Los Angeles Times

YES, THEY CAN

Hits disprove a Hollywood myth: Black films don’t do well overseas

- Times reporters Amy Kaufman and Josh Rottenberg contribute­d to this article. trevell.anderson@latimes.com

TRE’VELL ANDERSON

On his way to winning a best picture Oscar for “Moonlight,” a film made for a minuscule $1.5 million, writer-director Barry Jenkins took time between awards-season red carpet appearance­s for a six-city European promotion tour. It was time well spent. “Moonlight,” about a poor black boy living in the projects of Miami and struggling with his sexuality, wasn’t supposed to be the kind of movie that wins the best picture Oscar. Its modest coming-of-age narrative, unconventi­onal story structure and outsider characters with no mega stars made it, as f ilmmaker Mark Duplass said recently with admiration, “a bit of a miracle” that it even reached U.S. theaters. Certainly, it’s not the kind of movie that was expected to make money overseas. After all, says a longstandi­ng Hollywood myth, black f ilms don’t travel. Yet as of Tuesday, “Moonlight” has made $28.6 million at the internatio­nal box office — more than its $27.5 million domestic take — for a worldwide total of $56.1 million. With the film still in theaters, even more is expected. “This black film is definitely selling overseas,” Jenkins said to The Times on the red carpet for the Screen Actors Guild Awards, just after he’d returned from Europe.

It’s one more way “Moonlight” has bucked convention­al wisdom.

“Every time there’s a success, it gets swept under the rug,” says Jeff Clanagan, president of Lionsgate’s Codeblack Films, which primarily produces films with African American casts. “It’s almost like there’s an asterisk on it. They chalk it off as an anomaly.”

For 1988’s “Coming to America,” the anomaly was the comedic genius of Eddie Murphy, who “transcende­d race” when the film grossed $160.6 million internatio­nally for a $288.8-million worldwide take. (Samuel L. Jackson, Morgan Freeman, Jamie Foxx, Will Smith, Kevin Hart, Denzel Washington and Don Cheedle are other box office champs for whom the “transcende­d race” label has been applied.)

For 1995’s “Bad Boys” and its 2003 sequel — which together pulled in a combined $210.3 million internatio­nally and $414.7 million worldwide — it was that the film was an action flick, never mind leads Smith, Martin Lawrence and Gabrielle Union.

For 2015’s “Straight Outta Compton,” a $40.4-million payoff internatio­nally (and $201.6 million worldwide), it was the popular music of rap group N.W.A.

Even as three-time Oscar nominee “Hidden Figures,” with its predominan­tly black cast, has made $48.8 million internatio­nally — and nearly $215 million worldwide — the myth persists.

When asked about the myth, Octavia Spencer, Oscar-nominated for her “Hidden Figures” role, responded simply: “I have two words for you: Will Smith.”

“He was told the same thing [at the beginning of his career] — that he wasn’t going to be taken to promote his film,” she said at the annual pre-Oscars Sistahs Soiree honoring women of color in the industry. “Had he not paid for himself to fly all over the world that very first time, he would not be an internatio­nal box office star. So they have to start investing and taking black actresses and actors across the world just like they do with unknown white actors. They need to do the same thing for black actors. If you don’t know ’em, why would you go support the film?”

The latest picture to face the internatio­nal test head-on is “Get Out,” from writer-director Jordan Peele. While the social thriller starring Daniel Kaluuya has been the talk of Hollywood since its Feb. 24 premiere — making Peele the first black director with a $100-million debut — the film is just beginning to be released internatio­nally, an effort by the studio to first test the film among its intended American audience, then strategica­lly roll it out in other countries.

For Peele, the myth doesn’t negatively affect “Get Out’s” worldwide appeal.

“All I know is from the interviews I’ve done with people overseas who’ve seen it, they get it and really dig it just as much as the people who are interviewi­ng me here,” he says. “Otherwise I’ll have to wait and see.… Hopefully people come and see it.”

‘Good movies perform’

“If a movie is good, it should transcend borders, cultural difference and ideologies,” says Paul Dergarabed­ian, a senior media analyst with comScore who analyzes box office returns. “If you have a great movie, I think it can play anywhere.”

He struggles, he says, “with categorizi­ng any film using the makeup of its cast or point of view of its storytelli­ng” and calls Hollywood banter about the inherent lack of profitabil­ity for a movie that features a diverse cast “myopic.”

Jonathan Deckter, president and chief operating officer of Voltage Pictures, with a specialty in internatio­nal and domestic sales, agrees, saying the myth is “ignorant.”

“That’s an overgenera­lization to say that black films don’t travel,” Deckter says. “Good movies perform. Movies that have something special, unique, something that drives an audience to get off of their sofa and into a cinema perform.”

Director and producer Reginald Hudlin says, “The confusion starts with the definition of ‘black film,’ as if it was a genre. There are musicals, action movies, comedies, horror films, but ‘black’ is not a storytelli­ng genre. And the fact that these movies [with black casts] that can be wildly different are all put in the same category as if they’re all the same, ignoring actual genres, which can have a huge effect on its ability to travel, already leads to people misunderst­anding its worldwide box office potential.

“The definition,” adds Hudlin, who is working on the upcoming “Marshall,” starring Chadwick Boseman as Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, “is designed to reach a conclusion, which is that black films don’t sell.”

How does it work?

For an American independen­t film to make it into internatio­nal theaters, a producer works with internatio­nal sales agents to license the rights to overseas distributo­rs. The licensing process often begins with the sales agent attempting to pre-sell the film, persuading local distributo­rs in internatio­nal markets to purchase rights before the movie is complete. While some films get purchased during the pre-sale process, internatio­nal buyers can also choose to wait until they see a finished film at film festivals, or film markets, such as Santa Monica’s American Film Market, or those held alongside the Berlin and Cannes film festivals. A film’s commercial potential, which takes into account the U.S. release date, script, director, genre, cast, critical acclaim and culture of a film, dictates the enthusiasm of internatio­nal distributo­rs.

At last year’s American Film Market, “Moonlight,” says Voltage Pictures’ Deckter, was “one of the most sought-after movies,” months before it landed any awards-season nomination­s. The reason for such high interest in the film, independen­tly made through Brad Pitt’s Plan B and A24, wasn’t obvious.

“As a general rule, independen­t film distributo­rs try to find reasons to find movies that work, acquire them and then make them work,” Deckter says. “They’re probably not taking the same amount of atbats on black movies as they take on other movies. Distributo­rs haven’t seen an entry point to certain black movies so they haven’t taken it on.”

Perhaps with the success of “Moonlight,” some of those entry points are more clear. To Clanagan of Lionsgate’s Codeblack Films however, the fault for the pervasive myth lies at the feet of internatio­nal distributo­rs themselves.

“It comes from the foreign distributo­rs and studios,” he says. “They have perpetuate­d and created a myth that black movies don’t work over there.”

When Deckter was president of IM Global, he sold “Lee Daniels’ The Butler” and Marlon Wayans’ “A Haunted House” to internatio­nal distributo­rs. “A Haunted House,” a comedy starring Wayans and Essence Atkins, brought in $20 million internatio­nally — on a $2.5million budget. “Lee Daniels’ The Butler” pulled in $60 million internatio­nally, “twice as much as we thought,” he says.

There are general ideas about what types of films do better in certain countries, though there are exceptions to every rule. Dramas, for example, don’t play as well in Germany as they do in Britain. Comedies, unless they have huge stars, don’t play as well in France, Italy, Germany and Spain. It’s also difficult to translate comedy in hopes of connecting with an internatio­nal audience, unless it’s slapstick in nature like the “Ride Along ” or “Big Momma’s House” franchises.

And for those films that happen to have black casts, there is, in fact, a consistent market interested in seeing such stories; Britain, Australia, United Arab Emirates and South Africa are always popular locations.

“When people talk about ‘black films,’ the idea that quality is a factor [for the audience] is usually not considered,” says director and producer Hudlin, noting that many believed “Django Unchained,” the 2012 slavery western starring Jamie Foxx, wouldn’t travel. The Quentin Tarantino-directed picture brought in $425.4 million worldwide, with $262.6 million at the internatio­nal box office, nearly $100 million more than its $162.8 million in domestic ticket sales.

“It’s not giving the same allowances to audiences [of films with black casts] that we do for other films,” Hudlin says.

Such stigmatiza­tion shows up in the marketing schemes of films with diverse casts where U.S. posters of films are recast for some countries. Chinese posters for “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” shrunk the face of John Boyega, the black actor who played Finn, one of the film’s lead characters. In 2013, Italian marketers prominentl­y displayed Brad Pitt on a poster for “12 Years a Slave.” Pitt had a cameo in the movie, but his dominance on the poster overshadow­ed Chiwetel Ejiofor, the black star. In a possible sign of progress, word is that the internatio­nal posters for “Get Out” will feature Kaluuya, not his white co-star Allison Williams.

Challengin­g status quo

The next black film that Deckter and Voltage Pictures is shopping to internatio­nal buyers is “All Eyez on Me,” the Tupac Shakur biopic set for a U.S. release June 16. Voltage made the deal to handle foreign distributi­on of the film in October, a comfortabl­e gamble only because a similar film became a blockbuste­r years earlier.

“Two years ago, I don’t think I would’ve taken the film on. But then a movie called ‘Straight Outta Compton’ came out and did gangbuster business worldwide,” he says. “That was a proof of concept, if you will, that a black movie that’s a biopic about music can work internatio­nally.”

Surely 2004’s “Ray,” starring Foxx as singer Ray Charles, which pulled in almost $50 million internatio­nally, should’ve been a proof of concept too.

Even so, Deckter says, “There is no marketplac­e for any product until you prove that there is one. Once you prove that there is one, if you deliver a film at a high enough level, there should be success to follow.”

“Black films don’t sell if the studios and marketing people aren’t putting forth the right type of muscle to platform and position those films overseas,” says Gil Robertson, president of the African American Film Critics Assn. “When it comes to marketing urban or black-starring films, unless it’s a top-tier talent like Will [Smith] or Denzel [Washington], they very often fail.”

That’s why Clanagan physically goes to the countries where his films are opening to help “craft the marketing and find the right influencer­s…. the same way I do it here.”

Hudlin admits that after more than 20 years of pitching movies with multiethni­c and black casts to studios, he no longer has to preface it by saying “films with black casts aren’t just for black audiences.” But there still is a hesitancy to greenlight such films.

“The next frontier is finally blowing up this myth,” he says. “A lot of movies don’t travel, unless they do.”

 ?? Vittorio Zunino Celotto Getty Images ?? “MOONLIGHT’S” young actors Ashton Sanders, left, and Jharrel Jerome have reason to celebrate, what with a best picture win and buzz heard around the world.
Vittorio Zunino Celotto Getty Images “MOONLIGHT’S” young actors Ashton Sanders, left, and Jharrel Jerome have reason to celebrate, what with a best picture win and buzz heard around the world.
 ?? John D. Kisch Separate Cinema Archive / Getty Images ?? EDDIE MURPHY’S “Coming to America” was a hit at home in 1988, and it went on to gross $160.6 million internatio­nally.
John D. Kisch Separate Cinema Archive / Getty Images EDDIE MURPHY’S “Coming to America” was a hit at home in 1988, and it went on to gross $160.6 million internatio­nally.

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