Should British filmmakers be more independent?
Mark
takes a look at the future of British film funding and asks whether
Cameron's "commercially successful" films should seek independent
backing...
Much
of the response to David Cameron's recent call for Lottery funding to
be awarded to “commercially successful” films has been focused around
the fact that he doesn't really know what he's talking about. Well, no,
he doesn't, but his latest statement coincides with the British Film
Institute's “A Future For British Film” report, which outlines a number
of steps that should be taken to improve the output of British cinema.
One of the major points of the report is that major
broadcasters should be encouraged to invest more in the production and
distribution of home-grown films, addressing the main deficiency in the
British film industry; namely that it's not an industry at all. You'll
often hear talk of the Big Six studios in Hollywood, (Disney, Warner
Bros, Fox, Paramount, Sony and Universal) but the UK doesn't even have
one major studio to its name.
Look at the Harry Potter films, which are
apparently the ideal model of British filmmaking, in Cameron's eyes.
They're co-produced between the UK and the US, just like many other
commercially successful British films also draw on co-funding and
international co-operation to cover their budgets. Putting their success
aside, the reason why the Potter films were so consistently good
is because they were made in the UK, drawing on the huge national
talent pool, while the marketing and distribution was left to the big
guns in the US.
Hollywood is not always a creative business, but the
separation of functions in the UK generally keeps creative morale high.
Cameron's narrow view that filmmakers should be making more “films that
people want to watch” is so patently absurd that it has already been
debunked all over the place. The point of this article is to ask another
question: given the general quality of Britain's cinematic output right
now, should these commercially successful filmmakers benefit from
Lottery funding, or should they be the ones seeking independent funding?
After all, the most infamous case of a UK Film Council movie that was designed to be commercially successful is probably Sex Lives of the Potato Men, a 2004 film which brought Gareth from The Office
and that bloke from the PG Tips adverts together at last. On a budget
of £1.8 million, this tripe made a grand total of £673,328 at the box
office, and was used as a stick with which to beat the UKFC up until its
demise last year.
If you need another example, look at the misguided Horne and Corden Hammer-spoof, Lesbian Vampire Killers,
which took what was perhaps the most marketable title of all time and
then singularly failed to feature vampire killers who were lesbians. At
least that didn't have any public money attached to it, but it shows the
potential pitfalls of calculating something based on how commercially
successful it is expected to be.
Worse yet, many far better films than Sex Lives of the Potato Men and Lesbian Vampire Killers
have gone on to make less money at the box office. If Lottery funding
is intended, as with all other creative industries in which it is
awarded, to be arts funding, doesn't it make more sense for great films
like Shame or Tyrannosaur to be amortised by Lottery awards, than the apparently more commercial films?
The biggest truly independent success story in British cinema is inarguably that of Matthew Vaughn's Kick-Ass.
To avoid compromising with Hollywood studio heads over the content of
what was still unabashedly a very commercial superhero movie, Vaughn
raised $30 million to make the film by himself. He planned to make the
film and present it to the studios fait accompli, though he still joked
on set that it would be "the most expensive home movie I ever made.”
Kick-Ass the movie still makes several adaptations away from the sometime alienating plot of Kick-Ass
the comic, but these were ultimately creative decisions, and not
beholden to focus groups or test screenings. The film's distribution
rights were sold to Universal and Lionsgate, recouping the film's
production costs even before it went on to gross over $100 million at
the worldwide box office.
Quite aside from the fundamental problem of lacking
an actual industry to produce films, this shows how the creative
business thrives without the concerns that come with a production line.
$30 million is a relatively low budget, for a superhero movie that
features Nicolas Cage, but it also shows that independent films aren't
necessarily synonymous with low budgets.
Elsewhere, ambitious British films like Attack the Block and Monsters have thrived upon a relatively low-budget and a micro-budget, respectively. Monsters had very high production value, making use of currently available consumer technology in its visual effects, and Attack the Block used an economical alien design that was infinitely more memorable than boring, photo-real equivalents in Battle: Los Angeles, Cowboys & Aliens and Super 8.
Films like Attack the Block are plenty
marketable in their own right, and they're representative of what
Cameron would like the British film industry to be. In a good way, I
mean. These are films that appeal to the audiences weaned on Hollywood
fare, as well as cineastes, and so they'll be better distributed in
multiplexes across the UK.
And there is another problem that Cameron has
overlooked- the cost of the distribution model. Although the transition
to digital projection has theoretically made distribution easier for
smaller films, the recent case of We Need To Talk About Kevin
shows otherwise. Despite being based on Lionel Shriver's best-selling
and much-acclaimed novel, the film didn't get much of a showing in
multiplexes.
On a personal note, I know many people living
locally, in Middlesbrough, who are anxiously awaiting the DVD release,
after the three screenings at a local arthouse cinema all sold out, and
the nearest cinema showing it was in Newcastle. There's a film that has
plenty of people wanting to see it, but because it's not seen as a
commercial story, it wasn't distributed as widely.
The cost of distribution is prohibitive even for
films that everyone is talking about, based on awards season buzz or
simple word-of-mouth, and it's even worse for films that are smaller
than We Need To Talk About Kevin. These are films that need the
Lottery funding, because films that are assured in their commercial
appeal don't need the help to turn a profit.
If they took up this policy in other countries, like
France, the odds are that they wouldn't have reckoned on a
black-and-white silent film arriving at Middlesbrough's central
multiplex last week, because it wouldn't have been seen as commercial.
The kind of film that Cameron is talking about is guaranteed to make its
money back in the long run, anyway. Studio tent-poles can no longer
lose money in the long run. Piracy isn't making studios financially
bankrupt, it's just a scapegoat for their creative bankruptcy.
Without big studios running things in the UK,
filmmakers should be proudly independent. The construction of a UK film
industry in the mould of Conservative economics is too ghastly to
contemplate. Lottery film funding, as in other areas of arts funding,
should give privilege to the arts, and not the multiplex fare. This
isn't to say that Vaughn and Joe Cornish and Gareth Edwards have not
made art within their own sphere, but that I'm sure they're getting on
just fine without David Cameron sticking his oar in.
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