Montauk
Active Member
I know. It was in meant in jest but I realize now it sounded a little abrasive. I probably should've added a /s of sarcasm.Sometimes people just like things that you don't like. It's OK when that happens.
EDIT: I just did
I know. It was in meant in jest but I realize now it sounded a little abrasive. I probably should've added a /s of sarcasm.Sometimes people just like things that you don't like. It's OK when that happens.
That's basically me and LotR. 1/3 of the way, but I did go back for a second attempt, and got 1/6 of the way. 1/3+1/6 = 1/2, so we're about equal.I got half way and quit. I never saw the need to come back for more.
I liked the cleverness of the whole Hobbit thing, but got bored when it got all dramatic and went into sci-fi-cum-medieval conflict.That's basically me and LotR. 1/3 of the way, but I did go back for a second attempt, and got 1/6 of the way. 1/3+1/6 = 1/2, so we're about equal.
This is known as "Hollywood Accounting", a well established collection of methods for tax and profit sharing avoidance.That's what I've been arguing for a long time. There are accounting tricks. The movie loses money, but obviously someone is making money. A conglomerate is paying itself. But moving money to different parts of itself. And the expenses are inflated.
Article: Mackinac Center for Public Policy
Stop the Hollywood handouts
Film production incentives always flop
For years, movie producers have played states against each other and reaped billions in taxpayer money. The smart strategy for state lawmakers is to stop playing.
... a clear-eyed assessment demonstrates that states lose. Georgia auditors found that the tax revenue the state receives from the subsidized film industry amounts to less than a third of what it spends on the subsidies—even when counting the tax revenue from the people who sell to the people who sell to film producers. New York auditors found similar losses in their state.
Article: Australian taxpayers footed half the bill for Hollywood dud Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga
A huge chunk of the budget for Chris Hemsworth's latest box office flop was picked up by Australian taxpayers, it can be revealed.
Precisely how much public money went towards the latest instalment in the Mad Max franchise is unclear, because the figures are kept secret by Screen New South Wales and Screen Australia.
But experts put the bill in the vicinity of at least $183 million – all for the privilege of having the George Miller-directed action film shot on Australian soil.
"It's incredibly expensive and what value the Australian public get for that cost is questionable," Professor Kevin Sanson, head of the School of Communication at Queensland University of Technology, told news.com.au.
Interesting! Thanks for letting me know.I did watch a fan edit that gets close to Lynch's intention as possible and it was much better. I think it's called the Spicediver cut.
Looks like it might be here, at the Internet Archive:Interesting! Thanks for letting me know.