Yeah it's a scam. They'll claim they lost all the money that went into making the movie because no one would buy it for the price they wanted. If they'd sold it for the highest offer, they'd have lost less.
How is that any different than burning down my own building and claiming it as a loss in my taxes?
It's not JUST money laundering. It's also monopolistic practices, vertical and horizontal integration, regular-old fraud, and a healthy sprinkle of antilabor activities. The entire industry is wretched.
governments exist (in part) to regulate corporations, in order to stop them from doing things that are deleterious or destructive to the public good and to individuals who work for them. They have the means and motive to step in, whether declaring certain kinds of waste dumping to be illegal, trying to prevent private companies from bribing or otherwise influencing public officials
Unfortunately they don't actually do these things in real life
We need the artists to start pushing back against this with civil disobedience (or whatever the commercial equivalent might be).
Extract a high quality copy of the final film and set it afloat on the high seas. Best of a bag situation - companies still get the write off and the audience gets the movie.
Also this tax write off thing makes things unavailable to be used again, I remember seeing a video explaining that Megas XLR can't be updated or put up on streamings because CN used it as tax write off. It's where culture is gunned down, this needs to stop ASAP.
The biggest reform I want to see to copyright is a use-it-or-loose-it provision. Either you make the work available under "reasonable" terms, or you loose the copyright protection. Preferably this should be combined with a requirement of all copyrighted works past a certain size to be registered with the library of Congress.
This would still allow them to double the price, and move streaming from Netflix to their crappy homebrew streaming service. The idea is just that if you aren't selling it at all, you clearly don't need copyright protections to save you from others undercutting you. This would also solve the abandonware problem; where it is simply not clear who has the rights in the first place.
My second wish would be a mandatory licensing scheme; similar to what we have for music (although updated for the internet age)
Didn't Warner's tax write-off campaign have something to do with a heath insurance fund for animators that they were trying to starve of revenue? I seem to remember something about how it wasn't about the tax savings, but preventing a certain group from receiving residuals they were contractually required to fund if projects they worked on made money. I just can't remember where I heard that.... probably from some youtube video talking about infinity train.
I have no idea why they explain this away with "it's for the tax write off". One of us isn't understanding the tax system. I don't think there's any tax rule where you scrap something of value, and end up with more money at the end of it than if you hadn't. Even if it made literally no money, and nobody watched it, and nobody subbed to Max to see it, you just wouldn't have to pay any tax on the money you didn't make.
Things like Batgirl supposedly "cost" $90 million, and they claimed a $20 million tax write off.
Why not a $90 million tax deduction? It sounds for all the world like they spent $20 million, realised it was garbage beyond even the rest of the DCEU, and shit-canned it before spending the other $70 million on finishing it (VFX, distribution, etc) as it was never going to make that back.
You're close to the truth at the end there. They spent $90 million on it, found out it was an absolute dog when they started test evenings, and decided to scrap it rather than pay another $50 million+ on promotion and other post-production expenses.
With a $20 million write-off on a $90 million movie, they still lost $70 million. They just didn't want to lose more.
It still sucks for the actual creators and the fans, but it's not like doing this actually makes the studios richer. It's just about not falling into the sunk-cost fallacy.
I don't see how they only lost $70 million if they spent $90 million and scrapped it though.
Spend $90m, scrap it, you lose $90m. This comes off your yearly profit that you pay tax on.
Spend $90m, stick it on Max, do literally no promotion or anything, make no money. Still lose the same $90m. Same amount comes off your yearly profit that you pay tax on.
The only thing I can think of is that it was so bad that they fear for the reputation of their company. Like it's so mind-bogglingly awful their share holders will see it and immediately sell up so they don't have to admit they own shares in the company that made it.
And I've seen Aquaman 2. They ain't fucking worried about that...
Scooby and Krypto Too was leaked (scrapped officially)...and that movie had far less exposure than this one. There's definitely hope for this seeing the light of day