"Wire" star will play the god Heimdall in Marvel pic.
Lack of Movie Production Has Hollywood Scrounging
Not even a booming box office can offset the credit crunch and suffering DVD and foreign sales markets.
A dearth of film production has driven Ryan Bust, a set dresser based in New Orleans, to several states in search of work on feature films.
He and his wife currently are holed up in an abandoned fire station in Guthrie, Okla., waiting to begin work on Michael Winterbottom’s next feature “Killer Inside Me.” The film, starring Jessica Alba, Kate Hudson and Casey Affleck, was originally slated to begin shooting in January but keeps getting delayed.
“It’s really been bizarre for everybody,” Bust said. “We were called here Feb. 20 to do this movie, and they’ve come up with one excuse after another as to why they can’t start shooting. When it’s a money thing, nobody wants to know.”
Despite a box office that’s soared 17 percent so far this year, Hollywood’s year-long feature-film production dry spell has turned into a drought, leaving thousands of industry professionals above and below the line scrounging for work.
According to IMDbPro, only 35 films are in production or have filmed in the U.S. since January, an 8.7 percent drop from last year, which was already low because of last year’s writer’s strike.
And the slowdown is bad all over -- from L.A. to recent hotbeds of production activity such as Michigan and Louisiana, which offer enormous production tax incentives.
The slowdown hasn’t stopped Michigan and Louisiana from building multi-million-dollar production facilities. Producer Jimmy Lifton *announced plans last week to build a $146-million, 750,000-square foot production studio factory and village in Allen Park, Mich.
And a $45-million, 500,000 square-foot studio complex recently opened near New Orleans, even though only two films are slated to shoot there.
But only 10 films are “anticipated” to shoot in Michigan -- none of which are backed by major studios, according to the Michigan Film Office’s website. And the New Orleans Office of Film and Video lists 13 features -- mostly independents -- in pre-production, but none currently filming.
In Los Angeles, FilmLA recently reported that off-lot production in the city had its slowest quarter ever during the first three months of this year.
Not even the prospect of a huge summer with studio tentpoles like “Wolverine,” “Star Trek,” “Terminator Salvation,” “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” and “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” can offset the lack of new investors, the worldwide credit crunch and suffering DVD and foreign sales markets.
“A lot of studios have their slates set for next year, so there’s not this rush to production,” said an agent who represents A-level directors and writers, and who requested to remain anonymous. “Over the years, there had been too many films, so while some have done great, others had gotten lost. So a number of studios have cut back their number of films.”
“Studios are saying, ‘We won’t greenlight a movie if we can’t make sure we’ll get our money back.



Comments
fifi11 Says
Michigan Film continues to expand with more films coming daily. The film commission is not tracking all films working to launch this spring.games
luis Says
Here are some interesting calls that could be made...see what answers you'd get....
To the unions: How many members and what percentage of the membership are currently on the books as out of a job and looking for employment.
To the majors: How many films do you currently have in production in Southern California and how many are waiting to be greenlit?
Don't fall for the economy answer from the studios. Aren't they in the business of making movies? What do they plan to say to their stockholders when 2010 rolls around??
Michigan Film Says
Michigan Film continues to expand with more films coming daily. The film commission is not tracking all films working to launch this spring.
Michigan Film is the Michigan Film Production Company with 25 years Producing feature films and quality television.
http://www.michiganfilm.com
lb Says
Good article Lauren... However, I would take issue with the agent who says that a lot of the studios have their release schedules set for 2010. Take an objective look at them and they presently suck. There are the same number of multi-screen complexes in this country and they have to be fed. The current release schedules just can't support them as presently outlined. What's worse, we're heading into the 5th month of 2009 and you just can't make every show is 6 mos from pre-production through post.
There has been a trend that began most noticeably in 2007, in particular with sequels which is based on a broken formula. The equation says let's make this one bigger, faster, and cheaper. Something has got to give in that equation. Is it greed that drives this approach?...possibly...but at the very least, as a philosophy of management, it has huge flaws.
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