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Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

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Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films. Eric Fellner and Tim Bevan have achieved the near impossible They’ve created a wildly successful production company in a country where the film business is subject to repeated predictions of imminent doom. Eric Fellner. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Year 12 Audience & InstitutionsCase Study:Working Title Films

Page 2: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Eric Fellner and Tim Bevan have achieved the near impossible They’ve created a wildly successful production company in a country where the film business is subject to repeated predictions of imminent doom.

Eric Fellner Tim Bevan

Page 3: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

1984Working Title founded by Tim Bevan and Sarah RadclyffeNow the most successful British film production company

Page 4: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Film maths

Films + American stars = Appeal to international market (& success for the British film industry)

This approach has provoked criticism about the ‘mid-Atlantic’ nature of the films.

Page 5: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

The British film industry dilemma:

Do you: A) Make culturally specific films which appeal

to a limited audience? ORB) Make broader, generic films with a wider

appeal?

Page 6: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

The British film industry dilemma:

Working Title want to make European films for a worldwide audience.They want to imbue them with European ideas and influences and they couldn’t do these things without the backing of a major Hollywood studio.

Page 7: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

History of WT:

1984Working Title founded by Tim Bevan and Sarah Radclyffe1985First Working Title film My Beautiful Laundrette (The first of a series of collaborations with Channel Four Films)15 Number of WT films produced in the 1980s

Page 8: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

History of WT:

1988 Production deal with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment1991 WT sets up Hollywood office

Page 9: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

1992 PolyGram (a European music and media company) buys Working Title. Sarah Radclyffe leaves to set up her own production company She’s replaced by Eric Fellner

History of WT:

Page 10: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

History of WT:

1994Four Weddings and a Funeral A big box office success due to the access to the US market provided by Polygram

Page 11: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

History of WT:

1998 Polygram bought by Universal, a Seagram company2000Seagram is bought by Vivendi, the French multimedia conglomerateWorkingTitle is now owned by Universal, which is in turn owned by Vivendi

Page 12: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films
Page 13: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

$35mThe amount of money WT can spend on a film before consulting with UniversalWT2 Set up to encourage new British filmmakers.Billy Elliot (Dir. Stephen Daldry, 1999)WT2 did not need the approval of UniversalWT2 no longer exists

Page 14: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Unique:

There is no other British Film Company like Working TitleIt is allowed freedom to make creative decisions but it is owned by a conglomerate

Page 15: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Safety Net:

£13m Budget for Captain Corelli’s Mandolin£9.8mUK Box Office takingsThe protection of Universal means that Working Title was able to survive this disappointing performance

Page 16: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Some key Working Title films:

Film Budget (£m) Box Office UK (£m)

Bean (1996) 16.2 17.9

Elizabeth (1997) 13 5.5

Notting Hill (1998) 15 31

Bridget Jones (2000) 14 42

About a Boy (2001) 13.5 16.8

Love, Actually (2004) 30 36.2

Wimbledon (2004) 20 (est) 6.8

Page 17: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Some numbers:

4 or 5The number of films Working Title produce each year1Number of ‘risk free films’ Working Title will invest in each year2 Number of mainstream films WT will invest in each year2 Will invest in projects they feel passionate about (which have risk factors involved)

Page 18: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Some numbers:

95Number of films made (to date) by Working Title$4.5 billionAmount of money made by these films6Number of Academy Awards won26Number of BAFTA Awards won

Page 19: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Successful Relationships

Working Title make films with 3rd parties e.g. the Coen Brothers and people they know well and have built up a good working relationship with e.g. Richard Curtis

Page 20: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Notable films

TheSoloistState of PlayThe Boat That RockedWild ChildBurn After Reading,The InterpreterAbout a BoyNotting Hill

Page 21: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

ElizabethFargoDead Man WalkingBeanHigh FidelityJohnny EnglishBilly ElliotFour Weddings and a Funeral

Page 22: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Bridget Jones's DiaryBridget Jones: The Edge of ReasonO Brother, Where Art Thou?Love ActuallyShaun of the DeadPride & PrejudiceNanny McPheeUnited 93

Page 23: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

What does Eric Fellner have to say?

Working Title focus on character and narrative (as opposed to action/ special effects etc.)They often create films of cross-genresFellner feels the simple essence of a successful film is a really good screenplay and sense of humanity; that the most important thing is for the audience to identify and empathise with characters

Page 24: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

What does Eric Fellner have to say?

Working Title have aimed to create an industry that is exportable and globalThere is an active aggressive industry in Hollywood that we can never compete withWhat we should focus on is making films we believe in and exporting them

Page 25: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

What does Eric Fellner have to say?

We should dissipate the notion of the British Film Industry just being BritishInstead we should work with home grown material and work with others to distribute, market etcCharacters should be fun and engaging; you should want to spend time with them (regardless of whether they’re simplistic or stereotypical)This is the focus for Working Title, rather than trying to package films/ characters for American audiencesFellner says that the British film industry is “thriving” and can ride out recessions

Page 26: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

Homework:

Next lesson you will pitch your own film idea. You need to produce a synopsis of a film you think would fit into the Working Title production style.

Page 27: Year 12 Audience & Institutions Case Study: Working Title Films

You must explain why it is suitable for a Working Title production.

Your synopsis should include comments on:GenrePlotSettingStars Intended audience.