Michael Moore proved yet again that funnctional
paranoia could be both fun and lucrative. By the end of April 2004, he’d
finished making Fahrenheit 9/11 but had no American distributor. Mel Gibson’s
Icon Productions rejected the project back in April 2003. (Moore claims he had
a signed contract before Gibson acquiesced to White House pressure. Icon
executives deny any such contract existed.) Moore then went to Harvey Weinstein
at Miramax. Weinstein agreed to back the movie and signed a contract with Moore
to acquire the rights. But in order to distribute the movie, Weinstein still
needed the approval of his superiors at Disney. Although he does not discuss
this publicly, Weinstein’s contract explicitly prohibits Miramax, a wholly owned subsidiary of Disney, from
distributing any film that’s vetoed by the Disney CEO. When CEO Michael Eisner
exercised his veto in May 2003, Miramax, though it still held the rights to the
film, could not distribute Fahrenheit 9/11.
By the time Eisner told Weinstein of his decision,
the Miramax head had already given Moore $6 million from Miramax’s loan
account. Weinstein agreed that this advance was to be “bridge financing” that
he would recover when he sold off the film’s distribution rights. To make sure
there was no misunderstanding, Disney’s Senior Executive Vice President Peter Murphy,
who was also at the meeting, wrote Weinstein a letter on May 12, 2003,
affirming that this money was “bridge financing” and that Weinstein had agreed
to dispose of Miramax’s interest in the film.
For Moore, this $6 million in
“bridge financing” was more than enough to make Fahrenheit 9/11. He acquired
most of the footage from television film libraries at little, if any, cost and
did not pay any of the on-camera talent (except for himself). On April
13, 2004, after Weinstein saw a rough cut, he went back to Eisner and asked him
to reconsider his year-old decision not to distribute Fahrenheit 9/11. After
getting a report on the content, which included footage from such sources as Al
Jazeera and Al-Arabiya television, Eisner saw no reason to change his position.
He again declared that Disney wouldn’t have anything to do with the movie.
With the presidential election heating up, Moore
needed to get his movie into theaters. Although Weinstein had told Eisner and
Murphy that he planned to sell the film’s distribution rights after it was
screened at the Cannes Film Festival, Moore had a more expedient strategem. On
the Fahrenheit 9/11 DVD, Moore says he resolved to get the film seen in America
“by hook or by crook.” His hook was censorship.
On May 5, 2004, the New York
Times ran a front-page article headlined “Disney Is Blocking Distribution of
Film That Criticizes Bush.” [That’s funny.] The story included the
sensational charge that Eisner “expressed particular
concern that [choosing to distribute Fahrenheit 9/11] would endanger tax breaks
Disney receives for its theme park, hotels and other ventures in Florida, where
Mr. Bush’s brother, Jeb, is governor.” The source for this allegation
was Moore’s agent, Ari Emanuel. Two days later, Moore claimed on his Web site
that Disney’s board of directors rejected Fahrenheit 9/11 “last week.” In fact,
the Disney board had not made such a decision in 2004—the project had been
vetoed in 2003.
Moore’s excursion from reality proved a boon at
Cannes. On May 22, 2004, the Cannes jury defied
putative efforts to censor Moore by awarding Fahrenheit 9/11 the prestigious
Palme d’Or. [Very convenient coincidence. This kikefucker has no shame.]
Moore now had a golden palm in his hand and the media at his feet—with more
free publicity than any Hollywood studio could afford to buy, Fahrenheit 9/11
now stood to rake in a fortune. And Disney, which still controlled the movie’s
rights through its subsidiary Miramax, now got to decide who was going to
profit from it.
Disney had some experience dealing with Miramax’s hot
potatoes. Rather than distributing the controversial Kids and Dogma, Disney
allowed Miramax founders Harvey and Bob Weinstein to buy the films back and set
up short-lived companies to distribute them. But those potatoes were as small
as they were hot. In the case of Fahrenheit 9/11, Eisner wasn’t about to let
the windfall escape into the Weinstein brothers’ pockets. Nor could Disney take
the PR hit that would result from backtracking and distributing the movie
itself.
Eisner’s solution: Generate the illusion of outside
distribution while orchestrating a deal that allowed Disney to reap most of the
profits. Here’s how the dazzling deal worked. On paper, the Weinstein brothers
bought the rights to Fahrenheit 9/11 from Miramax. The Weinsteins then
transferred the rights to a corporate front called Fellowship Adventure Group.
In turn, that company outsourced the documentary’s theatrical distribution
rights (principally to Lions Gate Films, IFC Films, and Alliance Atlantis
Vivafilms) and video distribution rights (to Columbia Tristar Home
Entertainment).
Because of the buzz and prestige attached to
Fahrenheit 9/11, Harvey Weinstein extracted extremely favorable terms from
these distributors, about one-third of what distributors typically charge.
Their cut amounted to slightly more than 12 percent of the total they collected
from the theaters. As a result, Fahrenheit 9/11’s net receipts—what remains
after the distributors deduct their percentage and their out-of-pocket expenses
(mounting an ad campaign, making prints, dubbing the film)—would be much higher
than those of a typical Hollywood film.
Fahrenheit 9/11, now an event, took in more than $228
million in ticket sales worldwide, a record for a documentary, and sold 3
million DVDs, which brought in another $30 million in royalties. After the
theaters took their share of the movie’s gross (roughly 50 percent) and
distributors deducted the marketing expenses (including prints, advertising,
dubbing, and custom clearance) and took their own cut, the net receipts
returned to Disney were $78 million.
Disney now had to pay Michael Moore’s profit
participation. Under normal circumstances, documentaries rarely, if ever, make
profits (especially if distributors charge the usual 33 percent fee). So, when
Miramax made the deal for Fahrenheit 9/11, it allowed Moore a generous profit
participation—which turned out to be 27 percent of the film’s net receipts.
Disney, in honoring this deal, paid Moore a stunning $21 million. Moore never
disclosed the amount of his profit participation. When asked about it, the
proletarian Moore joked to reporters on a conference call, “I don’t read the
contracts.”
What of Disney? After repaying itself $11 million for
acquisition costs, it booked a $46 million net profit, which Eisner split
between two subsidiaries, the Disney Foundation and Miramax. While it was far
less than Disney made on children’s fare such as Finding Nemo, it was not a bad
outcome. The Weinstein brothers also made a multimillion-dollar profit. They
had a deal with Disney that contractually entitled them to a bonus of between
30 percent and 40 percent of the net profits on any film that they produced—in
this case, that came out to about $8 million per brother. But Michael Moore had
perhaps the happiest ending of all. Not only had he made $21 million, he
already had a sequel in preproduction—Fahrenheit 9/11 ½.
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