Block Booking / Photo Credit: Slide Player - Film2900
WHAT IS BLOCK BOOKING? (In the
Entertainment industry.)
WHAT IS BLOCK BOOKING?
Block booking is a system of selling multiple films
to a theater as a unit. Block booking was the prevailing practice among
Hollywood's major studios from the turn of the 1930s until it was outlawed by
the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc.
(1948). Under block booking, "independent ('unaffiliated') theater owners
were forced to take large numbers of [a] studio's pictures sight unseen. Those
studios could then parcel out second-rate product along with A-class features
and star vehicles, which made both production and distribution operations more
economical." The element of the system involving the purchase of unseen pictures
is known as blind bidding.
In 1942 when the Society of Independent Motion
Picture Producers began its attack on the Hollywood studio system, the group of
filmmakers singled out one old-time studio practice to focus its opposition.
That controversial practice was known as block booking.
Block booking meant that a studio would sell its
films in packages on an all-or-nothing basis—usually requiring theaters to buy
several mediocre pictures for every desirable one. Because the studios made
mass-produced films, they also sold them in bulk.
Block booking was unacceptable to the independent
producers for a number of reasons. Block booking made it difficult for the
independents to get their own movies into theaters when exhibitors had already
purchased a block of films that would provide the theater with plenty of
movies. But even worse, since the independent released their films through the
studio-owned exchanges, the independents found that their films were being used
by the Hollywood distributors to pawn off low-budget studio B-pictures. The
producers believed that block booking encouraged slack filmmaking by forcing
inferior films on the theaters and the moviegoers. In an open letter from 1942,
the Society of Independent Motion Picture Producers called the practice
"the root of all evil in the motion picture industry." The SIMPP
members brought this obscure practice to the fore until the courts finally
abolished block booking—which has remained illegal to this day.
Origins in the silent era
Paramount Pictures, under Adolph Zukor's leadership,
was largely responsible for introducing the practice of block booking to
Hollywood:
At a time when star prominence was the single most
important factor determining a film's box-office success, Zukor had cornered
the market. In a 1918 popularity poll...the six top stars on the list—Mary
Pickford, Marguerite Clark, Douglas Fairbanks, Harold Lockwood, William S.
Hart, and Wallace Reid—were all under contract to Zukor.
Using this leverage, Paramount was able to insist
that prospective exhibitors interested in, say, the Pickford films, acquire
them in large blocks along with a quantity of less attractive titles. These
block-booking arrangements typically included groups of from 13 to 52 or even
104 titles. Paramount salesmen offered a variety of different product lines,
from the top-quality Art craft releases of Pickford, Fairbanks, and Hart to the
more modest Real art productions, in which stars such as Bebe Daniels were
being developed. Because these films had not yet been produced, exhibitors were
required to "buy blind" from a sketchy prospectus or campaign book.
All of the other major studios, with the exception of
United Artists, ultimately copied these policies to varying degrees. For much
of the 1920s, Paramount and growing Warner Bros., in particular, "relied
heavily on block booking and blind bidding." Already, in 1921 the Federal
Trade Commission had launched an investigation of the studios' booking
practices that would last for eleven years. A 1927 cease-and-desist order was
disregarded by the majors. Smaller distributors such as Associated Exhibitors
who attempted to retain open booking were eventually driven to accept the
practice.
With Hollywood's conversion to sound film in the late
1920s, block booking increasingly became standard practice: in order to get
access to a studio's attractive A pictures, many theaters were obliged to rent
the company's entire output for a season. Paramount Pictures President Adolph
Zukor obtained the Paramount-Publix chains of theaters that totaled in 1,200 screens,
and insisted that the exhibitors and independent theaters sign a contract with
their company if they wanted the exclusive, top-of-the-line Paramount
productions. With a whole season's worth of films offered up on an
all-or-nothing basis, theaters weren't just bidding on movies they hadn't seen,
but on many movies not yet even made. This was also called
"blind-bidding" because, other than knowing the genre, the actors and
actresses, and a brief overview of the plot, the exhibitors knew nothing about
the films they were acquiring. In one case, Zukor had pressured theater
operators to buy a block of one hundred and four films each year and forced
them to show two films per week, for fifty-two consecutive weeks. With the B
movies—less expensively produced films intended to run as the lower half of
double features—rented at a flat fee (rather than the box office percentage
basis of A films), rates could be set that essentially guaranteed the
profitability of every B movie. Block booking and blind bidding meant that the
majors didn't have to worry over much about the quality of these B pictures:
Knowing that even the poorest picture would find an
outlet, the studios could operate at full capacity. In the process, the majors
shifted the risks of production financing to the independent exhibitor. The
long-term effects of the policy also stifled competition by foreclosing the
market to independent producers and distributors. In short, block booking
allowed the majors to wrest the greatest amount of profits from the marketplace.
Along with the blocks of features, exhibitors were
required to take the major's shorts as well—a practice known as full-line
forcing. The smaller Hollywood studios—known collectively as Poverty Row—didn't
have the big pictures with A-list stars that would have allowed them to compel
theater owners to directly block book. Instead, they mostly sold exclusive
regional distribution rights to so-called states' rights firms. These
distributors in turn marketed blocks of movies to exhibitors, typically six or
more pictures featuring the same star (given that the films' source was Poverty
Row, a relatively minor star). In July 1938, the Justice Department's antitrust
division filed a suit, United States v. Paramount Pictures, Inc. et al.,
charging the eight major Hollywood studios with violating the Sherman Antitrust
Act.
The Sherman Trust Act of 1890 controlled the
interstate commerce with different trust-busting provisions and were brought to
bear against studio system monopolistic activities. Block booking and blind
bidding were at the heart of the practices charged as illegally monopolistic.
The Department of Justice filed suit against the distribution arms of Hollywood
studios in the Famous Players-Lasky antitrust case of 1928. The Department of
Justice charged the ten entities that controlled ninety eight percent of the
domestic theatrical distribution. Appeals were filed and the studios were able
to prevent charges from being followed through until 1929, due to the collapse
of the stock market and the Great Depression happening at the same time, making
this issue moot. The major studios controlled the programming of their theaters
and also had negotiated wide-ranging distribution deals that constricted the
financial state of independent theaters.
On October 29, 1940, the Big Five studios (Loews/MGM,
Paramount, 20th Century-Fox, Warner Bros.-First National, and RKO—the majors
that owned large theater chains) signed a consent decree in an attempt to
settle the case. It provided, among other things, that "block booking
would continue, but in blocks no larger than five films; trade shows would be
held regularly to provide exhibitors with advance screenings; [and] forcing of
shorts and newsreels was banned." Because the decree was forged after the
September 1 beginning of the 1940–41 exhibition season, the new blocks-of-five
arrangement did not go into effect until the 1941–42 season. When the consent
decree lapsed in 1942, most of the majors continued with blocks of five, though
MGM went with blocks of twelve for two years. In contrast, Warner Bros.
abandoned blocks altogether in 1943. The practice was entirely outlawed by the
Supreme Court's 1948 decision, United States v. Paramount et al., against the
studios in the Paramount antitrust case.
In concurrence with decisions held by the lower
courts, the Supreme Court ruled that all of the major movie studios had
prevented domestic and foreign competition through their control over theaters.
In its 1948 decision, the Supreme Court ordered the elimination of block
booking and demanded a separation of theater holdings from production and
distribution. Without control over block booking, studios feared that they
could no longer force theaters to buy up to 400 movies each year. In
anticipation of mass profit-loss, studios cut production schedules and
terminated contracts with actors, producers, directors and other staff. Newly
unemployed artists began pursuing careers in television. As popular movie
actors transitioned from the silver screen to the television screen, viewers
followed their favorite artists to the new medium. In 1951, almost all cities
with television stations saw a significant increase in movie theater closures
corresponding with a simultaneous increase in television viewership. The
substantial rise in television’s popularity during the 1950s can be largely
attributed to the Supreme Court’s decision to outlaw block booking.
Sources, References & Credits: Bruce Bisbey, Google, Wikipedia,
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Film Daily, New York Film Academy, The Balance, Careers Hub, The Numbers, Film
Maker, TV Guide Magazine, Blurb, Media Match, Future Learn, Quora, Creative
Skill Set, Chron, Investopedia, Variety, No Film School, How Stuff Works, WGA,
BBC, Daily Variety, The Film Agency, Best Sample Resume, How Stuff Works, Bright
Hub, Career Trend, Producer's Code of Credits, Truity, Production Hub, Producers
Guild of America, Film Connection, Variety, Wolf Crow, Get In Media, Production
Beast, Sony Pictures, Warner Bros, UCAS, Frankenbite, Realty 101, Liberty Me, Careers
Hub, Sokanu, Raindance, Film Connection, Cast & Crew, Entertainment
Partners, My Job Search, Prospects, David Mullich, Gear Shift, Video
University, Oxford Dictionaries’, Boredom Therapy, The Bold Italic, Meets the
Eye Studio, The Guardian, Jones on art, Creative Plant, Studio Binder, Film
Tool Kit, Still Motion, Film Under Ground, Steves Digicams,
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Block Booking / Photo Credit: Slide Player - Film2900
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