The collapse in Japan’s independent distribution sector has made the territory one of the most difficult for foreign films to crack ‹ and nor are Hollywood studio films working. Jason Gray reports

Lust, Caution was a mis-step for Wise Policy

The cliché of Japan as a ‘land of contradictions’ holds true for the Japanese film industry of late. The first half of 2009 saw a robust 17.6% increase in cumulative box office over the same period last year, dipping to a still impressive 12.6% increase by the end of July.

“If you don’t get a theatrical sale, you’ll end up with 10% of the MG for a straight-to-video sale”

Thorsten Schumacher, HanWay Films

But only big titles, mostly local, are enjoying the bounty. Large-scale local releases are king, led by baseball film Rookies’ $92m home run. Hollywood’s expected comeback in 2009 has not happened, with only seven titles in the top 20 and all of them grossing less than $35m except the latest Harry Potter (currently on $85m).

Bankruptcies, near collapses and missing executives figure in the tales of indie distributors Movie-Eye Entertainment, Wise Policy, Rumble Fish and Xanadeux, with several more on life support.

“Often they ally themselves with each other to release films,” says Wild Bunch chief Vincent Maraval. “So the critical situation of some of them, plus the bankruptcy of Movie Eye and Wise Policy, makes everyone fear a domino effect.”

Thorsten Schumacher, director of worldwide sales and distribution at HanWay Films, says: “It’s definitely not the second biggest sales territory in the world any more, and companies cannot risk the big minimum guarantees from the old days.” Every seller has seen minimum guarantees (MGs) for Japan fall. “If you don’t get a theatrical sale, you’ll end up with 10% of the MG for a straight-to-video sale,” says Schumacher. Some sellers are even red-lining Japan when calculating sales forecasts, and moving on. Pre-sales are also a thing of the past.

“There are no pre-sales unless you’ve got a Brad Pitt movie or an auteur director,” says Jere Hausfater, former CEO of Essential Entertainment.
Several factors have been cited for the independent sector’s woes, particularly audience preference for homegrown blockbusters. Japanese audiences see a low 1.3 movies per capita annually, so generally choose safely.

“If a film isn’t rammed home by the media or luckily one of a handful of populist titles, people don’t often sit through two hours,” says Mitsuya Morita, development and investment general manager at Tokyo-based marketing, financing and management outfit Cinema Investment Corporation (CINV).

Independents crumble

The global financial crisis, the country’s own recession and the dying DVD/video market have affected everybody, but it is hard to ignore some eye-popping examples of unwise business practices.

The first red flag for overseas sellers came in April 2008 when Gaga Communications withdrew from acquisitions and production. Gaga had long spent lavishly on film-market attendance and acquisitions, which accelerated after the company was bought by Usen in 2006.

After stunning losses of $86m last year, Gaga was hollowed to its marketing and distribution core, co-releasing Nikkatsu purchases Burn After Reading and Che. This July the company was sold in a management buyout deal for a token $2m to Gaga chairman Tom Yoda and real-estate company Kinoshita Group.

This April, spending habits also brought down distributor Wise Policy, whose releases included The Golden Bowl, Brokeback Mountain (a notable pre-buy) and The Assassination Of Richard Nixon.

The company became known as an enthusiastic festival presence, but its multi-million-dollar gamble on Lust, Caution proved fatal, with the film unable to break $2.5m.

In one of the industry’s stranger episodes, Xanadeux president Hiroki Numata, whose company distributed The Limey, Rob Zombie’s Halloween remake and the original The Grudge films, did not bother with bankruptcy filings and is presumed to have run away in June. He has yet to reappear.

Movie-Eye’s summer demise created more shockwaves. Poised to fill the gap that Gaga had left (president Kaz Tadashiki himself being an ex-Gaga executive), Movie-Eye was known for prescient pre-buys of Oscar winners Crash and Million Dollar Baby, in addition to mounting local and Asian co-productions.

But like Gaga, Movie-Eye was not shy about big spending, amped in anticipation of finally becoming a listed company last year. But underperforming box office for pick-ups and its own slate accrued debts of more than $45m and a creditor list 291 names long. Hausfater remarks on the bankruptcy: “The collapse caused headaches as sellers have had to renegotiate deals, and because Japanese companies partner up with one handling theatrical and another handling the DVD release. It also hurts the Japanese DVD partners.”

The DVD market is the elephant in the room. The first half of 2009’s $1.4bn in overall revenues saw a drop of 9.7% compared to the same period last year, following an annual plunge of 11.1% in 2008. Blu-ray showed big gains of almost 390% but only accounts for a 6.6% market share. “It’s left the small to medium fringe no means to survive,” says CINV’s Morita.

Masao Teshima, president of Asmik Ace, a mini-major for which DVD sales were once the engine of profits, elaborates: “When the DVD market was bullish, we could recoup even if a film’s box office didn’t cover p&a. Now we can only sell a third of what we used to.” Asmik is instead focusing on its specialty ‹ midsize in-house productions such as Air Doll and Shock Labyrinth, Japan’s first 3D feature.

Desperado, which handled The Astronaut Farmer, Emir Kusturica’s Promise Me This, Hostel: Part II and I’m Not There, eschewed foreign acquisitions before it was too late. The company merged with Giga Networks in April to form Faith Wonderworks, specialising in mobile content.

“Even two years ago, buying foreign films was risky,” says chief producer of planning Michiyo Sato. “People might not watch a movie on a regular phone, but might on an iPhone or gaming devices.” Ultimately, unless 3D works its magic, movies are going to lose further ground. “Young audiences have more entertainment alternatives to cinema than ever. Of course that’s the case worldwide, but Japan is always at the forefront of this,” says Schumacher.
Who is still buying?

Japan’s $140bn content market shrunk for the second time last year, by 0.2%.

Revenues from games software, internet and mobile content have all increased, while traditional media (movies, DVDs, CDs, publishing, broadcast, non-game software) have tumbled.

Nonetheless, sellers want to know who in Japan is still buying films for theatrical release. “Japan is still drawn to big names, but fewer nowadays.
Human drama and big emotions are still very important,” says Schumacher.

Nikkatsu, Showgate and Asmik Ace all continue to do well with a smaller slate of safer, completed titles such as The Wrestler, Crossing Over and the Transporter series.

Nikkatsu’s acquisition of Wild Bunch’s Che films “had its best score in the world with $15m in box office”, says Maraval. In another non-English-language success, Avex’s $35m bet on the Red Cliff films has resulted in a $116m windfall. Perhaps the days of Japan’s big MGs will return, but it will be all about mouse clicks and mobile viewing.

Additional reporting by Jeremy Kay and Liz Shackleton

Japan Top 10 (to October 11, 2009)

 Title (origin) Distributor Gross
1Rookies (Jap) Toho $93.4m
2Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince (UK-US) Warner Bros $87.5m*
3Red Cliff: Part II (China) Toho-Towa/Avex $62.1m
4Pokemon 2009 (Jap) Toho $49.4m
520th Century Boys: The Last Chapter (Jap) Toho $46.9m*
6Evangelion (Jap) Klockworx/Studio Khara $40.6m
7Amalfi (Jap) Toho $40m
8Detective Conan: The Raven Chaser (Jap) Toho $39m
9Gokusen: The Movie (Jap) Toho $38.2m
10Angels & Demons (US) SPRI $36.4m

$1=¥89.50. *Still on release. Source: Screen International

TOP 10 GLOBAL BOX-OFFICE
TERRITORIES JAN-JUNE, 2009

 Territory Gross
1North America $5.4bn
2Japan $990.9m
3UK $824m
4Germany $599m
5France $576m*
6Australia $486.5m
7Italy $454.8m 
8Spain$418.3m 
9South Korea $375.7m
10China$330.2m

*Based on 97 million admissions. Source: Screen International