Then you start getting into associate and executive producers who may or may not want nominal salaries in addition to a return of their capital stake as well as interest on that stake (which, while it may appear to be a percentage of profit, is actually classed as as a production expense therefore not declared as profits).  

The fact that the prodution time of a big film (or series of films) can also span years means that depreciation and inflation get taken into account - more carpet under which apparent profits can be swept under.  Then there's marketing and DVD production.  Studios will generally fund all DVD production and marketing centrally but will then assign a cost (not necessarily accurate) to the production budget of each film which eats into the profit of that film alone.  The profit from merchandising is rarely - if ever - declared as being profit for the film but the cost of that merchandising is invariably attributed against the production costs.  EDIT 2: Trippy said this much butter above.

Unlike my first post in this thread, none of this is meant to be green.

EDIT: (I'm going to mention here that I used to run my own film production company and so started to get acquainted with a lot of this stuff.  Being small scale and low budget and largely dealing with short film production it was hardly on the same scale but as producer, I had to sort out the budgets and the contracts for films that cost something like $10k to make - a fucking pittance compared to the studio budgets - but even so, you start getting an insight into the convoluted nature of film accountancy and it's a deep, dark, evil place.  I never had the problem of being sued for profits as there really were fucking no profits to be had!  Having said that, I shut the company down a couple of years ago - the binds of starting a new family - so I have no idea who owns the rights to those films and who'd get the money if they ever did get sold.)

*but only for the filming.  Rehearsals, ADR, pick-up shots and the rest may well get paid at an entirely different lower rate.
« Last Edit: February 13, 2008, 04:40:04 AM by DraconianOne »

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Paelos
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Reply #31 on: February 13, 2008, 08:27:09 AM

The major movie studios have designed their business expressly so that they can claim little to negative gross profits on individual movies and still make millions and billions as a whole. They do this by charging themselves fees for production costs that they pay to themselves. E.g. a studio movie will rent production studio space from the same studio. For that movie it's a cost. For the studio as a whole it's income. One of the reasons they do this is to screw over their stars, producers and directors and people like the Tolkiein estate many of whom have a percentage of the gross profits in their contracts. Only a very small handful of stars, such as Tom Cruise, actually get a cut of the gross *revenues*. He made $150 million on MI:2 because he (and his production company) got a cut of the revenue.


Exactly how does that work? I admit I'm not a practicing CPA yet, but I'm getting a Masters in Accounting and it sounds an awful lot like the SPE stuff Enron got busted for. AFAIK you can't claim revenue from transactions that aren't arms-length. If the studio owns both, under the various qualifying rules, they would have to be consolidated in the financials according to GAAP.

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shiznitz
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Reply #32 on: February 13, 2008, 08:34:25 AM

Almost every movie is produced under an entity that exists solely for this purpose. The financing flows through that entity to the studios and employees of the film. That entitiy then usually vanishes after production. When you go watch a movie, look at all the logos that appear on the screen. There will be one you have never seen before and a bunch that you have. The one you haven't seen before is probably the limited liability company formed for just this film.

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Reply #33 on: February 13, 2008, 08:36:44 AM

The major movie studios have designed their business expressly so that they can claim little to negative gross profits on individual movies and still make millions and billions as a whole. They do this by charging themselves fees for production costs that they pay to themselves. E.g. a studio movie will rent production studio space from the same studio. For that movie it's a cost. For the studio as a whole it's income. One of the reasons they do this is to screw over their stars, producers and directors and people like the Tolkiein estate many of whom have a percentage of the gross profits in their contracts. Only a very small handful of stars, such as Tom Cruise, actually get a cut of the gross *revenues*. He made $150 million on MI:2 because he (and his production company) got a cut of the revenue.


Exactly how does that work? I admit I'm not a practicing CPA yet, but I'm getting a Masters in Accounting and it sounds an awful lot like the SPE stuff Enron got busted for. AFAIK you can't claim revenue from transactions that aren't arms-length. If the studio owns both, under the various qualifying rules, they would have to be consolidated in the financials according to GAAP.

They create companies to produce movies. Believe me, the writers' strike was just the beginning. The studios are going to start getting smacked around by people who are sick of the shaft. The problem with Hollywood is that if you won't do it on their terms, there are 100 other people waiting in the wings who will gladly take your place at the terms set forth by the studios. But yes, it has been common practice for a long time for the studios to shift money around so that profits remain low to non-existent.

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Paelos
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Reply #34 on: February 13, 2008, 08:47:58 AM

Yes, but my point is that shit is not above board. Having tons of companies shifting money around to avoid recognition screams scandal to any auditor worth his salt. The moment you find a good fraud, you get the PCAOB issuing standards down your throat.

That's why we have SOX now.

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