Dravokivich wrote: » A business is not going to invest in an individual product it makes no money from, even if overall the business is in profit. Producers require investment to develope the product. Movies / CDs are products, if they are not profitable, there won't be investment in them. Simple really. I'm suprised many people can't seem to comprehend that. Ah well.
af_thefragile wrote: » Avatar grossed $2.7 billion, the awful 3rd Transformers movie grossed over $1 billion
af_thefragile wrote: » Well that's like any other business then. If your product is crap, no one will buy it and you'll make a loss! If your product is good, then lots of people buy it and you'll become wealthy. Why shouldn't this apply to film/music too?
Sindri wrote: » They only get half the gross. It's the people who own the Music and Film studios who make the money. All the stars and directors earn peanuts compared to them.
Duggy747 wrote: » Because this poor lamb needs your money
Dravokivich wrote: » There's a bit more to it than that in this instance. The product is "good" and hugely available to be aquired without paying for it. If there's no money going back in from the product as a result of piracy, they are not going to invest more in similar products.
hooradiation wrote: » See, when piracy hit Hollywood, they didn't stop funding blockbusters -- they stopped funding edgy, creative movies. They're going with safer and safer bets. Good job, jackasses.
af_thefragile wrote: » Why are the movie and music makers b*tching about piracy?
af_thefragile wrote: » The film makers are still making millions and billions in some cases through ticket sales at cinemas. Avatar grossed $2.7 billion, the awful 3rd Transformers movie grossed over $1 billion. Music artists are still making millions through ticket sales and concerts and licence fees paid by TV, radio channels etc. and its not like people have stopped buying films and music because we can get it all for free now. People are still buying DVDs and CDs of the films and albums they like. If you just take a walk into HMV this becomes very apparent. Then why the hell do these people want to pass stupid legislations which has worldwide implications on the internet and then later go on MTV and show off their huge opulent homes and cars they own while bitching about how online file sharing is making them bankrupt.
smash wrote: » The same reason scroungers whine about dole cuts... money is money disregarding the quantity. It's all relative.
davet82 wrote: » yeah complaining that 8 years olds being charged 25 euro for a latest xfactor winner CD is the same thing
af_thefragile wrote: » If it wasn't for the internet not even quarter of the people would have bothered watching the movie. The producers should be happy for atleast getting recognised for their work even though they haven't made any money of it.
smash wrote: » What?
hooradiation wrote: » Yeah, I mean why should people expect to get paid for their work? That'd be fucking crazy, right? This is some of the stupidest bullshit and it fucking astounds me that people can type this and still expect to be taken seriously.
af_thefragile wrote: » If their work is good, they will get paid for it.
af_thefragile wrote: » No one is going to pay €10 to go watch some unknown obscure movie by some unknown obscure film maker. And no one will shell out €25 to buy a CD of some unknown band's music album.
af_thefragile wrote: » An obscure indie film maker cannot complain if 10 million people watched his movie online and only 10,000 went to the cinema to watch his move. Because if it wasn't for the internet, his complete audience instead of being over 10 million will be of little over 10,000 and he'll remain forever an unknown indie film maker.
Standman wrote: » The subject of that article makes 60,000 to 100,000 dollars a year. That's a reasonable salary. Why do people think that just because you make films you should be a multi-millionaire.