“They have been provided in clear breach of that agreement.”
“I’m floored that these documents could have been provided by someone, despite the fact that there is a clear agreement within the litigation ensuring that they are confidential,” said Marvin Putnam, an Anschutz attorney. Both sides seek millions of dollars in damages. Anschutz countersued, alleging that Cussler exaggerated sales of “Sahara” and other Dirk Pitt adventure books and that he refused to promote the film, hurting attendance. The financial documents obtained by The Times were submitted as “confidential” exhibits in an ongoing Los Angeles jury trial.Ĭussler initially sued, claiming that Anschutz’s producers reneged on his $10-million contract by failing to honor his right to approve the script.
But the movie was saddled with exorbitant costs, including a $160-million production and $81.1 million in distribution expenses. 1 after its opening weekend and generating $122 million in gross box-office sales. Unlike most financial failures, “Sahara” performed reasonably well, ranking No. The production firm owned by Denver billionaire Philip Anschutz got $20.4 million in government incentives to film and edit parts of “Sahara” in Europe. Ward, who won an Academy Award for “The Sting,” received $500,000. Ten screenwriters were paid $3.8 million in fees and bonuses - highlighting the increasingly common practice of hiring and firing numerous writers on big-budget features. A $40,688 payment to stop a river improvement project and $23,250 for “Political/Mayoral support” may have run afoul of U.S.
“Courtesy payments,” “gratuities” and “local bribes” totaling $237,386 were passed out on locations in Morocco to expedite filming. Rainn Wilson, who since has raised his profile through roles in “Six Feet Under” and “The Office,” was paid $45,000 for 10 weeks of work. About 1,000 cast and crew members worked on “Sahara.” The highest-paid was McConaughey, who received an $8-million fee, or $615,385 for each week of filming, not including bonuses and other compensation. But records show the film losing $78.3 million based on Hollywood accounting methods that count projected revenue ($202.9 million in this case) over a 10-year period. “Sahara,” an action-adventure based on the bestselling novel by Clive Cussler, has lost about $105 million to date, according to a finance executive assigned to the movie. The records offer insights into the economics of modern-day moviemaking and industry practices that seldom are disclosed. Everyone wants to know what everyone else is getting paid.” “The studios guard that information very, very carefully,” said Phil Hacker, a senior partner in a Century City accounting firm that audits motion pictures. Movie budgets are one of the last remaining secrets in the entertainment business, typically known to only high-level executives, senior producers and accountants. The line items cover such things as “local bribes” within the Kingdom of Morocco and the salaries and “star perks” paid to Matthew McConaughey and Penelope Cruz. The documents, obtained by The Times, provide a rare behind-the-curtain peek at the thousands of expenditures that drain the budget of a major motion picture. This kind of spending, according to accounting records, helped turn “Sahara” into one of the biggest financial flops in Hollywood history. The cost of the 46-second clip: more than $2 million.
“In the context of the movie, it didn’t work,” said director Breck Eisner. ON an old studio lot outside London, a production crew began work on the movie “Sahara” in November 2003 by staging the crash of a vintage airplane.īut when the film opened in theaters in April 2005, the sequence had been deleted.