If you are going to assert that something like that is the case, it is going to require something more than "Just Take It On That I Am Telling You That It's How It Is..."
If you are going to assert that something like that is the case, it is going to require something more than "Just Take It On That I Am Telling You That It's How It Is..."
There came a time when the Old Gods died! The Brave died with the Cunning! The Noble perished locked in battle with unleashed Evil! It was the last day for them! An ancient era was passing in fiery holocaust!
So I guess that's what I am asking when we see something like "Chris Evans signed for 6" is it really 6? Or is it like 3 movies with 3 options? Like I saw Paul Rudd once explain that he signed a deal that's basically "three-plus-plus-plus" which is 6 but is that three plus three options?
Again...in the end...it doesn't matter but I saw this topic taking off and it piqued my interest, for whatever reason.
never mine
Last edited by Raiders; 09-12-2018 at 10:13 AM.
Disney made 4 BILLION Dollars from MCU ticket sales alone not including merchandising even if they let the entire cast to GOTG Vol. 3 and they have to pay them it will not break a bank. I'm not saying they will but worst case scenario it's still making a mountain out of ant hill.
It depends on the actor contract, some actors sign good deals and some sign bad deals.
I'm sure if a movie is never made, there might be some compensation, but it"s not going to be close to money if the movie was made.
No company is going to give away millions for nothing.
Last edited by Raiders; 09-12-2018 at 11:40 AM.
One they signed under Ike who was cheap two it's not giving away millions for nothing.
Contracts guarantee the actors will be available for the studio and will get paid for that availability. I hate to echo this but you seriously don't understand how contracts work look up golden parachutes.
Actually it will be close to the what the movie would have made, if not EXACTLY what the movie would have made, or else no actor would ever sign a multi-picture contract. There has to be something in it for the actor cause contracts usually have clauses about not starring in other movies to keep their schedule free. If a movie is never made for any reason that the actor couldn't control, he could have made money in the interim by starring in another movie with another studio, and as such its baked into the contract that they'll get paid regardless, i.e., pay or play.
I swear this has been explained no less than 50 times by now. And unless the actor's agent is a complete moron that agent will negotiate a contract exactly like that.
So if 2 actors signs for 3 movie deal and one actor gets $10 million and the other gets $7 miilion for the second movie. But if the second is not made, are you saying the studio still has to pay this money to the actors?
And the studio also has to pay the actors for the nonexistent third movie?
Last edited by Raiders; 09-12-2018 at 12:33 PM.
You can try and move goalpost and add new stuff it won't change what I and others have said. YES, whether you like it or not that's how it works. You're looking at it as a "nonexistent movie" instead of paying for their availability. The contracts make sure you don't keep an actor waiting for a movie that doesn't happen when they could have been elsewhere with another studio actually making a movie that did. I and others can't explain it any plainer than that. If a studio does that, there's a financial repercussion. Just like studios aren't a charity, actors aren't in it for charity either.