We stand with Scarlett!
Thursday, July 29, 2021 at 6:01PM
NATHANIEL R in Black Widow, Disney, MCU, Scarlett Johansson, superheroes

by Nathaniel R

As you may have heard, Scarlett Johansson has sued Disney for breach of contract. She may have lost up to $50 million in bonuses on Black Widow. The very simplest way to explain it is that expensive movie stars (and some key directors) tend to earn "points" based on box office performance. A-listers like Johansson can reap hefty sums each time a movie passes certain agreed-upon thresholds. Disney, eager to beef up their Disney+ service, didn't regenotiate with her about her Black Widow contract before opting to place it on their streaming service for $30, thereby undermining its traditional box office and cutting Scarlett out of the significant $ of Disney+ purchases...

This is the same legally icky area Warner Bros dove right into when they suddenly announced that their movies would stream on HBOMax the same day they hit theaters; Filmmakers were not happy about their contracts not being regenotiated and, as Variety reminds us, Warner Bros paid out many of the biggest stars (presumably to avoid just this kind of lawsuit). Alas, Disney wasn't as smart as Warner Bros and has said that this lawsuit has no merit and tries to blame Scarlett for being insensitve about COVID-19 reality. That's playing dirty.

Though Black Widow opened well (for the pandemic era) it quickly dropped off. It's likely to become the second worst performer in MCU's history. The previous lowest grossers were The Incredible Hulk ($264 million) and Captain America The First Avenger ($370 million) both a decade ago long before Marvel had perfected their formula and half a billion globally was not just a game-changing sensation (2008's Iron Man got there but didn't do much more) but on the low end of the typical performance. 

The MCU Box Office Rank (Domestic/Global)
* denotes movies Scarlett is in so it's not like she hasn't been working for the $

Disney is the Hulk in this equation picking on a much smaller creature.

  1. * Avengers Endgame (2019) $858/2.7 billion
  2. * Avengers: Infinity War (2018) $700/2 billion
  3. * Avengers (2012) $623/1.5 billion
  4. * Age of Ultron (2015) $459/1.4 billion
  5. Black Panther (2018) $700/1.3 billion
  6. Iron Man 3 (2013) $409/1.2 billion
  7. * Captain America: Civil War (2016) $408/1.1 billion
  8. Spider-Man Far From Home (2019) $390/1.1 billion
  9. Captain Marvel (2019) $427/1.1 billion
  10. Spider-Man Homecoming (2017) $334/880
  11. Guardians of the Galaxy 2 (2017) $389/863
  12. Thor: Ragnarok (2017) $315/853
  13. Guardians of the Galaxy (2014) $333/773
  14. * Captain America: Winter Soldier (2014) $259/714
  15. Doctor Strange (2016) $233/677
  16. Thor: The Dark World (2013) $206/644
  17. * Iron Man 2 (2010) $312/623
  18. Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018) $217/622
  19. Iron Man (2008) $319/585
  20. Ant-Man (2015) $180/519
  21. Thor (2011) $181/449
  22. Captain America The First Avenger (2011) $176/370
  23. 🔺 * Black Widow (2021) $135/318
  24. The Incredible Hulk (2009) $135/264

We hope Scarlett lawyered up well.

 

https://t.co/QUsdBpJ8SG

— Liam Miller (@liammiller87) July 29, 2021

 

She deserves the money and she's setting an important precedent here that will help other filmmakers. If massive billion dollar corporations can do whatever they want and reneg on contracts with their most valuable players, what's to stop them from doing it all over the place and to people without the means to fight back? Depressingly many on the internet are calling her "greedy" and suggesting that the movie wouldn't have done well even if the pandemic hadn't been on. Both arguments are silly since the only greed is Disney's for not meeting to regenotiate and assuming that they could just keep all the Disney+ money for themselves (since that wasn't in the original contract). Plus, there's no way that Black Widow wouldn't have performed at least in the average low Marvel range of say $500 million. She's a more popular character than Ant-Man after all. What's more Captain Marvel (and non-Marvel film Wonder Woman) both very recently proved that the argument that women couldn't lead superhero pictures to financial success was just corporate anxiety combined with unimaginative sexism.

The real mystery is why Disney didn't meet about regenotiating her salary once they decided to put Black Widow on Disney Plus. 

 

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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