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The status of Barbarella

June 7, 2004 Dead Projects, Projects

Paul Wood from Essex, England writes:

I contribute to a Drew Barrymore fan site ([The Drew Barrymore Collective](http://www.drew-barrymore.org/)). I was looking for updates on Barbarella because that’s the film I want to see more than any other. Would you be so kind as to give us an update on how the script is coming along? I’d be interested to know how far along the line the production process is and if the film is still on the cards.

Alas, unfortunately, all of the cards have been played. The project is dormant, and quite possibly dead.

To briefly recap the tumultuous history of Barbarella:

1. Drew asked me to write Barbarella while I was working on the first Charlie’s Angels. Being a huge fan of Drew and the original Barbarella, I said yes immediately. This was in 2000.

2. The underlying rights have always been a mess. Ultimately, Fox 2000 and Warner Bros. agreed to pool their respective rights and develop the project together.

3. Based on the rights they owned, the studios could develop a movie featuring the Barbarella character, but not the plot of the first movie. This wasn’t really much a problem, though, because it’s not like the original movie had a masterful plot anyway.

4. I turned in my first draft in April 2001, and my second draft later that year.

5. I flew to France and met with Michel Gondry, who was Drew’s first choice to direct it. But he really wanted her for another movie (which hasn’t been made yet).

6. Everyone got busy. I did the second Charlie’s Angels with Drew. Laura Ziskin, the other producer on the movie, did Spider-Man.

7. In 2003, we got everyone back together to figure out what the next step was on Barbarella. Unfortunately, we learned that the rights situation had gotten much more complicated. Unless we could get the movie into production within the next nine months, everything would fall apart. We couldn’t, so…

8. Everything fell apart.

9. Now the script is in limbo. Unless someone budges, the movie can’t be made because it involves a character we no longer own. It would be a good writing sample for me, except that I have actual produced movies people can see.

So that’s the sad history of Barbarella. Hopefully, something will change and Barbarella will get her day in the sun.

Everything is turned in

May 28, 2004 Charlie, Projects, Tarzan

For the first time in almost a year, I’m caught up on all my writing.

Yesterday, I turned in the oft-delayed [Tarzan](http://johnaugust.com/projects), and this morning I emailed revisions on [Charlie and the Chocolate Factory](http://imdb.com/title/tt0367594/). Adding to the joyous feeling: this is a three-day weekend in the U.S. (Monday is Memorial Day), so I won’t hear anything back from anyone until Tuesday.

I think I’ll start watching the five episodes of [Deadwood](http://imdb.com/title/tt0348914/) I have on the TiVo.

Freddie Highmore cast as titular Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

May 23, 2004 Charlie, Projects

highmoreI’m always reluctant to talk much about CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY, because I never know what’s been approved by the studio for public release, and what’s supposed to be kept secret. But since this item showed up in [Variety](http://www.variety.com/index.asp?layout=cannes2004&content=story&articleid=VR1117905345&categoryid=1706&cs=1&query=highmore&display=highmore) this week, I’m probably in clear mentioning that [Freddie Highmore](http://imdb.com/name/nm0383603/) has been cast as Charlie.

Who the hell is Freddie Highmore? Never met him. I saw his screen test, and he was great. Tim likes him; Johnny Depp is already in a movie with him ([J.M. Barrie’s Neverland](http://imdb.com/title/tt0308644/)); the kid looks properly hungry and Dickensian. So cheers all around.

The movie starts shooting this summer at Pinewood Studios outside London.

[Random side note: Fans of [The Office](http://www.bbcamerica.com/genre/comedy_games/the_office/the_office.jsp) will recall that the show is set in Slough, which I always assumed was made-up — it sounds too gratingly pedestrian to be a real city. But it is real. You pass through it on the way to Pinewood.]

Big Fish sells 2 million DVDs in its first week

May 9, 2004 Big Fish, Projects

Big Fish DVD coverAccording to The Hollywood Reporter, Big Fish sold 2 million DVDs in its first week of release. Many thanks to all of those who bought a copy. Or three. And if you haven’t bought one yet, you can click the pretty picture to buy one through Amazon.

The screenwriter averages about five cents in residuals for every DVD sold, so that works out to $100,000. That’s a solid amount of money — enough to convince otherwise rational Americans to humiliate themselves on reality TV shows, for instance. So before I launch into an explanation about why DVD residuals are too low, understand that I’m not so jaded as to think a hundred g’s is a pittance. It’s a lot, and I’m grateful for it.

The issue of DVD residuals (and video-on-demand, the technology that will one day supplant it) is one of the primary topics of the current WGA negotiations. I won’t go into a long history here, but the formulas used for home video residuals are based on videotapes, which are relatively expensive to produce, and sell for a fairly low price. Technology changes. DVDs are cheaper to produce, and sell for a higher price. But the formula for paying residuals is still locked into the old paradigm. Studios make a hell of lot more on each DVD they sell, but the writer (and actor, and director) still get the same amount.

residualsA recent campaign by the WGA East does a graphical breakdown of the numbers, but let’s take Big Fish as an example. According to Video Business, its MSRP is $28.95, but most people will pay less than that. Let’s say $20, which is what you’d pay on Amazon. And Amazon is still pulling a 25% markup at that price; it buys the DVD wholesale at $16.

How much does it cost to manufacture, package, distribute and market each DVD? On average, $5.45. So the studio is making a profit of $10.55 on each DVD sold. For Big Fish, that means Columbia/TriStar has made $21.1 million _profit_ in just one week. Of that, the writer gets the “point-one.”

I’m certainly not faulting the studios for having found a great business model. I love DVDs. But whenever writers, directors or actors ask for a greater chunk of residuals, the studios cry poverty, which is absurd. True, fewer movies are earning their investment back in their initial domestic run, but that’s largely because of inflated production and marketing costs. The box office is still incredibly strong, and distributors have never had a cash stream like DVD.

The other arena in which DVDs are crucial is television. TV writers used to make their real money in syndication. Increasingly, series are sold on DVD, which greatly cuts down on the syndication life of a show. After all, who wants to watch an old Smallville at 6:00 p.m. with commercials, when they have a pristine copy sitting on the shelf? Since DVD residuals for TV shows are much lower than syndication residuals, the writer loses.

So how much _should_ the writer get for residuals? Per unit, one percent of the wholesale price. It’s a nice, easy-to-understand figure, which works out to 16 cents per copy. *This will never happen.* But it would be fair.

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