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Picture
yourself in your office, feet up, remote in hand, watching a movie
on your company-provided, state-of-the-art entertainment center.
Are you goofing off? No, you're doing your job. For film studio
executives, watching movies on the job is just the beginning.
Studio
executives live and breathe movies, day in and day out. They read
scripts every night and take home as many as ten or more every Friday
in a ritual known as Weekend Read. Their meals are paid for, because
they dine out morning noon and night with agents, managers, other
executives, writers, directors, and producers, all in the pursuit
of finding material and establishing relationships. Car allowances
can range from $500 to $1,200 and more, because every studio wants
to project the image of success at all times. They might spend the
afternoon in a plush screening room watching a hot young director's
latest film, and their evening at premieres, schmoozing with celebs
and other industry fabulosos.
It's
all about hits and misses
Samantha, who's been in the business nearly ten years, says the
job is most rewarding when you find a script, work for years to
get it made, and then watch as moviegoers flock to it in droves.
"Everyone's looking for that amazing, special, unique piece of material
that will break new ground and get audiences excited and talking
about it," she said.
Then
why are there so many copycat movies, you might wonder, if Hollywood
supposedly wants original scripts? It's called playing the odds.
Millions of dollars are riding on every green-light decision, and
no one wants to buck a trend. "If another studio's movie about dwarf
firefighters in Vegas makes major boxoffice, you’d better get one
in development," said one director, with a slightly weary tone of
voice. "You want to be original, but you have to follow the money
too."
It's
this overwhelming fear of taking risks that's responsible for copycat
moves like Volcano and Dante's Peak, Armageddon
and Deep Impact, and the countless comedies about mind/body
switches (remember Freaky Friday?).
You've
got to make the numbers
Burnout is high and job security is only as good as the grosses:
you definitely don't want to be the one responsible for a $100 million
movie that makes, say, $15 million at the boxoffice. If you are,
you'd better start looking for your next gig.
That
said, if you can survive the "audition" process - usually two or
three grueling years as an assistant at $300 a week - salaries for
studio execs range from $70,000 to about $400,000, and moving up
a studio's ladder usually happens quickly, sometimes in three or
four years. That kind of return certainly helps alleviate the stress.
So
get yourself some popcorn, sit back, enjoy the show ... and dream
on!
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Lauren Sheppard, Salary.com Contributor
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