Tenet - Box Office Autopsy
I found this on incentives in EstoniaJoshua Strong wrote: ↑May 29th, 2019, 10:32 amI wonder if any of these countries have granted the production rebates or tax incentives.
Up to 30% discretionary cash rebate. The maximum (30%) grant can be applied if the film production uses Estonian-based filmmakers, actors and other production crew, Estonian story and/or Estonian-set storyline.
Tartu Film Fund: 10-20% rebate for eligible expenditure incurred in the Tartu area by local film production companies providing production services to international co-productions. The film fund is capped at €150,000 annually.
Viru Film Fund: discretionary cash rebate or co-financing for qualified expenses incurred in the Eastern region of Estonia, including above and below-the-line expenses (except producer's fee in excess of 7% of the total eligible expenditure). No residency requirements. The film fund is capped at around €50,000 annually. Minimum spend: €0
Around the same budget as Inception had then? According to Wikipedia it had a budget of $160 million.
movies shoot ~*~*exclusively*~*~ where productions can claim rebatesJoshua Strong wrote: ↑May 29th, 2019, 10:32 amI wonder if any of these countries have granted the production rebates or tax incentives.
550 million domestic 510 million Foreign.
Very nice username, Mr. Reese.
I too miss PoI every damn day.
Saw some set photos of Marvel's upcoming Black Widow movie, and I was amazed at how many similarities it shared with Tenet.
Both are:
- spy films (or at least I assume) coming out summer 2020; Black Widow in May, and Tenet in July
- currently shooting in formerly communist Eastern Bloc countries
- using a tram and an armored fighting vehicle in an action scene
Oh, and did I mention that there's also Bond 25 coming out in April 2020?
There's a very real chance that come July 2020, audiences could be burnt out on the spy genre, which will affect Tenet's box office unless it has some kind of high-concept hook setting it apart that we don't yet know about.
Safe to say, summer 2020 box office is going to be fun.
Both are:
- spy films (or at least I assume) coming out summer 2020; Black Widow in May, and Tenet in July
- currently shooting in formerly communist Eastern Bloc countries
- using a tram and an armored fighting vehicle in an action scene
Oh, and did I mention that there's also Bond 25 coming out in April 2020?
There's a very real chance that come July 2020, audiences could be burnt out on the spy genre, which will affect Tenet's box office unless it has some kind of high-concept hook setting it apart that we don't yet know about.
Safe to say, summer 2020 box office is going to be fun.