QUESTIONS FOR FEEDBACK:
Answer these questions in pairs, in English, in a few sentences.
Answer these questions in pairs, in English, in a few sentences.
1. List 5 advantages Hollywood has over local
film industries in other countries.
2. How does the US use Free Trade Agreements to
help Hollywood?
3. How does the distribution system help Hollywood market its movies?
4. According to the writer, how much of the budget for a big budget film goes to marketing the movie and the products related to it?
5. How do American movies drive US cultural imperialism?
3. How does the distribution system help Hollywood market its movies?
4. According to the writer, how much of the budget for a big budget film goes to marketing the movie and the products related to it?
5. How do American movies drive US cultural imperialism?
READING 1.
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/263287009
Cultural
globalization and the dominance of the American
film industry: cultural policies,
national
film industries, and... Article in
International Journal of Cultural Policy · September 2014
…the expansion of media culture industries in
other countries has to be seen in the context of the continuing
dominance of American media culture. Banerjee (2002, p. 517) states: ‘The USA has emerged as the
most powerful player and clearly dominates the world’s cultural
industries’. This is particularly true in the film
industry.2 Using
data from 2002 to 2007, Fu and Govindaraju (2010,
p. 223) found that countries are increasingly
importing American films.
The annual World Box Office
Top 20 consists of American films
and a few US co-productions (European Audiovisual Observatory 2010)
(see Chart 1).
The dominance of the American film industry is generally explained by three factors: (1) the enormous concentration of
talent and economic resources for the production of film in the Los Angeles region (Hollywood)
(Scott 2002);
(2) the advantage of the huge American market
that offers economies of scale, ensuring that cultural exports can be sold at
rates well below the cost of production for smaller nations (Van Elteren 2003,
p. 173); and (3) a widespread and effective distribution system for American films in the USA and in many other countries
that effectively excludes foreign films
from the US market and ensures the success of American films abroad (Scott 2002).
Scott (2002, p. 958) attributes Hollywood’s competitive
advantages to ‘a dense agglomeration of firms and workers and associated institutions’.
This production system has two major components, one devoted
to the production of very expensive blockbuster films
that are marketed globally and another devoted to the production of relatively low-budget
independent films which may or may not be distributed abroad. A few American
conglomerates produce the most expensive films and provide financing and distribution for films made by small independent companies.3
These elements exist in an institutional
environment and regional context which provide filmmakers
with ‘strong competitive advantages in the form of increasing returns to scale and scope’ and which
function as ‘a seedbed of creativity and innovation for the industry’ (Scott 2002,
p. 965).
Among all film-producing
countries, the USA is unique in the average cost of films. The average cost of films produced by major studios is close to
$100 million while the average cost of independent films is less than $40 million (European Audiovisual Observatory 2006,
p. 37).4 By
comparison, the average cost of a British film
is $13.3 million (Brunet and Gornostaeva 2006), of a French film,
$5.1
million (European Audiovisual Observatory 2010,
p. 23), and of an Egyptian film, $1.3–$5.5 million (European Audiovisual
Observatory 2010,
p. 61). Table 1 shows the disparity in production costs between
North America and other regions. The high production costs of American films are necessitated by their use of a star system and their emphasis on increasingly
elaborate special effects.
Although many American films are very profitable in the USA, foreign markets have become much more important, as the costs
of making films have increased. In 2005, 61.3% of Hollywood’s box office receipts were derived from foreign markets (MPAA 2006, cited in Gao 2009).
US firms have the advantage of working in the principal international language, English.
Typically, about one-third of a US film’s budget is devoted to advertising and
promotion, including an emphasis on
film branding which includes product placements
and products that are widely marketed through commercial tie-ins and
cross-promotions (York 2010, p. 3). Scott argues that, without its effective and
unparalleled distribution system, the production system in Hollywood would be much
less successful than it is. The system relies on extensive networks of
regional offices in the USA and abroad, marketing and distribution involving intense
publicity campaigns and exhibition in many different theatres
simultaneously (Scott 2002, p. 969). The absence of comparable distribution systems in
the film industries in other countries prevents them from competing effectively in
the USA and elsewhere. The American market for foreign productions has
been described as ‘impenetrable and unattainable’ (Brunet and Gornostaeva 2006,
p. 61).
Another factor in the global dominance of the
American film industry is the role of cultural policy. As will be discussed in a
subsequent section, the continuing success of Hollywood films in the face of increasing competition
from other countries is at times the result of a fierce battle between national cultural
policies, onewhich Hollywood, supported a system of
Foreign Trade Agreements, negotiated by the American government, usually wins (see
below).
….
Cultural policy is an important element in
the global dominance of the American film
industry. The goal of the American government’s film
policy is to eliminate film
quotas in other countries so as to ensure that their film markets are open to American films. At the beginning of the past decade,
UNESCO (2000, 2005)
recognized the exceptional nature of cultural goods and affirmed the right of
nation states to implement policies that
protect and provide cultural expression in a Convention on the Protection and Promotion of
the Diversity of Cultural Expression (Jin 2008).
While European countries, particularly France, strongly supported the convention, the USA refused to
sign it and vigorously lobbied against it (Jin 2011).7
The American response to the UNESCO
convention was an increase in the use of Foreign Trade Agreements on a one-to-one
basis with other countries. FTAs are intended to eliminate film quotas and promote exports of American films to other countries. The American government’s reaction
to the UNESCO convention and its use of FTAs reflect
the enormous importance that the American government places on its film
industry. Cultural industries, such as film,
music, and television,
are major sources of American exports (Jin 2011).
While negotiations for the UNESCO convention
were taking place, the USA was beginning FTA agreements with more
than 20 countries, including Morocco, Columbia, Australia, Israel, South
Africa, Malaysia, and Korea (Jin 2011).
In some but not all of the countries that signed FTA agreements with the USA, their domestic film markets declined rapidly, as shown by the
market share
of local films.
This was particularly true in small countries with relatively small film industries, such as Canada and Australia,
which were no longer able to adequately protect their industries.
The USA also pressured South Korea to reduce its
quota system for foreign films that had been in existence for several
decades as a condition for starting negotiations for a US-Korea FTA (Jin 2008).8 In
spite of strong opposition from the film
industry, the government halved the quotas because it expected other industries
to benefit from other aspects of the FTA.
The effects of American pressure to cut
screen quotas vary depending upon the economic and cultural contexts in
different countries. In the early 1990s, when screen quotas were cut in Mexico as a
result of the NAFTA Treaty with the USA, the number of films produced in Mexico declined from 100 in
1992 to 14 in 2003. The market share of Mexico’s film industry was 7.5% in 2009. In
Korea, the short run effects of cutting the film quotas in 2006 were very negative. The film
industry lost money in subsequent years but, in 2009, it once again became profitable.
Six Korean films were among the country’s top 10 films (see Table 2). The Korean film
industry survived the change in screen quotas because of the huge market all over Asia for all
forms of Korean popular culture (known as the Korean Wave), including film, in an economic and cultural context where
emerging countries are expanding their
economies and their populations are starting to have disposable income for various forms
of consumption (Shim 2006; see also Keane 2006).
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https://ds.lclark.edu/ktkelly/2016/05/05/research-question-2/
Some critics see films as another
form of cultural imperialism. Since Hollywood has attracted global audiences,
it has made important modifications. Of the past two decades, references to
American culture are less specific, while themes and motifs of other cultures
are more prevalent, making the film appeal to audience on the global film
market (Crane, 2014). And while Hollywood has made these modifications to
diversify its content, the American film industry still faces scrutiny for not
being diverse enough, as exemplified in the #OscarsSoWhite movement during the
2015 Academy Awards. Because of its lack of diversity and global influence,
the Hollywood film industry potentially has the ability to homogenize global
cultures, and therefore the industry acts as a cultural imperialist (Crane,
2014).
The United States is not only a
political hegemon, but its pop culture is also hegemonic (Wagnleitner, 2001).
Ideals that the United States holds to be true are eventually adopted by lower
tiers and subordinate countries. For instance, the American view of development
as fast, progressive, and industrial, leaves little room for other
countries influenced by American pop culture to create a national identity or
perspective themselves (Su, 2011). On top of this the hegemonic devices used in
the film industry function to contain social change by absorbing stories (that should be told in different perspectives) into its core ideological
structure, “giving the appearance of addressing calls for social change, while
simultaneously legitimizing dominant ideologies for the viewing public,”
(Cooper, 1999).
While Hollywood has made
modifications to their industry to be more specific about other cultures,
Hollywood is also modifying the cultures within the movies to encompass
American ideals. Take, for instance, the Disney Princess movie, Mulan (1998). Before the United States even produced this film, the
Chinese folk tale had already been the subject of operas, television series,
and three films. When Disney production started, “American-style individualism
was inserted in the story, transforming a shy, demure heroine into an outgoing
and tomboyish girl… the story although set in China, is resolutely modern and
American,” (Crane, 2014)
Understanding Hollywood movies:
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