Friday, June 19, 2026

The Net Profit Illusion : Buchwald Subtitle: A judge called the formula unconscionable. The studio’s lawyers understood, correctly, that a quiet settlement was cheaper than letting that word survive on appeal.

The Net Profit Illusion Post II of IV  ·  Forensic System Architecture

Buchwald

A judge called the formula unconscionable. The studio's lawyers understood, correctly, that a quiet settlement was cheaper than letting that word survive on appeal.



A courtroom exhibit table: a thin treatment manuscript beside a thick studio accounting binder, the binder's shadow nearly swallowing the manuscript. The case did not turn on whether the film made money. Everyone agreed it did. It turned on whether "net profit," as written, was ever capable of saying so.
Layer I  ·  Source

In 1982, the humorist Art Buchwald submitted a short treatment to Paramount Pictures titled "King for a Day" — a wealthy African potentate visits the United States, suffers a string of comic mishaps, and ends up stranded in an American ghetto. Paramount optioned it, paid Buchwald and his producing partner Alain Bernheim a modest sum, ran it through several unsuccessful script attempts, and ultimately shelved the project.

In 1988, Paramount released "Coming to America," directed by John Landis and starring Eddie Murphy, who received story credit. Buchwald received none. The film cost roughly $36 million to make. It grossed close to $300 million worldwide. Buchwald and Bernheim sued, arguing the released film was substantially based on Buchwald's treatment under the terms of the original option agreement — and that the agreement entitled them to a share of the profits the studio said did not exist.

Layer II  ·  Conduit

The case ran in two phases. In the first, Judge Harvey A. Schneider found that "Coming to America" was indeed based on Buchwald's treatment, and that Paramount had breached its contract by not compensating him accordingly. That finding alone would have been a meaningful but narrow result — a single writer, vindicated, awaiting a damages calculation under the same net-profit formula his contract specified.

The second phase is where the case became something larger than a dispute over one treatment. Paramount's own accounting, applying its standard net-profit formula, showed the film at a deficit of roughly $18 million — on a picture that had already grossed many multiples of its budget. Buchwald's side, through producer Pierce O'Donnell, argued the formula itself was the problem, and asked Schneider to examine it directly rather than simply apply it.

$18M
Reported "loss" on a film that grossed roughly $288–350 million worldwide
Paramount's own net-profit statement for "Coming to America," produced during the Phase II accounting proceedings, showed the picture in deficit despite its commercial success. The deficit was not a clerical error. It was the formula working as written.

Schneider examined the formula and found it, in his own word, unconscionable — procedurally, because it was an adhesion contract signed under grossly unequal bargaining power, and substantively, because its terms were so one-sided that the promised net-profit participation was effectively illusory regardless of how successful the film became.

The Formula on Trial — What Schneider Actually Found
The court's Phase II findings did not allege fraud in the criminal sense. They examined the contract's own internal logic and found it incapable, by design, of producing the result it promised.
Provision Examined
What Paramount's Formula Did
Why Schneider Called It Unconscionable
Overhead
Charges
Applied a flat percentage — including a 15 percent charge on participations themselves, plus separate operational and advertising allowances — on top of actual production costs.
Charged the production for the studio's existence, not for any service specific to this film, layered on top of costs already counted elsewhere in the same statement.
Interest on
Interest
Compounded interest charges on negative cost, overhead, and participations themselves — at rates the court found did not reflect Paramount's actual cost of borrowing.
Manufactured a deficit through arithmetic alone, independent of whether the film succeeded, by charging interest on charges that were themselves internally generated.
Video & Cassette
Exclusion
Counted only 20 percent of home video and cassette revenue toward gross receipts, excluding the remaining 80 percent from the calculation entirely.
Removed a major and rapidly growing revenue stream from the side of the ledger that could ever produce a participant's share, while the full revenue still benefited the studio.
Stacked
Distribution Fees
Charged distribution fees alongside overhead allocations that were themselves calculated, in part, against the same costs the distribution fee already covered.
Double-counted the same underlying cost under two different line items, a deviation the court noted departed from standard accounting principles generally accepted outside the studio system.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

Here is what the court actually converted into a remedy, and it is worth being precise about it, because the precision is the whole second half of this story. Schneider did not order Paramount to pay Buchwald and Bernheim a share of net profits under a corrected formula. He set the flawed formula aside entirely and awarded damages based on quantum meruit — the fair market value of what they were owed, calculated independent of the contract's own broken arithmetic. The award: $150,000 to Buchwald, $750,000 to Bernheim, plus roughly $120,000 in trial expenses. $900,000 total, against a studio claim of an $18 million loss on a film that had grossed roughly $140 million domestically alone.

The court did not fix the formula. It stepped around it — which meant the formula itself survived the trial that exposed it, fully intact, ready to be applied to the next contract.

The Net Profit Illusion · Series Analysis

Paramount settled before the case could reach an appellate court, and the settlement — finalized in 1995, five years after Schneider's liability ruling — vacated the unconscionability finding as part of its terms. The studio's lawyers understood something the broader public discussion of this case has tended to miss: an appellate affirmance of "unconscionable" would have exposed every other net-profit contract Paramount had ever signed to the same challenge. A $900,000 settlement, with the precedent erased, was a rational price to pay to keep the formula's legal status unresolved.

Buchwald — Final Forensic Accounting
What was found
A standard studio net-profit formula, examined directly by a court for the first time at this level of detail, found procedurally and substantively unconscionable — not a fraud allegation, but a finding that the contract's own terms made the promised participation illusory by design.
What was won
$900,000, awarded outside the contract's own formula entirely. The formula was never applied to produce this number. It was set aside because the court found it incapable of producing a fair result under any application.
What was lost
The precedent. The settlement vacated the unconscionability finding before any appellate court could affirm it industry-wide. The very next year, a near-identical unconscionability claim against Warner Bros., brought by Batfilm Productions over the 1989 "Batman," was rejected on substantially similar grounds — with no surviving Buchwald precedent to support it.
What FSA reads
A system that survived being correctly diagnosed. The formula was named, examined, and called unconscionable by a sitting judge — and it is, with only modest revision, still the formula in use across the industry today. The win was real. Its scope was deliberately contained. That containment was not an accident of litigation; it was the rational, foreseeable outcome of a studio with far more at stake than $900,000 choosing to settle rather than risk what an affirmed appellate ruling would have cost it.
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

Buchwald v. Paramount is taught in entertainment law courses as the case that exposed Hollywood accounting. That is true, and it is also the version of the story that lets the industry off easiest, because "exposed" implies "corrected." What actually happened is closer to: exposed, contained, and absorbed. The case produced a book, a body of scholarship, and decades of references in press coverage every time a new accounting controversy surfaces. It did not produce a single binding appellate precedent that any other net-profit participant could cite against any other studio.

That is the insulation mechanism this post documents: not secrecy, but survivability. A formula that can be correctly diagnosed as unconscionable by a court, settled before appeal, and then left standing for the rest of the industry to keep using is a formula that has been stress-tested and found durable. The next post in this series follows the same formula into the era of leaked digital statements — when a different kind of exposure, requiring no lawsuit at all, briefly did what Buchwald's verdict could not.

Sub Verbis · Vera.

FSA Wall — Post II · Buchwald

Case background, the Phase I and Phase II findings, and the specific deduction categories Schneider examined are drawn from court records and from Pierce O'Donnell and Dennis McDougal's "Fatal Subtraction: How Hollywood Really Does Business" (1992), O'Donnell having served as lead counsel for Buchwald and Bernheim. The $900,000 damages figure ($150,000 to Buchwald, $750,000 to Bernheim, plus approximately $120,000 in trial expenses) and the 1995 settlement date, which vacated the unconscionability finding, are corroborated across contemporary legal reporting and subsequent scholarly analysis of the case's precedential limits. The Batfilm Productions v. Warner Bros. case, rejecting a similar unconscionability claim the following year, is referenced in subsequent legal scholarship discussing Buchwald's limited precedential reach; readers seeking primary case citations for Batfilm are encouraged to consult entertainment law casebooks directly, as this post relies on secondary scholarly characterization of that outcome rather than a direct reading of the opinion. Victor P. Goldberg's "The Net Profits Puzzle" (Columbia Law Review-adjacent faculty scholarship, 1997) discusses Buchwald specifically and is the primary source for Post IV of this series.

The Net Profit Illusion  ·  Series Navigation
Post IThe Formula
Post IIBuchwald
Post IIIThe Leak
Post IVThe Puzzle

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