Please forgive me if it takes a couple
of days to get back to speed. It's been a very long couple of weeks.
Before I get to the business at hand, I'd like to thank the hundreds
of you who wrote to offer your support as my transition into the next
phase of my professional life begins. I don't have time to thank each
of you personally, but please know how much I appreciate each and every
e-mail and phone call. If you aren't up to day, here's a link to yesterday's
column. That said, let's get to the buttoning…
LU-C-E, I AM YOUR
FODDER!: While the roughcut team was up at Sundance, Mike
DeLuca and a host of New Liners were being shown the door in L.A.
Actually, a number of the dead were walking up and down Main Street
in Park City, trying to figure out the best way to express their "joy"
about their freedom. Mostly, I got to tell the maudlin jokes about death
and corporations and they got to laugh... birds of a feather and all.
So, what do I think about Mike DeLuca
specifically? Well, he has his fans and his detractors all over this
town. At one table, the word "scumbag" gets used and at the next he
is "like a brother." That's a pretty good place to be in this business.
A man with no friends is in eternal danger, but a man with no enemies
isn't getting out enough.
The truth is that I think that DeLuca got
out at just the right time. They've been flogging the same horses (big
movies one year, tiny ones the other) alternatively at New Line for
some time. Miracles occur. (See: Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged
Me, whose "miracle" started with easily the largest P&A investment
in New Line history.) But in the end, the movie business is a game of
percentages. And a company either has to be in the blockbuster business
or not. The middle is the most dangerous place. Because two big budget
films a year, amongst lots of smaller budgets, means that if both miss,
the year is dead. And the blockbuster odds on big pictures are more
like 1 in 5.
Where did I get that figure? Pulled it
out of my tuchus. But then, I went to the studio release lists from
2000 -
Disney: Mission To Mars, Dinosaur,
Gone in Sixty Seconds, 102 Dalmatians, Unbreakable.
Fox: The Beach, Titan A.E.,
X-Men, Me, Myself & Irene, Cast Away
Paramount: Mission: Impossible 2,
Shaft, Lucky Numbers, What Women Want
Sony: The Patriot, Hollow Man,
Charlie's Angels, The 6th Day, Vertical
Limit.
Universal: U-571, Viva Rock Vegas,
Rocky & Bullwinkle, Nutty Professor II, The Grinch,
Family Man
Warner Bros.: Romeo Must Die, Battlefield
Earth, The Perfect Storm, Space Cowboys, Get Carter,
Pay It Forward, Red Planet
Now, Paramount only has four on their list
and Warner Bros. list includes some Elie Samaha projects that
didn't pray on the studio's cash flow. But you get the idea. Disney
had three $100 million movies amongst their rocket shots and still had
a pretty soft year. The first three attempts at really big movies at
Fox got Bill Mechanic fired. Paramount had bookend smashes to
keep them in the middle. Sony is still quaking after The Patriot
broke $100 million but was seen as a disappointment and Charlie's
Angels was a disappointment that was made to seem like a smash.
Universal hit a powerful .500 in the tentpole biz and had Meet The
Parents jump up out of nowhere and yet all people talk about is
Rocky & Bullwinkle not making the fiscal grade. And Warner
Bros. is still trying to figure out which way is up.
But at New Line, there were a bunch of
little quirky pictures and just two real tentpole efforts, The Cell
and Little Nicky. In 2000, almost nothing worked. There were
small victories like Next Friday, Final Destination and
Frequency. But those weren't nearly enough to overcome the combination
of weak box office and weak critic receptions for film after film. Add
Lost Souls and the still-date-shifting Town & Country
and you have recipe for a dramatic exit.
It is already being speculated that DeLuca
won't be getting the big German deal that guys like Joe Roth
were able to put together in a flash last year. Well, duh! That train
has left. But if DeLuca can deliver three movies a year that he really
believes in, not born of a need to fill a pipeline or to meet a quota
of low budget product, he will quickly become a very valuable producer
for the New Line stable or for whatever studio at which he really puts
his roots down. He won't be the next Saul Zaentz. But he's not
going to be the next Roger Corman either. DeLuca will gamble
on the Paul Thomas Andersons and Brett Ratners and Pete
Jacksons of the world and come up a winner, whether financially
or critically or both. Do you want a career to compare DeLuca's potential
career to? Well, he may well be thinking "a less angry Scott Rudin,"
but I would look more at David Brown's career. Brown was an insider
at Fox before going independent with Dick Zanuck and building
careers like Steven Spielberg's while making quality films with
guys like Sidney Lumet and Ron Howard and Rob Reiner
and on and on. The big difference is that DeLuca is on the loose as
a 35-year-old veteran and Brown didn't start producing until the age
of 57. On the other hand, Brown is still in Oscar play with Chocolat
at the age of 84. DeLuca could pick a worse role model.
PAGE TWO: Ongoing
Ugliness,
A Simple Misunderstanding & ROTDs