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• Artist, Director, and Producer Agreements
• Facilities Agreements
• Composer and Music Synchronisation Agreements
• Co-production Applications and Agreements

When the producer has raised the finance necessary for the production of the film, he will be required to enter into numerous agreements in order to engage and retain necessary personnel.

It is normal, in the case of an independently produced and financed film or television production, for the producer to form a new company to be the production company; all the rights and contracts secured or entered into during development will be transferred to this new company, and all production personnel, facilities, finance and services will be contracted by that company.

The following are some of the agreements that the production company will enter into:

A. Production Agreement

A Production Agreement is the agreement between financiers, distributors or broadcasters and the production company. At its most simple, a Production Agreement sets out the terms for the film the Producer is to make and provides that the financier/distributor/broadcaster will make available finance to do this.

Production Agreements are fairly long and complex documents. What follows is a summary of the most important aspects of a Production Agreement, from a production standpoint.

1. Budget: the Production Agreement will contain an undertaking on the part of those financing the film to provide finance up to the amount of the approved budget for the film. The budget will be paid to the production company in accordance with a cash-flow schedule. Both the budget and the cash-flow schedule will be annexed to and be part of the Production Agreement.

2. Banking: the production company will always be required to open a Production Account through which all finance is routed. The amount of money that may be withdrawn from the account on a weekly basis is limited to the agreed cash-flow schedule. The production accountant will keep careful records of all monies spent on a daily and weekly basis and reports on such expenditure are normally sent to financiers on a weekly and sometime daily basis. Financiers will insist that the bank where the Production Account is held will not exercise any rights of set-off it may have against the production company.

3. Statement of Cost of Production: following delivery of the film, the production company will be required to prepare a statement of the cost of production certified by the production company's auditors. This is an essential document because it dictates, amongst other things, the point at which "net profits" arise.

4. Rights: the copyright in the film and all ancillary and subsidiary rights may be assigned by the production company to the investors/financiers of the film. Banks will also take charges and distributors and broadcasters will take distribution and/or broadcast rights.

Also, the production company will be expected to have acquired sufficient rights from contributors to the film (such as the writer, the director, the talent, composers and owners of music rights) and any necessary licences or consents required from owners of rights to enable the film to be commercially exploited in all media throughout the world in perpetuity.

5. Technical and Other Specifications: the production company will be required to produce the film in accordance with a particular specification comprising both creative and technical elements.

6. Budget Savings: the Production Agreement will generally provide that any budget savings are repaid to those providing finance although sometimes a production company will share an underspend.

7. Insurance: the production company will be required to have in place full insurance arrangements in respect of the film. The principal types of insurance required include Errors and Omissions Insurance, Employers' Liability, Public Liability, Cast Insurance, Property Damage, Negative and Raw Film Stock Insurance.

Investors/financiers will normal require their interest to be included on the policy. They will normally insist that they are named as additional insureds and "sole loss payee".

Errors and Omissions Insurance covers claims for infringement of copyright, defamation or invasion of privacy. Normally, the production company obtains insurance cover for a period of 3 years from delivery of the film.

8. Approvals and Controls: a financier/investor will normally nominate a production representative who will be entitled to be present during the production of the film and who will be entitled to make representations to the production company and to exercise any rights of artistic approval taken by the investor/financier.

The degree of artistic control enjoyed by this representative will be a matter of negotiation. The representative will normally have a right to view the rushes, the first rough cut of the film, the work print and the final print.

9. Default, Take-over and Abandonment: if the production company commits any act of default of its obligations, the financier/investor will always enjoy a right to take over the production of the film. In these circumstances, the investor/financier can either elect to complete the film or abandon it. When there is a completion guarantor involved, the investor's/financier's rights here will normally be subject to those of the completion guarantor.

The events giving rise to a take-over or abandonment will include running over budget, falling behind the production schedule, failure to agree on essential elements, failure to obtain approvals, departure from agreed specifications, important breaches of warranty and business failure.

10. Delivery: delivery of the film is normally effected by the physical delivery to a named laboratory of all of the film items listed in a Schedule of Delivery Items.

The delivery provisions of Production Agreements will also frequently include provisions for the acceptance of the items delivered. These provisions are principally concerned with the completeness of the items delivered and their being of a satisfactory technical standard.

In addition to film elements, the production company will be required to deliver documentation relating to the film such as a statement of credit obligations, music cue sheet, music licences, certificates of origin etc.

B. Producer's Agreement

It is the function of the producer to ensure that everything which is necessary to enable the film to be produced in accordance with the budget of the project and the production schedule is done.

The responsibilities of the producer include, the commissioning of original treatments, development of screenplays, selection and contracting of artists, selection and contracting of the director and the production team, negotiation with financiers, negotiation with distributors, sales agents and broadcasters, overseeing principal photography and post-production up to delivery of the completed film.

Form of a Producer's Agreement

1. Engagement: the producer will be engaged for the entire period of the production schedule. Financiers will usually insist that the producer works on the particular film project exclusively until delivery. Producers nearly always want to get on to the next job during post-production. The usual compromise is that the producer will be available on a first-call basis during post-production.

2. Rights: the producer will be expected to relinquish any interest in any copyright works and waive any moral rights that he/she has.

3. Fees: the producer will be paid fees on a weekly basis and will have expenses reimbursed. Where a producer has negotiated this, he or she will also be paid a share of the net profits of the film.

4. The producer will be required to give customary warranties.

5. A producer will normally take rights of approval in respect of certain matters, principally the choice of talent. Generally, however, the financiers will have the last say as to who is selected.

6. Credit: the contract will provide for the producer to receive a credit on all positive prints of the film and in major paid advertising. It is customary for the producer to be given a single card credit before that received by the director. However a producer may also attempt to negotiate a proprietary credit for himself or his company, e.g. "a [Company] production".

C. Director's Agreement

The function of the director of a film is the development of the screenplay with screenwriter, the direction of the cast and crew and the creation of the final edited version of the film.

When a director is involved in the film in another capacity, e.g. as a writer or producer, he or she will have separate agreements for each function.

Form of a Director's Agreement

1. Engagement: the contract will generally provide for the engagement of the director from a set date until delivery of the film. He/she will normally be exclusive to the production company during preproduction, production and editing and then on first call until delivery.

2. Rights: the director will be expected to assign copyright in the film to the production company and waive moral rights.

3. Fees: the director will be paid a fixed fee in instalments over the term of his involvement on the project. Normally, the director is also paid a share of the net profits of the film.

4. A director will be required to give customary warranties.

5. The director will be asked to acknowledge that he or she has seen and approved the production schedule, the budget and the screenplay for the film. The director will also be asked to give the same acknowledgment to a Completion Guarantor.

6. Cuts: one provision which is often the subject of intense negotiation is the clause in the contract dealing with the "director's cut". This depends upon the status of the director. Cutting rights generally range from none to the final cut, vis-a-vis the Producer. It is very unusual for a director to get an absolute final cut vis-a-vis the financiers. A Completion Guarantor will generally wish to limit the cutting rights of the director. Most commonly, a director is given a "first cut", also known as "director's cut".

7. Approvals: another provision which is also the subject of substantial negotiation is that dealing with approvals and consultation. This, again, depends upon the status of the director. Rights of approval and consultation range from none to mutual approval of the main cast, screenplay and key crew.

8. Credit: the director is always accorded a single card credit in the form "directed by", traditionally in the last position before the film starts. Well known directors also get so called "possessory credits" in the form "a film by [Director]".

D. Agreements with Leading Artists and Other Personnel Agreements

Lead actors and actresses are normally engaged under the terms of long form agreements negotiated between the production company and the agent representing the talent, rather than on the basis of standard Equity Agreements. Agreements for the services of lead talent are often the most time-consuming and difficult contracts to negotiate.

Important Provisions in Agreements with Leading Artists

1. Engagement: the contract will normally specify a period or periods during which the artist should be exclusively available for pre-production, shooting and sometimes postproduction (but usually on a first call basis only). A producer will normally expect the lead talent to make themselves available for a certain number of days for publicity purposes. From the production company's point of view, the contract should normally provide that the talents' services should be made available longer if a production schedule changes.

2. Rights: the artist will be asked to give to the production company all rights necessary to record and commercially exploit their performances and also to issue the artist's likeness and biographical details in connection with the publicising of the film.

3. Fees, Profits and Expenses: fees and profits are always a matter of negotiation with the talent's agent. Fees should cover buy-out of all use fees payable under any relevant Union Agreements.

Expenses are often negotiated at length and depend on the status of the artist.Expenses normally cover travel, accommodation and meals. Often, in the case of well-known artists, a production company will normally be expected to provide a car with a driver and a private dressing-room or accommodation on location.

4. Credit: along with expenses, this is the clause in the contract most often negotiated. The size and order of billing are generally regarded very seriously by artists and their agents.

5. Dubbing and Doubles: the production company will normally negotiate for the right to alter, change, re-arrange or delete the whole or any part of the performance and specifically provide for the right to dub the artist's voice or substitute doubles.

Equity Agreements

Artists other than the lead talent will normally be hired under the then current terms of engagement for members of British Equity. Equity Agreements normally provide for a minimum basic fee, together with additional use fees payable in respect of the use of the artist's performance in various media and various territories. These "use fees" are normally bought out so that no additional fees are payable in respect of the exploitation of the film.

The Musicians' Union

A number of different types of Agreements exist for the engagement of Musicians' Union members. These normally provide for a combined use payment which permits the worldwide exploitation of the music in the film in all territories and in all media.

The Crew and Technical Personnel

The crew are normally engaged under standard agreements prepared by the Trade Union BECTU.

E. Music Agreements

 

The music included in the soundtrack of a feature film will often comprise music specially commissioned for the film.

A composer of music will also normally be required to orchestrate, arrange and adapt music as well as conducting music and generally supervise its recording. Occasionally, a composer will also be engaged to act as an instrumentalist or vocalist.

If music other than commissioned music is proposed to be used in the film, then synchronisation licences will need to be obtained from the owners of the musical composition(s) being performed (usually a music publisher).

There is separate copyright in a musical composition and in a recording of a musical composition. Thus, if an existing recording of that music is also proposed to be used in the film, a synchronisation licence for that recording (sometimes called a master use licence) will need to be obtained, in addition, from the owner of the copyright in the recording (usually a record company).

Form of a Composer's Agreement

A composer's agreement will normally deal with the following matters:-

1. Engagement: the agreement will define the services the composer is expected to render and the nature of the music he is to compose and conduct; the composer will normally be expected to work over a fairly tight timetable during the post-production period of the film;

2. Fees: the composer will normally be paid a basic fee payable in instalments over the period of the engagement (usually on commencement of writing, commencement of recording and delivery of finished masters);

3. The composer will be required to give customary warranties;

4. The composer will grant the production company the right to use his name, likeness and biography in exploiting the film and the music;

5. Rights the agreement will provide for the ownership of the copyright in any music written by the composer. Sometimes the production company will buy out these rights and arrange for the publishing rights in the music to be exploited either by its own publishing concern or by a commercial publisher. Alternatively, the copyright in the music will be owned by the composer with the film company enjoying a world wide, perpetual synchronisation right in respect of the use of the music in the film in all media and a share of the publishing royalties;

6. If it is proposed that the music to the film will be commercially released as a soundtrack album, the composer may be entitled to record royalties.

The Performing Rights Society Limited

Most composers will be members of the Performing Rights Society Limited ("PRS"). When a composer joins the PRS as a member, he/she assigns the "performing right" in any compositions written by him/her to the PRS. The performing right includes the public performance, broadcast and cable transmission of music. PRS collects royalties from exercise of such rights in the compositions. In the case of film music, the major sources of public performance income are the fees and royalties paid by theatre owners and broadcasters (TV and radio) when the film and the compositions are publicly performed in theatres and on air.

The Mechanical Copyright Protection Society Limited

This Society protects and administers the right to synchronise (or dub) music onto films and thereafter to reproduce the music mechanically on copies of the film as part of the process of exploiting the film. Its members are composers and publishing companies, and, more often than not, it will be to this Society that producers will apply for licences to synchronise existing music which has not been especially composed. For a feature film, it is normal to "buy out" the music rights so that the film can be exploited in all media forever; this is not necessarily the case in other forms of programming such as music video, where it is normal to pay a royalty on sales of video units.

The UK broadcasters have entered into "blanket" licences with the MCPS for the synchronisation of music for television use in the United Kingdom, and producers can normally make use of these arrangements when making programmes under commission for UK broadcasters.