Michel Gondry spoke at SXSW to a packed house; it was fantastic to see one of my favorite directors
speak about his creative process. During the talk, he mentioned a project he did where fans could
buy portraits of themselves, sketched by Gondry himself, for only $20. He did about 1,000 of these
portraits before he ended
the deal, saying
that while some portraits took only 2 minutes, he started getting fancier and fancier as time
progressed, and eventually he didn't think that was a good business to continue it. When he said
that, a collective, sad sigh was felt across the conference room, since I'm sure I was not the only
one in the room who wanted a hand-drawn Michel Gondry portrait -- and if $20 wasn't the right price
to make sense, business-wise, surely there was an appropriate price point that
would make
sense (and, in looking at his site, it appears that he
raised the price to
$99.95 with a copy of his DVD). Now, while it is true that Gondry is a famous movie director,
surely a few hundred dollars for minutes of work is enough to get him interested, especially when
he considers that this portrait further serves to endear him more to his most passionate fans, who
are incredibly appreciative that he would ever even think to offer such a deal:
It's amazing
enough that Michel has the time to draw thousands of portraits a week amidst his incredibly busy
schedule and his "Green Hornet" workload. Hopefully this commitment will urge other filmmakers to
devote similar generosity towards their fanbases... So, contrary to what Gondry thought, his
portrait offer most certainly made good business sense and was a great example of an RtB deal,
since it was soaked in his charmingly quirky artistic personality. Then again, perhaps another
example of Gondry's unique understanding of the business world is with this
strange
notice that he sent out to the purchasers of the portraits, sometimes well after they had
purchased the image, telling them they
could not resell the image ever.
"By
placing your sketch order, you hereby acknowledge... that the sketch is for your personal use only
and you shall not have the right to sell the sketch for any commercial purpose whatsoever." To
ask this of his truest fans (especially
after they have commissioned a sketch) is not only
most likely unenforceable
legally (case law here is still a bit messy, but courts have said that you can't just give up
your right of first sale based on one side's declaration), it also serves to sour the goodwill and
affection that Gondry's true fans have bestowed upon him. Now,
that's bad business.
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