Saturday, July 4, 2026

The Paper Loss : Post IV: Sixty-Two Thousand Dollars

The Paper Loss | Post 4: Sixty-Two Thousand Dollars
The Paper Loss Post IV  ·  Forensic System Architecture  ·  Sub Verbis · Vera
GROSS: UNPAID

Sixty-Two Thousand Dollars

// 1969–2009 — a gross-participation deal, not a net one, and the fee that measured the entire distance between a contract's promise and its payment



An aged studio contract page open to a clause defining net profits, a pen resting across the line
Every case in this series so far has turned on how "net profits" is defined. This one didn't need a definition at all. The contract said gross. The studio still didn't pay it.
Case Diagnostic — Post IV
Posts I through III traced how the word "net" gets engineered to mean nothing. This post is different on purpose: the contract behind it used the word "gross" — and the studio still found a way to pay almost nothing against it.
Contract Terms
7.5 percent of gross receipts, under rights tracing back to J.R.R. Tolkien's 1969 film agreement with United Artists, later held by producer Saul Zaentz, and eventually licensed to New Line Cinema for the live-action trilogy.
Payment Received
$62,500 — an upfront "sequel fee" paid before production began, and, per the trustees, nothing further despite the trilogy earning an estimated $6 billion combined across box office, home video, and merchandise.
Suit Filed
February 11, 2008, Los Angeles Superior Court, by the Tolkien Trust and HarperCollins — seeking in excess of $150 million, later revised to $220 million during litigation.
Pattern Context
Before this suit was even filed, the same studio had separately settled profit-participation suits brought by director Peter Jackson and producer Saul Zaentz over the same trilogy — each for more than $20 million.
Layer I  ·  Source

The rights chain behind this case runs back further than the films themselves. Tolkien signed a film agreement with United Artists in 1969. Producer Saul Zaentz eventually acquired those rights, made an animated adaptation in 1978, and later licensed the live-action rights to New Line Cinema, which released the trilogy between 2001 and 2003. Buried in that chain of licenses was a term entitling the Tolkien Trust — the UK charity that administers the author's estate — to 7.5 percent of the films' gross receipts.

That detail is the reason this post exists in the series at all. Every case so far has hinged on how "net profits" gets defined, redefined, and recalculated until it disappears. This contract didn't use that word. It used "gross" — the plainer, harder-to-manipulate figure, the kind of deal Post I described as the actual defense against the net-profit trap. And for years, per the trustees, the studio paid against it exactly once: a $62,500 upfront sequel fee, sent before a single frame of the trilogy had been shot.

$62,500
the only payment the Tolkien Trust says it received
Against a contractual entitlement to 7.5 percent of gross receipts on a trilogy the trustees' own filing valued at nearly $6 billion in combined revenue.
Layer II  ·  Conduit

A gross-receipts deal is supposed to be immune to the mechanics documented in Posts I through III — there is no distribution fee, no overhead allocation, no self-charged interest standing between the box office and the participant's percentage. The Tolkien Trust's complaint describes a different conduit entirely: roughly $100 million in settlement payments made to Zaentz and Miramax, in separate disputes over the same trilogy, were themselves booked as costs of the films — reducing the very base that the 7.5 percent was supposed to be calculated against. The complaint separately alleged underreported home-video revenue and the destruction of relevant financial documents.

Layered onto that was a simpler mechanism still: the studio's outright refusal to let the trustees audit the receipts of the second and third films. Where Posts I through III describe formulas that produce zero by design, this case describes something more direct — a studio narrowing the participant's ability to even check the studio's math, on a contract that, unlike the others in this series, didn't leave much math to argue about in the first place.

Layer III  ·  Conversion

The conversion here isn't a formula turning a hit into a paper loss — it's the distance between two numbers that were never in dispute. The trilogy's box office alone ran to nearly $3 billion worldwide; the trustees' own complaint put total revenue, including home video and merchandise, at close to $6 billion. Against either figure, 7.5 percent is not a small number. What the Tolkien Trust says it actually received was $62,500 — not 7.5 percent of anything, but a flat fee paid before the films existed at all, with nothing more following in the years afterward. The suit didn't just ask for money. It asked the court to let the trustees terminate New Line's further rights to Tolkien's work entirely, including the planned Hobbit films — a demand serious enough that it put the sequel's future genuinely at risk.

New Line has not paid the plaintiffs even one penny of its contractual share.

Steven Maier, UK counsel for the Tolkien trustees  ·  February 2008
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

Warner Bros. absorbed New Line in March 2008, a month after the suit was filed, and inherited the litigation along with it. The case settled roughly eighteen months later, in September 2009, in a deal the Hollywood Reporter described as one of the largest profit-participation settlements in the industry's history — reported at more than $100 million, against a claim that had grown to $220 million. The terms were never filed with the court and were described at the time as confidential. As with Buchwald's vacated finding in Post III, the resolution that ended the dispute is also the reason the public has no binding standard to point to the next time a studio's gross-receipts accounting gets challenged.

The pattern context matters as much as the settlement itself. Jackson and Zaentz had already extracted more than $20 million apiece from the same studio over the same trilogy, after what reporting at the time described as a public feud with New Line's own leadership. Three separate profit participants, on three separate contracts, tied to the same three films, all needed to sue — or credibly threaten to — before the studio paid anything close to what its own agreements described. That is not evidence of one dispute. It is evidence of a studio's standing posture toward anyone with a percentage claim on this trilogy, regardless of whether their contract said "net" or "gross."

Friction Capital Read v5.5 Diagnostic Overlay

All three conditions fire in Post IV, and the first one fires on a mechanism this series hasn't documented until now.

Interpretive Capital — fires, but not through the word "profit." Here the studio is reported to have diluted the gross-receipts base itself, by booking roughly $100 million in unrelated settlement payments as costs of the films — narrowing the very number the 7.5 percent was supposed to apply to, without ever having to redefine "gross" on paper.

Enforcement Asymmetry — fires. Three separate participants — a director, a producer, and an author's estate — all had to sue the same studio over the same trilogy before receiving anything close to their contractual share. Whether any of them ever got paid depended entirely on their capacity to litigate, not on the clarity of what their contracts said.

Temporal Capital — fires. The trustees spent years attempting to negotiate directly with New Line before filing suit in 2008 — itself five to seven years after the first film's 2001 release — and the case then took a further eighteen months to resolve. The total gap between the trilogy's earliest revenue and any payment beyond the original $62,500 runs the better part of a decade.

FSA Wall — Post IV

The lawsuit's filing date, the $62,500 upfront fee, the 7.5 percent gross-receipts term, and Steven Maier's on-record statements are drawn from France24's February 12, 2008 report, treated as Tier 1 contemporaneous reporting. The itemized allegations — underreported home-video revenue, the roughly $100 million in Zaentz and Miramax settlement payments booked as costs, document destruction, and the refusal to permit an audit of the final two films — along with the initial $150 million damages figure and the 1969 United Artists rights history via Saul Zaentz, are drawn from Variety's February 11, 2008 report, treated as Tier 1. The eventual settlement, the $220 million revised claim, the "more than $100 million" settlement estimate, and the parallel Jackson and Zaentz settlements of more than $20 million each are drawn from The Hollywood Reporter's 2009 report, treated as Tier 1. The Associated Press account of the settlement's announcement, Christopher Tolkien's and Bonnie Eskenazi's statements, and the confidentiality of the settlement terms are drawn from AP wire coverage as distributed via Today.com, the Seattle Times, and the Deseret News, treated as Tier 2.

Series note: this is Post IV of The Paper Loss. Post V asks why a gross deal and a net deal, pursued through entirely different mechanisms, both end the same way — a confidential settlement that resolves the dispute without ever setting a public standard for the next contract.

The Paper Loss  ·  Series Navigation
Post IThe Number They Get to Write
Post IIThe Machine That Empties the Gross
Post IIIThe Case That Named the Trick
Post IVSixty-Two Thousand Dollars
Post VThe Settlement That Says Nothing
Post VIThe Day the Formula Broke

The Paper Loss : Post III: The Case That Named the Trick

The Paper Loss | Post 3: The Case That Named the Trick
The Paper Loss Post III  ·  Forensic System Architecture  ·  Sub Verbis · Vera
FINDING: VACATED

The Case That Named the Trick

// 1982–1992 — the one time a court called Hollywood's net-profit formula unconscionable, and the settlement that erased the finding before it could bind anyone else



An aged studio contract page open to a clause defining net profits, a pen resting across the line
This is the line a court finally examined directly, in 1990, and called unconscionable. The finding didn't outlive the settlement that resolved the case it came from.
Case Diagnostic — Post III
Post II documented the formula's output on paper. This post documents the one time a court examined the formula's own mechanics — and what happened to that finding within the same case.
Ruling Date
1990 — Los Angeles County Superior Court, Judge Harvey A. Schneider presiding, in the damages phase of Buchwald v. Paramount.
Underlying Contract
A 1983 agreement granting writer Art Buchwald 1.5 percent and producing partner Alain Bernheim 17.5 percent of the net profits of any film made from Buchwald's 1982 treatment — produced, without credit to either man, as Paramount's Coming to America (1988).
Court's Finding
Paramount's standard net-profit formula was "unconscionable," "unduly oppressive," and "fundamentally flawed" — the first time a court examined the formula's mechanics rather than accepting it as neutral boilerplate.
Ultimate Outcome
Paramount settled for $900,000 before any appeal. As a term of that settlement, the unconscionability finding itself was vacated — stripped of binding force before any higher court could review it.
Layer I  ·  Source

In 1982, Art Buchwald wrote a treatment called "It's a Crude, Crude World," pitched to Paramount's Jeffrey Katzenberg with Eddie Murphy in mind for the lead. Paramount optioned it, renamed it "King for a Day," then dropped the project in 1985. Buchwald took the idea elsewhere. In 1987, Paramount went ahead and made Coming to America — credited solely to Murphy and the film's writers, with no reference to Buchwald or his producing partner, Alain Bernheim. Both men sued for breach of the 1983 agreement, arguing the finished film was "based upon" their treatment under a phrase the contract itself never defined.

The court agreed a breach had occurred. That finding settled the theft question, but it barely touched the money question, because the 1983 contract hadn't promised Buchwald and Bernheim a flat fee — it promised them a percentage of "net profits." What that phrase actually meant, on a real film with real box office, was about to be tested in open court for the first time in this series' record, rather than assumed, leaked, or modeled academically.

$0
net profit — Paramount's own trial testimony
Assigned, under oath, to a film the same testimony separately conceded had brought in $288 million in ticket sales.
Layer II  ·  Conduit

What the damages phase actually put on the record was the formula itself — the same shape of deductions described in Posts I and II, examined this time under oath rather than reconstructed from a leaked statement or an academic paper. The court's finding went further than simply calling the result unfair. It found that the net-profit formula written into participant contracts like Buchwald's does not correspond to the net profit concept the same studio uses in the financial statements it files with the Securities and Exchange Commission and reports to its own investors. Two different numbers, two different audiences, the same underlying film — one version of "profit" real enough to disclose to regulators and shareholders, another version, defined in the participant's own contract, engineered to double-count costs the studio had already recovered elsewhere.

That is the conduit this post is built around: not a leak, not a formula reconstructed after the fact, but a court's own finding that a studio maintains two accountings of the same picture, and that only one of them is designed to ever show a profit.

Layer III  ·  Conversion

The conversion is the same one this series has traced twice already, now confirmed under oath rather than inferred from a document or a formula description. Paramount's own witnesses acknowledged Coming to America had taken in $288 million in ticket sales. Run through the contract's net-profit formula, the same film produced nothing — not a modest return, not a marginal loss, but a flat contractual zero, on a picture the studio itself did not dispute was a hit. The number that changed wasn't the box office. It was the figure sitting on the one line a percentage contract actually depends on.

Unconscionable, unduly oppressive, and fundamentally flawed.

Judge Harvey A. Schneider, Los Angeles County Superior Court  ·  1990
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

The insulation in this case is the case's own resolution. Fearing that a formal "unconscionable" finding would expose every other net-profit contract it had ever written to the same challenge, Paramount settled before any appeal could be filed — $150,000 to Buchwald, $750,000 to Bernheim, $900,000 total. As a condition of that settlement, the unconscionability finding itself was vacated, removed from the case's binding legal force. The one moment in this series where a court examined the formula directly and named it unconscionable did not survive the resolution of its own lawsuit.

No appellate court has reviewed the question since. And Schneider's ruling was not even the last word among trial courts on the same issue: a separate Superior Court case, Batfilm Productions v. Warner Bros., concerning 1989's Batman, examined a similar net-profit formula and found it was not unconscionable. California trial courts remain split on the exact question this post is built around, with no appellate decision above either ruling to say which one controls. The industry's actual response to Buchwald wasn't to rewrite the formula the case exposed — it was to make idea submissions harder, with studios adopting policies to return unsolicited scripts unopened, closing off the kind of claim that started the case rather than the accounting practice the case's damages phase put on the record.

Friction Capital Read v5.5 Diagnostic Overlay

All three conditions fire in Post III — the first post in this series where the evidentiary record supports testing all of them.

Interpretive Capital — fires, confirmed by a court rather than inferred. The contractual "net profit" formula does not correspond to the net profit the same studio reports under GAAP to the SEC and its own investors. Two definitions, one word, applied selectively depending on who is owed money by the answer.

Enforcement Asymmetry — fires, on a different axis than in Posts I and II. Not talent leverage this time, but adjudicative inconsistency: the same category of net-profit formula, examined by two different Superior Court judges within roughly a year of each other, produced opposite conclusions — unconscionable in one courtroom, acceptable in the next — with no appellate court ever settling which reading controls in California.

Temporal Capital — fires. Thirty-six years separate Schneider's 1990 finding from this post, and the finding has never been affirmed, reviewed, or overturned by any appellate court in that time — not because the underlying question was resolved, but because the one case built to test it was settled before an appeal could force a higher court to decide.

FSA Wall — Post III

The case's procedural history, Judge Schneider's finding that Paramount's net-profit formula does not correspond to its GAAP/SEC accounting, the Batfilm Productions v. Warner Bros. comparison, and the $900,000 settlement with vacatur of the unconscionability finding are drawn from Wikipedia's "Buchwald v. Paramount" entry, treated as Tier 2 aggregation of court filings and legal commentary. The exact quoted findings — "unconscionable," "unduly oppressive," and "fundamentally flawed" — the 1983 contract's 1.5 percent / 17.5 percent split between Buchwald and Bernheim, and the $150,000 / $750,000 settlement breakdown are drawn from Grokipedia's entry on the case, cross-checked against Wikipedia's independent account where the two overlap. Quimbee's case brief summaries of Buchwald v. Paramount, 90 L.A. Daily J. App. Rep. 14482 (1990), are treated as Tier 2 confirmation of the procedural posture and the finding that Paramount's contract was presented as boilerplate rather than freely negotiated. Pierce O'Donnell and Dennis McDougal's 1992 book, Fatal Subtraction: The Inside Story of Buchwald v. Paramount, is the fullest existing account of the case and is referenced here only indirectly, via Wikipedia — flagged as an interested-party record, since O'Donnell was Buchwald's own trial attorney, rather than treated as a neutral source.

Series note: this is Post III of The Paper Loss. Post IV turns to a single figure in a different contract — the $62,500 the Tolkien estate had received from New Line Cinema before suing over The Lord of the Rings.

The Paper Loss  ·  Series Navigation
Post IThe Number They Get to Write
Post IIThe Machine That Empties the Gross
Post IIIThe Case That Named the Trick
Post IVSixty-Two Thousand Dollars
Post VThe Settlement That Says Nothing
Post VIThe Day the Formula Broke

Friday, July 3, 2026

The Paper Loss : Post II: The Machine That Empties the Gross

The Paper Loss | Post 2: The Machine That Empties the Gross
The Paper Loss Post II  ·  Forensic System Architecture  ·  Sub Verbis · Vera
GROSS: DRAINED

The Machine That Empties the Gross

// July 2010 — the leaked accounting statement that showed, line by line, how a $938 million hit became a $167 million loss



An aged studio contract page open to a clause defining net profits, a pen resting across the line
The interest line on a picture cost statement rarely says who the interest was paid to. In the case this post documents, the studio financed its own film, then charged that same production nearly $60 million to borrow money from itself.
Documented Instance — Post II
Post I described the formula in the abstract. This post is built around one of the only times the formula's actual output became public — not through disclosure, but through a leak.
Leak Date
July 6, 2010 — Deadline Hollywood publishes a leaked "net profit participation statement," the internal document a studio issues to net-profit participants, for Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.
Subject Film
Warner Bros.' Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007). Grossed $938.2 million worldwide per the leaked statement itself — publicly tracked box-office data puts the figure closer to $942 million, the same order of magnitude.
Reported Result
A loss of more than $167 million, per the studio's own statement — on a film that, at the time of the leak, ranked among the ten highest-grossing releases ever made.
Authorizing Body
None. The statement is prepared and issued unilaterally by the studio to whoever holds a net-profit contract. Nothing required Warner Bros. to make it public. The only reason anyone outside that contract saw it at all was that someone leaked it to a reporter.
Layer I  ·  Source

Every net-profit contract generates a document like this one. Studios issue participation statements as a matter of routine bookkeeping — a running account of what a picture has earned and spent, sent periodically to whoever holds a contingent stake in it. Almost none of them are ever seen by anyone outside that narrow circle. They aren't filed with a regulator, aren't disclosed to shareholders as a matter of course, and aren't published anywhere a journalist or a competing studio could review them. The formula described in Post I is not a secret. The specific numbers that formula produces, on any specific film, almost always are.

What makes the Harry Potter statement different is simply that it escaped. In July 2010, Deadline Hollywood's Nikki Finke published the actual document — the internal statement Warner Bros. had prepared showing the fifth Harry Potter film, three years after release and after grossing $938.2 million, running more than $167 million in the red. It is one of the few times the public has been able to look directly at what the formula from Post I actually does to a real film's real numbers, rather than trust a description of the mechanism in the abstract.

$60M
in interest charged against an estimated $400 million production and marketing cost
Carried for roughly two years, per the leaked statement — on a film Deadline reported had no outside financing, meaning the lender the interest was owed to was, in substance, Warner Bros. itself.
Layer II  ·  Conduit

The conduit is visible in the statement's own line items. Distribution and advertising costs make up the bulk of the deductions, and a meaningful share of that marketing spend, according to commentary on the leak, went to Warner's own sister media divisions — meaning money counted as an "expense" against the film's net profit line flowed to another arm of the same parent company rather than to any outside vendor. The interest charge works the same way in reverse: nearly $60 million charged against roughly $400 million in production and marketing costs, carried for about two years, on a picture that — per Deadline's reporting — had no outside financing at all. If there was no outside lender, the entity charging the interest and the entity absorbing the cost of it both trace back to Warner Bros. The studio was, functionally, billing itself and recording the bill as a cost against the participants.

This is the conduit Post I described as boilerplate made concrete: a distribution fee, an overhead allocation, and an interest charge, each one payable to an entity connected to the studio itself, each one subtracted before a single dollar reaches the "net profit" line. Nothing about this required a scheme in the sense of a scandal. It required only a standard contract, applied as written, to a film that happened to make almost a billion dollars.

Evidence from the Edges How Industry Professionals Actually Reacted to the Leak

Deadline's own report noted that the numbers were run past several entertainment attorneys and agents before publication. None of them were reported as surprised. The reaction wasn't disbelief that a billion-dollar film could show a loss — it was recognition that this is simply what a net-profit statement always looks like, on any film, once it clears theatrical release.

That reaction is itself evidence. A mechanism that no longer surprises the professionals who negotiate around it every day isn't a malfunction in the system. It's the system operating exactly as its own experienced participants expect it to.

Layer III  ·  Conversion

The conversion is arithmetic, not metaphor. $938.2 million in worldwide receipts, run through a distribution fee, a marketing spend substantially recycled to the studio's own divisions, and a self-charged interest bill on a loan with no outside lender, converts — on the studio's own paper — into a stated $167 million loss. None of that revenue disappeared from the real world. Theaters were paid. Warner's marketing divisions were paid. The interest, such as it was, was recorded as paid. What converted wasn't the money. It was the number attached to the contractual line marked "net profits" — the same line, sitting directly above "participation payable," that determines whether anyone holding a contingent stake in the film ever sees a check.

No movie is ever, ever going to go to pay off on net participants.

Unnamed dealmaker, quoted by Deadline Hollywood  ·  July 2010
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

The insulation here is the same one that let this document stay private for three years in the first place: nothing compels a studio to disclose a participation statement to anyone but the participant it was prepared for, and that participant's own contract typically restricts what can be done with it once received. The Harry Potter statement is not public because a disclosure rule required it. It is public because someone with access to it decided to send it to a reporter, and the reporter decided to print it. Absent that individual decision, the statement functions exactly as every other studio's participation statements still do: privately, permanently, and unreviewed by anyone outside the relationship it governs.

Deadline's own framing of the leak pointed directly at the post this series is building toward. Nothing about the Harry Potter statement was described as new or unusual — it was described as confirmation that nothing had changed since a judge called this same kind of accounting "unconscionable" twenty years earlier, in a lawsuit brought by a writer over a 1988 comedy that made ten times its budget and was still declared unprofitable. That case is the subject of Post III.

Friction Capital Read v5.5 Diagnostic Overlay

Two of three conditions fire in Post II. The third is deferred, consistent with the standard set in Post I.

Interpretive Capital — fires cleanly. "Interest" ordinarily describes the cost of borrowed capital paid to an outside lender. On a film with no outside financing, a self-charged interest line describes something else entirely: an internal transfer, priced by the studio, paid to the studio, and still subtracted from the participant's side of the ledger as if it were an external cost.

Temporal Capital — fires. Twenty years separate Buchwald v. Paramount's 1990 finding that this kind of accounting was "unconscionable" from the 2010 leak showing an unchanged mechanism applied to one of the highest-grossing films ever made. That gap is dateable at both ends: a legal finding on one side, a leaked document on the other, with no evidence of the underlying practice having moved in between.

Enforcement Asymmetry — not yet assessable from Post II alone. This post documents one instance of the mechanism operating as designed, not a comparison across differently leveraged participants. That comparison resumes once Posts III and IV establish named cases on both sides of it.

Per the v5.5 standard, conditions are reported only where this post's evidence actually supports testing them.

FSA Wall — Post II

The leaked participation statement, its $938.2 million gross figure, the $167+ million reported loss, and the detail that the numbers were reviewed by attorneys and agents who were not surprised by them are drawn from Nikki Finke's original July 6, 2010 Deadline Hollywood report, treated here as Tier 1 — the first publication of the document itself. The $60 million interest figure, the roughly $400 million production-and-marketing cost basis, the two-year carry period, and the unnamed dealmaker's on-record quote are drawn from the same Deadline report. The detail regarding the absence of outside financing and the resulting self-charged interest is drawn from Boing Boing's 2011 commentary on the leak, treated as Tier 2 analysis of the Deadline document. SlashFilm's contemporaneous July 2010 coverage is treated as Tier 2 corroboration of the statement's core figures. Wikipedia's entry on the film is used only to cross-check the film's publicly tracked worldwide gross against the figure stated on the leaked document itself.

Series note: this is Post II of The Paper Loss. Post III turns to Buchwald v. Paramount, the 1990 case that first put this mechanism in front of a judge — and the case Deadline's own sources pointed back to when this leak surfaced.

The Paper Loss  ·  Series Navigation
Post IThe Number They Get to Write
Post IIThe Machine That Empties the Gross
Post IIIThe Case That Named the Trick
Post IVSixty-Two Thousand Dollars
Post VThe Settlement That Says Nothing
Post VIThe Day the Formula Broke

The Paper Loss : Post I: The Number They Get to Write

The Paper Loss | Post 1: The Number They Get to Write
The Paper Loss Post I  ·  Forensic System Architecture  ·  Sub Verbis · Vera
NET: NULL

The Number They Get to Write

// 1950–1998 — the fifty-year arc from the first Hollywood profit-sharing deal to the standardized formula that lets "net profit" resolve to zero by design



An aged studio contract page open to a clause defining net profits, a pen resting across the line
A picture cost statement, June 1962. The pen rests under "Net Profits" — but the line below it, "Participation Payable," carries a number. The money was never missing. It just had somewhere else to be first.
Founding Instance — Post I
The origin of contingent film compensation. This post traces how a single 1950 deal, made in good faith between two parties who trusted the same set of numbers, became the template for a formula that no longer requires trust at all.
Founding Date
1950 — Universal's Winchester '73, the first confirmed instance in the sound era of a film actor taking a share of a picture's earnings in place of a fixed salary.
Stated Actors
James Stewart; his agent, Lew Wasserman of MCA; Universal Pictures under studio head William Goetz.
Authorizing Body
None. A single negotiated arrangement between one agent and one studio — never reviewed, standardized, or capped by a guild, a regulator, or any body representing the participants who would later be offered the same deal shape on non-negotiable terms.
Precipitating Condition
Universal could not meet Stewart's usual fee, reported at roughly $200,000. Goetz offered a percentage of the picture's profits instead — a concession that looked, at the time, like the studio giving something up. Within a generation, the same structure would be standardized industry-wide as a way for studios to give up nothing at all.
Layer I  ·  Source

The story usually told about Winchester '73 is a story about leverage — an agent outmaneuvering a studio, a star cashing in on a hit nobody expected. That story isn't false. Wasserman negotiated Stewart a share of the picture's profits in place of his salary; the film outperformed expectations; Stewart walked away with roughly $600,000, more than triple what his usual fee would have paid him. It became the deal every agent in town wanted to replicate, and within a decade, more or less every above-the-line participant in Hollywood was working, at least in part, for a percentage of something called "profit."

The detail that gets skipped in that telling is the one that matters for this series: nobody in 1950 needed to define what "profit" meant with any real precision, because the deal was new enough that no one had yet learned to weaponize the definition. Both sides were still counting on the same set of numbers. What Winchester '73 actually originated wasn't a payday — it was a dependency. From that deal forward, whether a participant's compensation existed at all would hinge on a term the paying party alone got to define, calculate, and audit. In 1950, that dependency was harmless because no one had thought to exploit it yet. The fifty years that followed are the story of someone thinking to.

125%
of prime — the interest rate later standardized into the "net profit" formula
Charged on production financing regardless of the studio's actual cost of capital, and — per the mechanics documented below — recovered before the film's own production costs are paid down at all.
Layer II  ·  Conduit

The conduit is the formula itself, and by the time academic economists got around to documenting it, it was no longer being negotiated picture by picture — it was boilerplate. A studio's standard contract defines "net profit" as gross receipts, minus a distribution fee commonly cited in the 30 to 35 percent range, minus an overhead allocation typically set at 10 to 15 percent regardless of what the production actually cost the studio to service, minus interest charged on the money advanced to make the film — a rate documented at 125 percent of prime in the definitive academic treatment of these contracts. None of those three deductions is tethered to an audited real-world cost. All three are fixed percentages the studio writes into its own template and then applies to itself.

The order in which those deductions are recovered compounds the effect. Under the standard formula, any revenue left over after the distribution fee is paid does not go toward paying down the cost of making the film first — it goes to satisfying the interest charge first, and only once that interest is fully covered does anything begin reducing the production's actual negative cost. As long as a balance remains outstanding, interest keeps accruing on it, which means the "profit" line can stay at zero indefinitely, not because the film failed to earn money, but because the formula recovers the studio's own internal charges before it recovers anything else.

The Formula, As Standardized
Three deductions, fixed by the studio's own contract template, applied before a single dollar reaches a "net profit" participant
Distribution Fee
Commonly cited at 30 to 35 percent of gross receipts — a flat charge for the studio's own distribution arm "selling" the film, unrelated to what distribution actually costs on any given title.
Overhead Allocation
Typically 10 to 15 percent, applied without meaningful tracing to the production's actual use of studio facilities, staff, or services.
Interest Charge
Documented at 125 percent of prime on money advanced for production — a rate set by the studio's own contract, not by any external lender.
Order of Recovery
Interest is satisfied before the film's negative cost is repaid — meaning the balance can remain in deficit, on paper, for as long as any financing stays outstanding.
Layer III  ·  Conversion

What that formula converts, in practice, is real box office success into a contractual nullity. Stan Lee's agreement with Marvel entitled him to 10 percent of the net profits from anything built on characters he co-created. Spider-Man, released in 2002, brought in more than $800 million. Run through the standard formula, the picture's net profit — as defined in Lee's own contract — was zero. He filed suit later that year; the case wasn't resolved until January 2005, when Marvel agreed to a $10 million payment covering both the claims Lee had already made and any future ones arising from the same agreement. The settlement didn't reinterpret the formula. It priced the cost of not litigating it further.

Winston Groom's deal for the screen rights to Forrest Gump included a 3 percent profit share. The film grossed roughly $680 million against a budget near $55 million — by any ordinary measure, one of the most profitable pictures of its decade. Run through the studio's accounting, it showed as a net loss. Groom was paid a flat $350,000 for the rights, plus a separate $250,000 payment from the studio — figures negotiated as settlements to the underlying dispute, not distributions of the profit share his contract had promised him on paper.

Eddie Murphy is reported to have dismissed net profit shares as "monkey points" and to have regarded accepting them as a mistake no one with real leverage needed to make. That distinction is the one worth sitting with: the defense against this formula was never a better contract clause. It was refusing net profit points altogether and negotiating for a share of the gross instead — a defense available only to talent with enough box office weight to make the studio say yes.

Don't ever settle for net profits. It's called "creative accounting."

Lynda Carter, on The Late Show with Joan Rivers
Layer IV  ·  Insulation

The insulation begins in contract law itself. Courts generally treat "net profits," as used in a personal services agreement, as a negotiated term of art rather than a factual claim about a project's real-world profitability — meaning a studio's accounting can diverge sharply from any ordinary understanding of "profit" without that divergence, by itself, constituting a breach. The bar for challenging the calculation is deliberately set high: a participant generally has to show something closer to bad faith or an unconscionable result, not simply that the number feels wrong. What that standard actually requires, and how rarely it gets met, is the subject of the next post in this series.

The second layer of insulation is procedural. Standard studio contracts typically limit a participant's right to audit the studio's own books — narrow audit windows, restricted scope, and cost-shifting provisions that put the burden of proving the calculation wrong back on the person least equipped to prove it. And no outside body sits above any of this. Not the SEC, not a guild acting collectively, not any state regulator reviews or standardizes what a studio is permitted to define "net profit" to mean in the contracts it writes. The definition is authored by the party whose payout depends on it landing at zero, applied by that same party, and defended by that same party when questioned — a closed loop that requires litigation from the outside to interrupt, rather than review from within to prevent.

Friction Capital Read v5.5 Diagnostic Overlay

Two of three conditions fire cleanly in Post I. The third needs a dated instance this post doesn't yet have.

Interpretive Capital — fires cleanly. "Net profit" is redefined from a plain description of financial success into a technical term whose only fixed meaning is whatever the fine print says — the same two words, industry-wide, doing something close to the opposite of what a participant signing the contract would reasonably assume they mean.

Enforcement Asymmetry — fires. The same industry that left Stan Lee and Winston Groom with contractually worthless net points routinely carved out a different deal — gross participation — for talent with enough leverage to refuse net points outright. The asymmetry isn't between studios. It's a two-tier system operating inside every studio at once, sorted entirely by who has the leverage to say no.

Temporal Capital — not yet assessable from Post I alone. Testing the gap between when a contract is signed and when its true cost becomes visible requires a dated instance where disclosure and consequence can be measured against each other. That instance is the subject of Posts III and IV.

Per the v5.5 standard, conditions are reported only where this post's evidence actually supports testing them.

FSA Wall — Post I

The Winchester '73 origin account — Universal's inability to meet Stewart's usual fee, Wasserman's negotiation, and the resulting payout — is drawn from Wikipedia's entry on the film and Variety's 2016 Lew Wasserman retrospective, both treated as Tier 2, cross-checked against each other given some variation across secondary accounts of whether the original deal was structured on gross or net terms. The standardized distribution fee, overhead allocation, interest rate, and order-of-recovery mechanics are drawn from Mark Weinstein's "Profit-Sharing Contracts in Hollywood: Evolution and Analysis" (Journal of Legal Studies, 1998), treated as Tier 1 primary economic and legal analysis. The Stan Lee/Spider-Man settlement, the Winston Groom/Forrest Gump figures, and the Eddie Murphy and Lynda Carter attributions are drawn from Wikipedia's "Hollywood accounting" entry and its HandWiki mirror, treated as Tier 2 aggregation of underlying reporting.

Series note: this is Post I of The Paper Loss, tracing how "net profit" in studio contracts became a defined term rather than a description — from its origin, through the standardized formula, two named legal cases, the studio's own defense of the practice, and the streaming-era rupture now breaking the model that grew out of it.

The Paper Loss  ·  Series Navigation
Post IThe Number They Get to Write
Post IIThe Machine That Empties the Gross
Post IIIThe Case That Named the Trick
Post IVSixty-Two Thousand Dollars
Post VThe Settlement That Says Nothing
Post VIThe Day the Formula Broke