Admission
Slips ... The
mantra at ShoWest - the annual conclave of film exhibition - emerged as "we
have to look at the long term." And, on the surface, that's not an altogether
unreasonable statement.
Let's
refrain from making snap judgments. What occurred six months ago may not be indicative
of what we will see moving forward a decade. Things might improve markedly and
they might become more dire.
National
Association of Theater Owners president John Fithian observed that the
nature of the business he represents is cyclic. Historically, it has downturns
but over the long haul it's held its own against every competing diversion from
radio and television to home video and, hopefully the iPod.
I'm
not sure there's much of an argument in the movie vs. television department. Americans
used to go to the movies a lot more often prior to the 1950s and it would require
a considerable number of caveats to maintain there was a more dominant popular
entertainment than that piece of furniture in most people's living rooms, dens
and bedrooms.
In
Fithian's address to the troops, he claimed that over the past four decades admissions
have increased about 200 million in the U.S. per decade. He didn't make note of
bumps in the general population. However, at a post-event press conference he
provided percentage boosts that compared the two curves and in general terms admissions
grew between 2% and 3% per decade. That data would confirm as those that have
taken the long term perspective have noted that the theater business is a slow
growth industry.
Trends
and statistics are a kind of safe harbor for people like myself that crunch numbers
and do analytic pieces. Numbers have an undeniable veracity but how they are interpreted
has infinite possibilities.
There
was an excellent example of this at a panel that focused on the international
marketplace. One reality of the arena that popped up throughout the session was
film piracy in its myriad manifestations. In the movie industry the theft of intellectual
property has a negative economic impact and, in discussing the issue, UIP topper
Andrew Cripps made note of the situation in Russia with specific reference
to the bandit's ability to acquire master material and make top quality illegal
DVDs as opposed to the generally fudgy-looking camcorder efforts.
Cripps'
feeling was that the wise policy was to delay movie releases in Russia as a means
to forestall illegal clones. However, later in the same panel Mark Zoradi
of Buena Vista International also got around to the subject and the Russian situation.
His conclusion was that it made sense to release movies in the former Soviet bloc
as close to day-and-date with the domestic arena to slow down the process of rampant
piracy.
Now, as
to what is the most effective policy cannot be concluded until different approaches
are tried and the results can be assessed over time. The interesting situation
right now is that two intelligent, experienced distributors looking at the same
problem have come to diametrically opposed conclusions.
The
following day I ran into John Malone, a former FBI officer that runs the
Motion Picture Association of America's anti-piracy operation. He maintained a
sense of humor about the two men's views and without favoring one side, offered
that he could argue effectively for either scenario. Malone also made note that
each approach would not put an end to piracy and one would be delusional to assume
the problem could be completely erased. His mandate was simply to make it more
difficult to realize.
I
know a little bit about the long term realities of piracy. I've seen economic
impact studies on the industry that go back 30 years and the conclusions decade-by-decade
are that it ranges between 6% and 8%. It's obviously grown, but only proportionally
to the increases within the industry. In the current reality of annual global
revenues between $45 billion and $50 billion, current estimates of $3 billion
of theft per year fall within that range and attest to the MPAA's effectiveness
at holding the line.
A
Russian exhibitor told me that piracy has become so lucrative in his nation that
it is no longer the dominion of the Russian mafia and has fanned out to include
a diverse range of entrepreneurs. He made mention of the fact that a number of
theaters are located on military bases and there have been instances in which
senior officers have been bribed to look the other way for some late night withdrawals
with the knowledge that the police dare not attempt to make raids on an army compound.
There
is no effective arithmetic formula that calculates that one increases by a factor
of x for additional y factors regardless of what one ascribes the monetary values
for piracy vs. prevention. Someone, somewhere sitting with actuary tables can
still likely tell you that at a certain point it is no longer cost effective to
plow more money into prevention to curb the impact of piracy.
Regardless
of formulas (or in their absence) the current effort has been effective in at
least maintaining a factor that has been part of the film industry from its inception.
The contemporary manifestation of an ounce of prevention has sustained a trend
and one suspects that had they been abandoned recent impact studies would have
shown the sort of double digit erosion that has plagued the music industry.
The
key factor of trend analysis is that when one or more elements change radically,
a new trend is established.
In
accessing the cycles Fithian references, one has to first consider how much of
the long view one should embrace. I have a pretty good first hand knowledge of
box office trends domestic and international that date back close to three decades.
I also have more data files than I care to mention and from time to time receive
requests for comprehensive information from people wishing to make their own conclusions
from the information.
While
hardly a hard and fast rule, most inquiries began by asking for too much information
in my opinion. Depending on the particular need, I'll advise people to narrow
their focus to the past five or ten years. It boils down to the fact that the
further back one looks, the less homogeneous the comparison becomes.
Just
as movies in the age of television offers a manifestly sharp contrast in eras
without that particular box, the fact that one has considerable revenue potential
from such areas as DVD and Pay-cable exploitation alters the perspective of movies
released prior to those elements. And it's not simply new technologies that alter
the landscape. The manner in which films are released and advertised has undergone
significant change that makes side-by-side comparisons of current releases with
films that opened in 1989 or 1995 of limited value.
I'm
with Fithian in taking more than a snapshot perspective but my suspicion is that
we have different focal lengths in our rear view mirrors. It's only fair to assume
that like the panelists involved in discussing the international marketplace,
we will come to conclusions that vary in shades of gray and others that will contrast
as sharply as black does to white.
There
was another ShoWest panel that squandered an opportunity to discuss the present
and future of film going from the perspective of four of the nations most muscular
theater owners. They were asked the easy questions and they gave the easy answers.
What
I'd like to know isn't simply how to meet one's house nut regardless of the release
slate they cannot determine. It's no great surprise that these men want to improve
the entertainment quality of their respective pre-show ad packages but I suspect
each has some innovative idea that's yet to be tested as an audience magnet for
the film going experience.
I
also suspect that each has some queasy feeling from time to time that the slow,
consistent drop in attendance of the past three years may not be anomaly. If that's
the case, each must surely have ideas about the causes and what elements were
within and beyond their control.
I
participated in a conference in London in December with the sweeping mandate of
the global box office. It featured presentations from theater owners, marketing
analysts, statisticians, studio distribution executives and the like and the one
thing that seemed to recur in all the presentations was how little we know about
the movie audience. It's a factor that has grown in importance not simply because
the potential customer has more entertainment options but also because movies
(taking that long term view) have over the decades gone from seeing everyone as
a potential customer to targeting specific sectors of the population.
Dan
Glickman, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, announced
in his ShoWest speech that his organization in concert with NATO had commenced
a first ever research project to gather data about the movie going audience. Though
he limited his description to the broad strokes, he made it clear that the intent
was more than simply identifying who attends, how often and their socio-economic
profile.
He gave
the impression that a wide spectrum of questions would query every aspect of the
movie going experience and the possibility that some elements might not be terribly
illuminative about the future. Nonetheless, there was a sense it would be sufficiently
wide-ranging to provide a degree of insight for an industry that historically
has eschewed more than cursory reflection.
It
isn't simply good enough to embrace the fact that everyone loves the movies. People
not only have films they will see again and again or shared experiences that bond
them to others in an emotional way that few other mediums can claim and fewer
can match in intensity. There are so many factors in going to the movies that
defy categorizations. That's the medium's strength and the bane of researchers.
You cannot come
to terms with something that defies logic but it's crucial to identify those things
that are hard facts. Otherwise some historian of the future will be taking the
long term perspective to explain why movies disappeared and were replaced by
March
17, 2006
-
by Leonard Klady