Why Deleting and Destroying Finished Movies Like Coyote vs Acme Should Be a Crime | MZS | Roger Ebert - eviltoast
  • tmyakal@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    You’re close to the truth at the end there. They spent $90 million on it, found out it was an absolute dog when they started test evenings, and decided to scrap it rather than pay another $50 million+ on promotion and other post-production expenses.

    With a $20 million write-off on a $90 million movie, they still lost $70 million. They just didn’t want to lose more.

    It still sucks for the actual creators and the fans, but it’s not like doing this actually makes the studios richer. It’s just about not falling into the sunk-cost fallacy.

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      9 months ago

      I don’t see how they only lost $70 million if they spent $90 million and scrapped it though.

      Spend $90m, scrap it, you lose $90m. This comes off your yearly profit that you pay tax on.

      Spend $90m, stick it on Max, do literally no promotion or anything, make no money. Still lose the same $90m. Same amount comes off your yearly profit that you pay tax on.

      The only thing I can think of is that it was so bad that they fear for the reputation of their company. Like it’s so mind-bogglingly awful their share holders will see it and immediately sell up so they don’t have to admit they own shares in the company that made it.

      And I’ve seen Aquaman 2. They ain’t fucking worried about that

      • tmyakal@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        “Stick it on Max” still costs money? Royalties, hosting, closed captioning and translation, GUI requirements all are going to keep chipping dollars out of a product that they did not believe would make them money.

        And, as you say, DC movies have really underwhelmed. Did anyone reasonably think that the (apparently) worst one was going to draw in new subscribers?