Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • Christmas,

  • the most wonderful time of the year,

  • with the most festive movies of the year.

  • But not all Christmas movies are created equally.

  • On one side you have the theatrical studio Christmas movie.

  • We're talking your Elf’s, we're talking your Home Alone’s,

  • your The Santa Clauses.

  • These films aren't blockbusters per-se,

  • their budgets are often medium to small.

  • But they're significant when compared to the micro-budget

  • Christmas movies that our moms have grown to love

  • Like Time for Him to Come Home for Christmas

  • or Time for Me to Come Home for Christmas

  • or Time for You to Come Home for Christmas

  • Or Time for Us to Come Home for Christmas

  • or A Cookie Cutter Christmas.

  • Okay, that last one was a departure, I know.

  • But I lumped it in because I actually spoke to the guy

  • who made the music for it.

  • Hey, I'm Russ Howard and I am a film composer

  • Almost every day on Hallmark

  • during Christmas season, there's a good chance

  • if you turn on the TV, then you'll run into some of my music.

  • I called him up to talk about

  • how all the Christmas movies we know and love,

  • and the ones we might not know yet, sound Christmas-y.

  • Like many things, those decisions start with money.

  • While studio film budgets are in this range,

  • Hallmark movies are generally made for $2 million and under. Although...

  • I think most of them are shot for

  • maybe like $400,000 to $500,000 and less.

  • When it comes to music,

  • only a small percentage of the overall budget

  • is allocated for it.

  • Traditionally, it's about 3% to 5%.

  • 3% being more the average,

  • And then if it's a very song heavy movie

  • that would push it up to that 5%.

  • Let's take Elf as an example.

  • It cost roughly $33 million to make.

  • 5% of that is just over $1.6 million

  • more than the whole budget of some Hallmark films.

  • So they were able to afford a scene like this

  • where Zooey Deschanel and Will Ferrell sing a popular song

  • (singing) I really can't stay

  • Which...I can’t actually play more than that here for fear

  • of getting flagged for copyright infringement

  • But, anyways.

  • songs like that one cost a pretty penny.

  • and just how much is a pretty penny?

  • Well, I emailed a bunch of music supervisors

  • to try and find out, and one got back to me.

  • Lexy Brewer.

  • She mostly works on the cable TV side of things

  • And via email she told me that

  • the traditional Christmas songs

  • we know and love tend to cost somewhere

  • in the ballpark of $25,000 per side

  • Per sideis important to note here,

  • because when you want to license a song for a movie, there's

  • actually two sides to every clearance.

  • Like, let's say you wanted to play Christmas (Baby

  • Please Come Home) in your movie.

  • Russ: I don't know if I know that one exactly

  • Ed: You definitely do, it’s the one that’s like

  • (singing) Christmas, the snows coming down!

  • Russ: Oh yes, of course.

  • AHEM -- Editor's Note to Michael Bublé,

  • Darlene Love, and anyone else who sings the song

  • Please don't sue us for doing that.

  • The first fee you have to pay is for the composition of the song:

  • using those notes in that order

  • $25,000 or thereabouts goes to the music publisher.

  • The second fee depends on what those notes in that order sound like

  • You could have the original recording

  • [snippet of the original Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) recording plays]

  • or the cover by Michael Bublé,

  • [snippet of the Michael Bublé’s Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) recording plays]

  • Either way, you need to square up for at least another $25,000

  • But depending on the song, the artist might want more

  • and then the overall cost increases.

  • Lexy explained with this example of Mariah Carey.

  • If she wanted twice as much as the traditional rate on her side,

  • then the other side would likely match, doubling the total fee.

  • Of course, these are all loose numbers.

  • These kinds of deals generally aren't made public.

  • And Lexy works on the TV side of things.

  • She didn't know the numbers specifically,

  • but she said that streaming

  • and theatrical fees are likely more expensive.

  • So that might not be exactly

  • what Mariah or other artists might charge, which is why

  • You would hear other artists covering Beatles songs a lot of times

  • [snippet of Here Comes The Sun, by The Beatles, but performed by a group that is very much not The Beatles]

  • because they could pay

  • for the right to use the song,

  • but not for the right to use The Beatles

  • Not licensing music ahead of time

  • can get you into some sticky situations

  • like Russ was telling me

  • about this one time where a rough cut for a film

  • that he was working on for Hallmark

  • had a scene where characters sang Rudolph

  • the Red-Nosed Reindeer,

  • you know, I get to be the bucket of cold

  • ice water on their Christmas dreams and say,

  • Hey guys, like these songs

  • very well could cost more

  • than the movie budget, you know, to license.

  • They ended up cutting that scene from the film.

  • But if they would have known what songs do

  • and don't have copyright,

  • there's a way that they could have made

  • a similar scene for free

  • A lot of the Christmas songs

  • we love are not what we call public domain.

  • Public domain,

  • or in other words, free from copyright.

  • It's the reason that you hear this song in so many movies.

  • [snippets of Trepak: Russian Dance from The Nutcracker in every Christmas movie youve ever seen in your entire life)

  • When it comes to public domain in the U.S.,

  • every piece of creative work made

  • before 1928 is totally open for anyone to use.

  • Anything created after that, for the most part,

  • is A-OK 70 years after the creator dies.

  • So this song you're hearing right now,

  • it was written by Tchaikovsky for The Nutcracker in

  • 1892, public domain.

  • What's great about the public domain Christmas songs

  • is it's this like shared cultural experience that we all have.

  • These cost nothing,

  • and are Christmas as heck.

  • They're used in movies big

  • [jazzy version of Jingle Bells from Iron Man 3]

  • and small.

  • [Whimsical version of Deck The Halls from My Christmas Guide]

  • And because they're open to the public,

  • composers like Russ can recompose bits and pieces

  • with no worries about having to pay a huge fee,

  • or even worse, getting sued.

  • The trick is recomposing them

  • to fit the mood of a particular scene.

  • if I was going to take like Joy to the World

  • [plays Joy to the World on the piano]

  • and then I wanted to

  • make it maybe a little more moody,

  • I would maybe, [plays moody version of Joy to the World on piano]

  • My job is like, how do I take that,

  • and, make it work to a scene?

  • This is Deck the Halls fit for a baking montage.

  • [Deck the Halls, fit for a baking montage]

  • But for me, the most interesting rearrangements

  • of these classic songs are the more warped ones.

  • Russ was able to make sinister versions of songs

  • we know and love for the Christmas slasher

  • It's a Wonderful Knife.

  • [Russsinister version of Joy to the World plays]

  • Joy to the world

  • in like, kind of like an evil version.

  • Did you detune the bells too? Yes.

  • Yes! Yeah, they're they're a little bit detuned.

  • So they sound a little bit off.

  • [plays the detuned bells on the piano, and they do indeed sound just a little bit off]

  • There are many ways

  • to rearrange the classic songs we all know and love,

  • but sometimes the cheat code to the Christmas sound

  • can boil down to a simple instrument.

  • Tinkling bells [plays Jingle Bells on the tinkling bells]

  • and then, of course [plays the sound of sleigh bells]

  • But it seems like, no matter how you get there

  • the most effective way to spread Christmas cheer

  • is public domain Christmas songs

  • for all to hear

  • As we wrap up this festive episode

  • we here at Vox have a request.

  • since 2020, Vox has turned to readers to help

  • keep our journalism free.

  • We believe that information like this

  • doesn't belong behind a paywall.

  • And if you believe that too, then help support our mission

  • by going to vox.com/give-now to make a contribution.

  • the goal is 95,000 gifts by the end of the year.

  • And that's just a few days away.

  • So click the link in the description to learn more.

Christmas,

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級 美國腔

What all Christmas movies have in common

  • 94 0
    林宜悉 發佈於 2024 年 02 月 24 日
影片單字