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5 Innovative Ways Hollywood Is Screwing You Over

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5 Innovative Ways Hollywood Is Screwing You Over

Here are five of the new, innovative ways that they're screwing us over.

By Dan Seitz     January 10, 2009
Source: Cracked.com


The famous Hollywood sign at sunset. (slideshow)
© Mania

Ah, Hollywood. Where the magic happens.

And by "magic," we usually mean overpriced crap homogenized to death by market studies. It turns out the dream factory that is the film industry is a business after all, and one with the kind of greed that puts Microsoft to shame.

Here are five of the new, innovative ways that they're screwing us over.

 

#5.Double-Dipping DVDs

 

There are sometimes genuinely good reasons to issue a special edition DVD. The technology has improved, so there's no question DVDs released today often have image quality that was almost unthinkable when the format first appeared. So we're always happy for a cleaned-up edition, especially if the original was released back in the early days of the format when you considered it a special feature if you got a plastic DVD case instead of a cardboard one.

More often than not, though, studios will rerelease for any goddamn thing, often tacking on just enough "extras" to give them an excuse to slap on a new cover with a gold or silver bar at the top. A prime offender is Sony Home Video, which apparently can't be bothered to rerelease classic films like The Shop Around the Corner or His Girl Friday but are more than happy to crap out four different editions of Resident Evil.


This movie has been released on DVD more times than Citizen Kane.

Better Get Used to it...

As the profits continue to shift from theatrical to the home market, studios will keep finding reasons to do this. It doesn't help that we keep buying them, apparently on the wistful hope that a new picture on the cover will somehow make Resident Evil something other than terrible.

Just to rub it in our faces, a Miramax exec admitted they intentionally put out separate DVDs for each of the two Kill Bill volumes, saying:

"'Vol. 1' goes out, 'Vol. 2' goes out, then 'Vol. 1 Special Edition,' 'Vol. 2 Special Edition,' the two-pack, then the Tarantino collection as a boxed set for Christmas," he said. "It's called multiple bites at the apple."

Multiple bites. That Resident Evil "apple" must be a freakin' core by now.

 

#4.Ads in Front of Movies

 

Television has had a long-standing unspoken agreement with the viewer: It shows you programs you like, and you in return ignore the ads that interrupt your enjoyment to go to the bathroom, flip around or--these days--fast-forward through them.

Advertisers have never been happy with that "ignore" part of the equation, and one day some enterprising ad executive looked at movie theater, saw how all of the viewers are basically forced to watch whatever comes on the screen with no option to change the channel, and came up with a truly evil idea.


"They're like a bunch of prisoners..."

They'd take the same ads you found too annoying to watch on TV, and project them in the theater! No changing the channel or fast-forwarding, and you often can't get up without fear of losing your seat. This would be the same seat you paid ten bucks for.

Theater chains were happy to take the money, figuring a little annoyance of their loyal customers was more than worth it to add another revenue stream.

Better Get Used to it...

And what a revenue stream it is. They've now got about 400 million reasons a year to keep running the ads, and that number is growing fast. Some markets have fifteen minutes worth of ads before the trailers (which are, you know, more ads).

The biggest chains (Regal Cinemas, Cinemark and AMC) have actually teamed up to form National CineMedia to maximize the sweet, sweet ad revenue. The only thing left is to stop the movie half way through so they can run more ads. Now, in case you thought we were trying to make the theaters out to be the bad guys in this situation, one reason they got on board with this was due to...

 

 

#3.Hollywood Squeezing Theaters for Every Dime

 

Hollywood has the major theater chains over a barrel, and they've been going all Deliverance on them for about two decades now. Pretty much every single thing you hate about the movie-going experience that doesn't involve some jerk on his cell phone can be attributed to this prison-bitch relationship dynamic.

This is why popcorn is like seven bucks a box. Yes ticket prices are ridiculous, but the movie theaters have to forward most of that money on to the studios.


A typical Hollywood executive.

The way it works is the studios have front-loaded deals, so that for the first weekend, up to 75% of box office has to be paid to the studio (Star Wars: Episode I infamously demanded 90% up front). Then each weekend thereafter it drops 10% (meaning the theater gets to keep more of the money as the movie plays).

You see why it's a terrible deal when you realize movies make most of their money in the first couple of weeks. So the studio cashes in during that early period when fans are seeing it based on the awesome trailer, and then the theaters are left with the crumbs when word of mouth informs everyone it's a turdburger.

Better Get Used to it...

As DVD sales have risen, theater attendance has sunk like a rock. So they have to keep afloat somehow, and that means inflated concession prices, the aforementioned commercials and those stupid slides before the movie starts. (See chart)

And through all of that, the studios still have all of the power in the relationship. Their product (that is, the movies) is the only thing that gets people into theaters. The chains don't have much choice but to sign the deal and go scraping for revenue elsewhere. They get screwed, so the theaters have no one left to screw but you, the customer, forming one big daisy-chain of screwing.

Which is exactly the sort of thing you'll never see on screen, thanks to..

 

#2.The MPAA

 

By handing out movie ratings, the Motion Picture Association of America controls the entire movie industry. Seriously. You want an example of a dark conspiracy controlling a major American industry? This is it. Right here. The MPAA decides what you'll see in movie theater and video chains, and just as importantly, what you won't. They're probably watching you right now. Don't turn around.

They've got it set up so that if you're a filmmaker and want it to be shown on the vast majority of movie screens in America, you need an MPAA rating. The North American Theater Owners (no, seriously, they call themselves NATO), which consist of the biggest chain theaters in America, by and large will not show an unrated movie. Nor will they show a movie rated NC-17, which is why one romantic comedy after another is ruined by their refusal to show penetration.

DVD rental giant Blockbuster also doesn't do NC-17, and neither does Wal-Mart. So in short, the ratings system is entirely voluntary and you don't have to go through the process. Unless, you know, you were hoping people would get a chance to ever actually see your work.

This is why Hollywood contractually obligates filmmakers bring the movie in for at least an R rating. But luckily, the MPAA is honest and open with filmmakers about how their films are rated. Oh, wait, no. It's the exact opposite of that. The MPAA is a black box: you submit a film, it spits out a rating for that film, and that's it.

You can recut the film, but they won't tell you what to cut or why. So do you cut from the orgy, or the exploding skull scene? Or maybe trim two minutes off the sequence where a cow shits a leprechaun? All you can do is guess.

But you can appeal, right? Sure you can! The appeals board consists of...members of NATO, representatives of the clergy and studio heads. Good luck!

Better Get Used to it...

The MPAA isn't going anywhere. It's a fairly effective lobbying group, and people like the ratings system, even though it appears consumers largely ignore it (how many of you actually didn't see an R-rated movie until age 17?).

Will they loosen the restrictions of "adult" material? Well for now, movies are actually moving in the other direction as fast as possible. These days the challenge is all about watering movies down to the PG-13 sweet spot (see the Die Hard 4 fiasco), so forget about pushing the limits of the R vs NC-17 envelope. Your studio head is giving you two "fucks" and some side boob. And maybe a pencil through a dude's eye if you're lucky.

 

 

#1.Video on Demand

 

As much money as Hollywood makes on DVD (and now, Bluray), there's one thing about it they still hate. Namely, the fact that you get to watch your copy over and over again without paying them again each time. It's not fair, dammit!

Even worse, you can loan your disc to a friend, without your friends paying to see it. Or, you can sell it back to some record store that deals in used DVDs. It's like highway robbery! You might as well leave these studio execs bleeding in an alley, you cold-hearted bastard!


"Before DVDs, I had four large bundles of money to juggle."

They hate it so much that they've been trying to devise a system that will lure the consumer away from, you know, actually owning movies and watching them when it's convenient, to a system where the consumer pays, every single time, to watch the movie, at Hollywood's convenience.

The first attempt was that venerable cable staple, pay-per-view. Remember when you were a kid, how PPV got "all the hot Hollywood movies FIRST"? Remember also how it cost about four times what it cost to rent a video? Remember how you laughed in their face?


Remember the laughing?

Then they tried to inflict DivX on humanity. DivX was a disc-based format which was supposed to rival DVD. The movies had no extras, didn't display in the proper aspect ratio, and literally expired after 48 hours. The idea that anyone would use DivX lasted just slightly longer.

The latest attempt is to put a squat plastic box on top of your TV that will feed you movies via download. So far, Vudu, Apple and Netflix have jumped into the fray with Blockbuster not far behind. Unsurprisingly, they're expensive, DRMed out the wazoo, don't cooperate with each other and have crappy selection. We're surprised the things don't self-destruct and blow up your house if you try to cancel.

Also unsurprisingly, they're all failing, with the possible exception of Netflix. At least their box doesn't make you pay for each movie, but lets you download however many you want for the same flat monthly fee you pay for the DVD subscriptions.

If that behavior seems less dick-like than what you'd expect from Hollywood, it's because Netflix doesn't really have a vested interest in the studios. Unlike, say, Apple, which has its ties to Disney via Steve Jobs, or Blockbuster, which has been owned by a movie studio, Viacom. So they don't have some guy in a suit in their office saying, "Come on, the little bastards will pay anything for our movies! Screw them harder! No, harder!"


Doesn't play by the rules.

Better Get Used to it...

The studios are still picturing a day when they can say goodbye to disc manufacturing and packaging costs once and for all (as well as having to share the profits with the retailers who sell them), hopefully replacing it with a model where you pay every time you watch a movie streamed directly from them over a digital signal.

After all, this is the era of broadband. Aren't customers ready to go to an all-download model for their movies?

Sure we are! We call it BitTorrent.

 

 

 

5 Innovative Ways Hollywood Is Screwing You Over comes courtesy of Cracked.com.

COMMENTS AND RESPONSES

Showing items 1 - 10 of 12
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jorson28 1/10/2009 11:43:22 AM

Too true - and yes, there does appear to be no end in sight.  I don't really care about the MPAA thing -  biggest sham there is the criteria.  BEETLEJUICE has the "F" word probably twice and it got a puny little PG rating while some R-rated films barely have anything worse in the way of violence than your average Looney Toons classic.  I've kind of come to the opinion that a film's rating is as essential to its marketing as its trailer, and not just because studios don't want an NC-17 to potentially alienate audiences.  Some movies, particularly franchise films, they know audiences just expect to be PG-13 or R.  Just in terms of theme and violence, THE DARK KNIGHT pushes an R-rating and yet it wouldn't even cross an exec's mind to let a Batman film be R-rated. 

What I hate is Hollywood's tie to politics - all these overpaid stars and directors stumping for the left because it supposedly respects the "little guy" that buys all the tickets and DVD Special-Editions (no wonder we're all broke now) while they ride back and forth to their Malibu or Beverly Hills homes in limousines courtesy of paychecks doled out by the right-wing studio execs.  I don't think it's any coincidence that the one election in the last eight years when idiots like Michael Moore and Sean Penn kept their distance from the fray was the one in which a Democrat - someone from their party of choice - finally won the presidency, and hopefully a worthy one. Hollywood HURTS the political parties it tries to help because everyone knows that most celebrities lack any real rights, experience or qualifications to be talking about it in the first place.  Actually, count 2006 in there since that's when the Dems took over the House and Senate.  2004 was the debacle of all these loud-mouthed celebrities trying to help overthrow Bush by endorsing a candidate with practically no consistent appeal or backbone.

Wiseguy 1/10/2009 1:17:56 PM

I wouldn't be surprised if they try to incorporate something like divx in the future. Maybe they'll find a way to limit the amount of times you can actually view a film on dvd, say maybe 20 times. After which you'd have to pay for another 20 by the net or at a local Blockbuster.

Most of these I can live with. The stuff that doesn't get you your desired rating you can cut and have it as an extra on the dvd. Something they already do.

The chain theaters need to stop having so many showings and screens devoted to just one new film. This way most people would just wait the extra week or weeks and see it when the chain can get a bigger piece of the pie. But they make so much money off the concession stand that I don't think they care.

I think we all have to stop buying these dvd re-releases. 99.9% of the time they're not worth it. The LOTR dvd's are probably the most noteable exception. Most add garbage and in some I didn't even realize what they added because it was so miniscule and unimportant.

darkheart00 1/10/2009 2:47:56 PM

Great article.

Hollywood Execs = Money grubbing whores.

Another prime offender in the DVD re-issue nonsense is Anchor Bay. They, like most other companies, are pretty consistant in re-issuing DVD's with new cover art / slipcovers with lots of verbage ("ultimate edition", "superbit edition", "platinum edition", "titanium edition", "restored edition", "anniversary edition", "directors cut edition" and my favorite "special edition" - thanks George) to make you think it's a brand new transfer or possibly some new content. In reality it ends up being the same old stripped down version you bought years ago (Yeah, I'm looking at you "Halloween" and yes I am still bitter). 

StarlightGuard 1/10/2009 5:55:21 PM

did anyone see the movie THIS FILM IS NOT YET RATED... ?

it deals with the nazis at the MPAA....seek it out, and you'll see just how out of whack those people are

DayDrumFour 1/10/2009 8:08:11 PM

It's like young kids are writing these colums.

1.) Hollywood has ALWAYS been this way. Wake up stupid.

2.) Your ten favorite films are also ten examples of a way to get your money, stupid.

3.) "Bedtime for Bonzo" and "Terminator" welcome to the Republican party, stupid.

What amazes me is the memory span of the general public these days.

Get assaulted going down the same entertainment alley over and over again and still complain.

What's worse: Another new Star Wars box set, or the moron who pays for it.

 

darkheart00 1/10/2009 10:41:29 PM

You know you are absolutely right DayDrumFour, we are all cattle to Hollywood in some fashion or another. They know what we want, they acquire the rights to, create and produce what we want, we lap up what they do give us (good and bad) because we are happy to get our feed (who else is going to give it to us.....oh yeah no one). That most certainly does not mean we have to like to when we get slaughtered.

For the record, the person who puts together the new Star Wars box set with no new content, transfer etc., IS THE "moron" (and previously mentioned : "money grubbing whore") for feeding off the interest of fans of those movies. The fan that buys it is simply showing interest / support of his or her favorite films and I don't see how they can be faulted for that. When they get home with their new purchase and realize they have been had is what is wrong here. Hollywood is running a business and they consistantly show what they think of us as customers,

"Fuck the fans. We already have their money." - Tom Rothman (20th Century Fox).

The Hollywood Executives are the morons for treating their customers (fans and theater chains) in such a poor and disrespectful fashion. Because they can do it, doesn't mean they should. Have they always been this way, sure but they are getting worse and worse. I will complain until the day I die. It will never change the Hollywood machine but that does not mean I have to like the way I or anyone else here is being treated. This is a solid article about the state of and continuing decline of this industry, just because you don't agree doesn't make anyone here a "young kid", "stupid" or a "moron".

almostunbiased 1/11/2009 6:27:46 AM

This might be old news, but the article was well done and funny.  Way better than from some other quest columnists on here.  Cracked is hit or miss, but at least this time they had some truth to their comedy which always makes it funnier.

Now I'm not one to buy more than one copy of the same movie, but I have admittedly done so if a new relaese comes out with 40 more minutes or something.  Sure it pisses me off, but sometimes it's like a completely new movie, so it's worth the money.  LOTR extended is a good example.

I still keep waiting for Kingdom of Heaven Director's edition to drop in price, because I hear that is a way better version to, but I'm just too pissed to buy it.

tombaker 1/11/2009 10:34:19 AM

#4....

if any of you have ever watched a movie in Germany you have enjoyed the AT LEAST 30 minutes of commercials ranging from cars to tvs to snickers bars... then after that half an hour (i am not kidding) they have a commercial for ice cream then people come in to sell you ice cream in the theater... that takes another 5-10 mintues depending how many people want something. Then you have trailers and maybe another commerical or two... then the movie starts... I remember getting to movies and waiting and waiting to see a flick and almost fall asleep watchign the commercials... i guess it makes them money because they had it at 2pm shows and 10pm shows so you have to figure they lose a screening a day on their commercials at least.

AND WHAT REALLY GETS ME!!! they would not let you buy a ticket 30 mintues after the "movie" started even though YOU KNEW it was not starting yet... it still had 10-15 minutes of commercials... they wanted you in your seat watching the commercials... ugh... this is why i moved to portugal, here we only have about 10 minutes of commercials about cars, beer, and STDs... but its only 10 minutes :)

Hobbs 1/11/2009 1:03:48 PM

I hate playing the "oh whoa is me" card.

Of course Hollywood is going to try and rip us off.  So be smart about it.  You know they are going to release 4 versions of the DVD you want so wait till the one you want comes out and buy it or better yet, beat hollywood at their own game.  After it comes out wait about 6 months to a year then it will be in the $5 bin at Walmart.  There, you just saved money.

Same with commercials before a movie, do what I do wait 15 mins later to leave for the movie and thus you miss all the commericals...sometimes you might miss the trailer sometimes you won't but oh well...trailers are all over the internet now.   

As far as ratings are concerned...that is a big deal but nothing we can do anything about.  Yeah, Die Hard 4 not being R did take something away from it as I'm sure it will with the Terminator movie this year cause its geared for the kids (see the transformer in the trailer) to sell toys.  That's a studio decision though...R movies can still make money see Gran Torino as an example this weekend.

If movies stop getting sold and you can only get them on demand or netflix then stop watching movies...lots of other things to do in life.  Just like the NFL if they move all the games to their network and force us to pay to watch it I'll stop watching Football.  It's all about choice. 

I could go on but the point being you have a free will so be smarter because trust me, Hollywood isn't smart they are just greedy. 

Now if you choose to sit through commericals or buy 10 versions of the same movie they hey, more power to you but then don't complain that Hollywood does this.

darkblue 1/12/2009 2:08:34 AM

There's another thing that hasn't been widely publicized yet regarding NC17: the theater owners (NATO) (and the MPAA to a lesser extent) are upset about "UNRATED" DVD's. They believe the market for titles marketed as "Unrated" is causing movie fans to bypass seeing the film in theaters altogether: because audiences know full well an "unrated" DVD is going to be released with the material that the MPAA didn't feel like people in Kansas could handle in their god-fearing multiplexes.

never mind the fact that if the studios could actually place films rated NC-17 in multiplexes, there would not be a need to release an unrated version. God forbid an exhibitor actually pay a minimum wage earning kid to stand at the auditorium door for the day to enforce the rating.

This is literally what the theater chains are afraid of: they run an NC17 rated movie, then Jesus-jucing mom in Tulsa raises a big stink to the local newspaper because shes afraid 11-yr old tommy will find a way to sneak in and see a set of boobies. His purity is spoiled forever by evil movie theater owner and the devil himself: hollywood. Mass chaos ensues. Its no accident there are priests on the MPAA appeals board.  This is why grown ups in 21st century america cannot see an NC17 rated "Requiem for a Dream" or "Eyes Wide Shut", or "Hostel part 17" at a movie theater: fear of losing the $10 the jesus juicing mom in bumf- oklahoma gives her kid to go the bijou.

The scary thing is: they're actively trying to prevent you from seeing that unrated film _in your own home_ as well.

 

 

 

 

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