5 Burning Questions We Still Have For 'Content Kings' at Warner Bros.
Posted by STV at 5:15 AM on August 13, 2008
We took the better part of two days to process the NYT's recent recognition of Warner Bros. as the crown jewel at Time Warner, where Jeff Bewkes, Barry Meyer, Alan Horn and Co. are venerated at length for emphasizing "content" (i.e. their film and TV properties) ahead of "distribution" outlets like AOL, DVD and on-demand services. It's an oddly situational success story; in fact, it opens with WB chairman Meyer literally inhaling the incoming fax telling him The Dark Knight made $66 million on opening day, and namechecks Two and a Half Men among a handful of TV series that are finding lucrative traction internationally. There's also the HBO factor and the Turner channels' flourishing as well.
And while we can't and/or wouldn't argue any of these points, a ceremonious Warners rimjob also seems untimely. After all, what did Meyer do with his Speed Racer faxes on opening weekend? That and a few more pressing questions after the jump.
1. What about Speed Racer? Warners' legacy is one of adventurous flops and sturdy gambles, not messianic cultural events like TDK. If the point is a "content" state-of-the-union, then it's worth noting that the studio also dropped the summer's biggest bomb. For which, by the way, we love them; Where the Wild Things Are isn't likely to fare much better, but it is nice to know it's there.
2. What about Warner Independent and Picturehouse? The slimmed-down New Line earns a cursory mention, but its return to genre-junk roots is one of Time Warner's signature (and slightly desperate) content revisions since the AOL merger. And the axed Picturehouse — which had a strong summer of Mongol and Kit Kittredge after winning three Oscars in February — was all about "content" that's hit and missed just as regularly as the mother ship.
3. What about Get Smart? Again, the sturdy gamble is the thing: A hit that's grossed $200 million worldwide, will land equally hard on DVD and VOD and has sequels on the way. Screw TDK, really — Bewkes needs more like this, and he needs them recognized.
4. Did you know that Charlie Sheen makes $800,000 per episode of Two and a Half Men? A bit of rehash of an earlier question here at Defamer, we know, but a phenomenon we've come to now grudgingly accept knowing that T&HM is the flagship of a $4 billion television empire. Not that we get it; feel free to continue discussing below.
5. Whither questions and actual answers about new media revenues? Just because Tim Arango is writing all about Warners' precious "content" doesn't mean Bewkes can get away without answering his own query, "[T]he consumption of entertainment products is growing rapidly... The question is how do you offer it, and how do you get paid for it?" And this guy wonders why TW stock still hovers around $16. Come on, Jeff.

Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
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Juancho
Posted 5:40 AM 13/8/08
Warner Bros. is the classic case of the conglomerate that doesn't know what it has.
While their maverick sense of giving money and free reign to talent on franchises is laudable, they're not seeing a whole lot of returns. For every Christopher Nolan, you'll see one Bryan Singer and two Wachowskis. Whither Lorenzo Di Bonaventura?
For example, D.C. Comics is a friggin' farm team of potential blockbusters, and their mishandling of it has been comical. Marvel, which was all but left for dead in the mid-90s, has come all the way back to end up
making their own pictures and having studios line up for the right just to distribute them. While Marvel had their share of troubles getting their characters to the screen, they now have a solid schedule of films lined up for years. Meanwhile, WB wanted to derail all their TDK momentum with a young Justice League movie. Don't you think there's a good reason that a Flash movie has been stuck in D-Hell for 15 years, and that Joss Whedon and Joel Silver have thrown their hands up and walked away from doing Wonder Woman?
If WB were smart and really wanted to bank coin, they would be exploiting the brands they have. I could see a MAD Magazine line of direct-to-video/broadcast comedies that would leave National Lampoon or American Pie eating their dust.
Juancho
Mark Graham
Posted 5:35 AM 13/8/08
Meyer gets his box office numbers via fax? I can only assume that the Pony Express doesn't deliver to his neighborhood anymore.
Mark Graham
Juancho
Posted 6:19 AM 13/8/08
@UncannyXMan:, @clarknhilldale: I naturally include Vertigo, and Wildstorm (et al). The lesser-known the property, the more fun you could have with it- see the success of 300. I sincerely hope Y: The Last Man gets a shot at the screen one day, I think it would make a great TV show, actually.
I'm holding my breath on Watchmen, it's going to be an interesting test of both the general public's wallet and the fanboys who will rip it to shreds for ruining their wet dream.
Juancho
clarknhilldale
Posted 6:12 AM 13/8/08
@Juancho: Word.
Also: Harry Potter's nearly done. Also: WB ran the Looney Tunes brand into the ground. The last "reimagining" failed, now a Marvin the Martian movie? Does anyone under 35 even know who Marvin the Martian is?
clarknhilldale
UncannyXMan
Posted 6:05 AM 13/8/08
@Juancho: Along those lines...within DC (where I agree, they have a wealth of characters they should be digging into ala Marvel) they also have the imprints of Vertigo and Wildstrom. If WB took a closer look at what they have there, they'd realize they have an endless source of either tentpoles/high-concept properties.
UncannyXMan
Juancho
Posted 7:12 AM 13/8/08
@bess marvin, girl detective: ja, and David Goyer was writing it...but David Goyer is attached to write half the comic book movies in Hollywood.
I actually like Shia, but I don't think he's right for the role. Needs someone a little bit older. I could see Casey Affleck pulling it off quite well.
An aside: Everyone here needs to go rent D.J. Caruso's The Salton Sea. It doesn't all work, but is well worth a look.
Juancho
bess marvin, girl detective
Posted 7:00 AM 13/8/08
@Juancho: caruso (the guy that did disturbia) is doing y: the last man and my shia is in talks. you approve?
bess marvin, girl detective