financing and distributing european films in the digital era: challenges and opportunities a joint...
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Financing and Distributing European Films in the Digital Era:
Challenges and Opportunities
A joint presentation by FIAPF, IVF and IFTA
Licenses for Europe - WG 1 - AV sub-group
Who are we?
FIAPF: Film producers’ associations worldwide - 30 national producers’ organisations from 27 countries across the globe from Europe, Africa, Asia, Pacific, North America, and Latin America.
IVF: publishers of film and audiovisual content on digital media and online.
IFTA: independent film and television industry world wide - 150 companies and sales agents from 23 countries, EuropaCorp, Gaumont, K5 International, Nordisk Film A/S, Pathé Distribution, Svensk Filmindustri AB, StudioCanal, Telepool GMBH, TF1 International, among many others.
Short competitive shelf life
IntroductionFilm is a high-risk investment …
No price differentiation
No standardisation – each film is a prototype and has its own business model Very high non-recoverable costs and unit production costs
Very high marketing costs
What is the business landscape like?
EU linguistic and cultural fragmentation – as well as highly differentiated market conditions and financing requirements – drives rights’ licensing activities
EU AV/cinema sector is complex network of large, medium and small-scale enterprises each specialized in individual parts of the industry (production, marketing, publishing/distribution) – reflects nature of EU as culturally and linguistically diverse
Given the level of financial investment required for film, there is a need to share or outsource the financial risk involved in development, production, marketing and distribution, and/or publishing
Cinema release often essential but very poor returns due to high costs and competition for audience
Relative stagnation of films’ presence on linear TV except for blockbuster titles – implications for financing of EU films
Long tail effect in online VoD has yet to materialize – concentration on few titles – EU films need targeted promotion in online world to ensure visibility and discoverability
The market for EU films is highly competitive and changing rapidly…
Pre-sales of rights strategic to financing EU films
Pre-sales to future distributors/publishers by platform, language and/or territory to entities specialized in each platform, market and type of films – local marketing/distributions efforts
Pre-sales build in circulation in multiple territories at project financing stage
Elaborate form of peer review: investment partners are attracted by creative credentials and commercial potential
of the project Before actual production of the film as evidenced by our case studies
Pre-sales of film – national and international - make it possible to finance EU films . . .
. . . and enable and stimulate their distribution across national boundaries
A Royal AffairA Denmark/Sweden/Czech Republic co-production
Winner Best Screenplay and BestActor Award, Berlinale 2012Nominated Oscar/Academy Award Best Foreign Language Film 2013
Producers/Private InvestorsDK/Sweden/Czech + privateInvestors + tax break
Pre-sales Various platforms and linguistic versions and/or territories
Subsidy Arrangements DK/Sweden/Czech Eurimages
Total Finance Plan
23%
€1,474,772
Financing A Royal Affair - Financing Overview
37%€2,382,284
40%€2,555,116
€6,412,172
CarnageA France/Germany/Spain/Poland co-production
Nominated Golden Globeand European Film Awards
Producers/Private InvestorsDeferred fees, producers’ cash, broadcaster equity
Pre-sales Distributors MGs in co-prod countries and other countries + TV licenses
Subsidy Arrangements France/Germany/Spain/PolandEurimages
Total Finance Plan
6%€1,080,000
Financing Carnage - Financing Overview
66%€11,880,000
28%€5,040,000
€18,000,000
Kon TikiA Norway/Sweden/Denmark co-production
Nominated Oscar/AcademyAward Best Foreign Film 2012
Producers/Private InvestorsNordisk Film Prod + pan-Scandi publisher
Pre-sales To all-rights distributors for all Nordic and German-speaking territories + advance on rest ofthe world
Subsidy Arrangements Norway/Sweden/Denmark +Eurimages
Total Finance Plan
33%
€3,960,000
Financing Kon Tiki - Financing Overview
37.5%€4,500,000
29.5%€3,540,000
€12,000,000
Amour A France/Austria/Germany co-production Palme d’Or, Cannes Film Festival, 2012
Winner Oscar/Academy Award Best Foreign Language Film 2013
Producers/Private Investors
Pre-sales
Subsidy Arrangements
Total Finance Plan
34.85%€2,835,051
Financing Amour - Financing Overview
31.80%€2,586,933
33.35%€2,713,026
€8,135,012
What do the case studies tell us?
• Pre-sale of rights to future distributors/publishers in each country makes it possible to finance European films and ensure their best possible promotion to the future audience
• EU’s strength is mosaic of cultures and varying market conditions: films do not cross cultural borders just because they are made available - each film needs separate ‘signalling’ investment for each cultural market – this means active marketing and distribution efforts on all platforms
• Because of these cultural factors, EU films rely on a network of national distributors/publishers with considerable expertise of how to make films cross cultural borders, to make them relevant to a foreign audience
What are film producers/publishers doing to improve cross border access and portability?
Producers are open for business licensing content in multiple ways, including for multiple territories
Our case studies demonstrate readiness to pre-sell/license rights across borders to raise production finance and to increase cross-border distribution opportunities and availability of films
Commercial (platform) and consumer demand for content across borders is limited at this stage – online businesses tend to focus on growing strong nationally and then consider further geographical expansion
Film producers’ and publishers’ contribution to increased cross-border availability lies in making and distributing high quality content with wide appeal – we build cross-border circulation into our very project financing and future distribution plans
TV thriller dramas Spirals or The Killing, or films by renowned film-makers (Loach, Ozon, Amenabar, Haneke, Sorrentino, Garrone, Akin, etc) are examples of such dynamic EU business partnerships
The economic returns on rights is dependent on bespoke distribution campaigns and efforts in each market. Mere availability does NOT create consumer demand – the long tail is not an online reality for most non-national EU films . . .
What are film producers/publishers doing to improve cross border access - continued
Which issues/problems to cross border access do film producers /publishers see?
Online platforms are still at a pioneering stage – business models are formative, competition is stiff and access to venture capital is tough – future production of EU film and AV content depends on platforms participating in financing of production
Economic quandary: few platforms have the scale and cash-flow to be present in several territories. It is vital not to encourage excessive market concentration detrimental to EU competiveness and cultural diversity
Emergent VoD platforms with ambitions to be present in several territories find they need to conceive marketing campaigns in each culture in which their brand exists
Ensure contractual freedom to pursue best possible solution for each individual film in terms of financing, promotion, distribution and publishing
Focus should be on providing national access to European content, rather than European access to national content (subtitling/dubbing; title-specific MEDIA funding?)
National platforms/services in the local language will be most consumers’ first choice in accessing content (be it national, European or international content)
Possible solutions to improve the situation?
Conclusion
The market is experimenting and developing flexible options supporting the continued development, financing, marketing and distribution/publishing of European films
Multiple models and solutions mirror the notion that each individual film is a prototype and requires its own tailor-made business model
Availability of many films\AV content in multiple territories is built into the very business model for developing, financing and producing new projects
Online distribution must NOT be seen as potential future revenue source only – platform/online service participation in economic risk of development and production is vital for the future of a competitive, sustainable and diverse EU film industry
Thank You
Disclaimer: some of the financial data included in this presentation (film case studies) are based on the films’ financing plans, which do not necessarily always reflect with absolute
accuracy the actual production spend, owing to changes occurring between project planning and the production process
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