I couldn't see this on anywhere so here goes. there was a one off concert with The Damned back in October Night of a 1,000 Vampires, there was a piece from Forbes about it and future plans of Hammer.
Sorry the pictures didn't show up.
There is some footage of the show on youtube
Moo.
Oct 27, 2019,04:15pm EDT
How Hammer Films Plans To Grow In The $1 Billion Horror-Movie Market
Mark BeechContributor
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
Hollywood & Entertainment
Simon Oakes, CEO of Hammer Films in his office in Beverly Hills. (Photo by Lawrence K. Ho/Los ... [+] Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Hammer Films, one of the world’s oldest movie producers, is moving into top gear after being revived. The British company is setting out its plans for growth in the horror market that grosses as much as $1 billion a year globally.
After films such as The Woman In Black with the Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe, which grossed $130 million worldwide and is one of the biggest indie-horror movies ever, Hammer is planning to release its next title in 2020 as it steps up production. It is also showcasing its archive of some 300 movies and more than 10,000 photos with events such as The Night Of 1,000 Vampires on October 28 at the London Palladium. The Halloween-themed event ties in with a sell-out concert by the punk band The Damned, which named after a Hammer movie. Hammer has also just signed an agreement with StudioCanal for global distribution of its catalog.
Hammer started in 1934 and is known for its popular gothic-horror films of the 1950s to the 1970s, such as Dracula, The Curse Of Frankenstein and The Mummy, which spawned numerous sequels. Its regular stars included Peter Cushing, Sir Christopher Lee and Oliver Reed. Bela Lugosi and Bette Davis also featured. Hammer’s terrifying blood, gore, extravagant costumes and sets were presented in color, enraging censors and delighting audiences. In the 1970s, it launched television series such as Hammer House Of Horror and Hammer House Of Mystery, which starred David Carradine, Diana Dors and even Pierce Brosnan.
Horror films made worldwide currently gross as much as $1 billion annually. Last year such movies had a 7.5% market share and took some $900 million, according to The Numbers.com. The chief executive of Hammer, Simon Oakes, is optimistic that the company is in a unique position to capture a significant market share.
Oakes had worked for John Malone’s Liberty Global for many years and was looking at different film channel ideas. Horror was an obvious area, and Oakes loved Hammer: “I realized it was one of the very rare brands in the media industry which is in the vernacular: You refer to a thing as ‘like a Hammer film.’ It has global potential like no other.” In 2007 he helped resuscitate the company with private-equity money, taking control of the library, archive, brand and name.
After a 2008 online vampire story, Beyond The Rave, came a remake of a Swedish film called Let The Right One In. The result was Let Me In (2010), says Oakes: “We gave Chloë Grace Moretz, as a child vampire, her first major role and it got a great critical response.”
In 2011, Hammer released Antti Jokinen’s The Resident, starring two-time Oscar winner Hilary Swank, Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Hammer legend Christopher Lee. Wake Wood (2011), which Oakes describes as “a sort of folklore movie,” was filmed in Ireland. It starred Aidan Gillen, Eva Birthistle and Timothy Spall.
The comeback breakthrough was Hammer’s first feature-length ghost story, The Woman In Black, in 2012: “It was synchronicity, because it’s a famous novel and play. Jane Goldman came on board to write the screenplay. I took a big risk by casting Daniel Radcliffe, who was finishing the Potter series. It proved lucky. Our key demographic is 16 to 30 years old. It became the most successful British horror film of all time.”
English actor Christopher Lee as the blood-sucking Count in 'Dracula A.D. 1972', directed by Alan ... [+] Gibson for Hammer Films, 1972. (Photo by Silver Screen Collection/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Getty Images
The paranormal thriller The Quiet One in 2014 is about an unorthodox professor (Jared Harris) who leads his students in an experiment to create a poltergeist. It was followed by Hammer’s first sequel in 41 years, The Woman In Black: Angel Of Death, which began terrifying audiences in 2015.
The Lodge had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January. It is now scheduled to be released in February 2020 by Neon.
Oakes wants to step up production to more than one title a year: “You have to be cognizant of the budget. Our sweet spot is between $8 million and $12 million, depending on the cast. Hammer, in the 50s, 60s and 70s, made a movie every six weeks like a repertory group and the average budget was about £250,000 [$320,000].”
While Hammer is looking at remakes too, some ownership is complex, though the characters are in the public domain: Frankenstein’s monster, mummies, Dracula, mobsters, psychopaths, and even cave girls. Hammer is also extending the brand with a publishing imprint with Random House, a streaming platform and social-media presence.
Horror is the seventh-highest grossing movie genre, and its films are both among the highest-profile and most profitable, especially with franchises where a character reappears. Other companies had success with The Blair Witch Project, made for $60,000 and grossing about $250 million. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre also made back a multiple of its production costs. Horror does especially well in the run-up to Halloween – witness the success of R-rated Joker this year.
Hammer House of Horror Presents The Damned At The London Palladium Launch Event, 'A Night Of A Thousand Vampires': Damned guitarist Captain Sensible, left, and Simon Oakes of Hammer.
2019 Georgia Taylor via Outside Organisation Ltd.
Other British producers are looking at genre films, with the old Carry On! comedy franchise being revived.
Oakes notes that only a third of Hammer films were horror. It even took on comedy: Up The Creek (1958) starred Peter Sellers. Hammer tackled crime thrillers, sci-fi noir, war films and historical epics; titles included Dick Barton Strikes Back, Quatermass, The Abominable Snowman and The Hound Of The Baskervilles. Martin Scorsese called Frankenstein Created Woman one of his favorite films; Quentin Tarantino owns one of the only surviving 16mm prints of the 1967 classic. Stephen King has written of his love for X The Unknown (1956).
One can bet the Hammer horror will keep growing, long after tonight’s Damned show. Zombies, vampires, werewolves and others take note.
© 2020 Forbes Media LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Thanks Moo.
I think the StudioCanal deal is just for distribution of their back catalogue (Indicator has done a deal to release some of them). https://variety.com/2019/film/news/dracula-the-mummy-hammer-films-deal-with-studiocanal-studiocanal-1203353412/
You're right that Rush seems to have gone well into profit, although it didn't do well in the USA (unsurprisingly). That's interesting about The Quiet Ones. The Encyclopedia of Hammer Films brands it as a flop but it seems to have done fine.
There was the Screamland at Dreamland live event last Hallowe'en which seems to have copped bad reviews at Trip Advisor: https://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/AttractionProductReview-g503912-d19250930-Screamland_at_Dreamland_all_the_HORROR_of_Halloween-Margate_Isle_of_Thanet_Kent_En.html
Mal in the big bumf up top it states Hammer signed an agreement with Studio Canal.
This is mainly from memory but I have found some links.
They were involved with Winchester (2018 but it took a long and torturous time to get done and come out.) with Helen Mirren but the Hammer name is no longer attached but Marc Schipper and Simon Oake are both listed as executive producers.
Rush actually did quite well, (it was from exclusive, Spitfire Pictures were the documentary arm) just checked the figures budget $38mill gross $96mill. it also came out in 2013, The Quiet Ones budget $200,000 gross over $17mill. So by this point thy weren't too bad, I remember they expected more from the Mat Scudder movie A Walk Among the Tombstones, possible franchise start but it did OK.
Exclusive was run by Nigel Sinclair and Guy East, it was Exclusive Films International but became Exclusive Media group, Exclusive was the film and main part (distribution as well as production, Spitfire Pictures documentaries (1:Life on the Limit was the last thing they did in 2013.) and Hammer.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/exclusive-media-group-rebrands-as-media-302194 (about name change in 2011)
In 2014 Sinclair and East were forced out by Danish hedge fund Dasyn ( a major share holder.) In April 2015 they (Dasyn) then sold most of the library and film slate plus sequels right to Ambi. That was pretty much the end of Exclusive and Spitfire Pictures disappeared.
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/media-film-library-sold-ambi-820578
Exclusive films at the time had Dark Places with Charlize Theron 2015 (budget $20mill gross $5mill) and Jane Got a Gun (budget $25mill gross $3mill.) NB Woman in Black 2 budget $15mill gross $48mill.
But the big problem I remember was they had a film being shot in Feb 2015, principal shooting was 10 days in when finance problems hit, production stopped, then the director walked and so did the star Bruce Willis, the film was Wake. A month later the firm was sold.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wake_(cancelled_film)
Hammer if you remember then did several theatre pieces, The Turn of the Screw 2013, The Haunting of Hill House 2015, and a live immersive live thing at Hoxton Hall in 2017, Hammer Live The Soulless Ones. There was the TV show Let the Right One In 2017, it looks like the pilot was made but not the 13 episodes that were planned.
I seem to remember they did something with one of the Dungeons but I'm not certain, and as above they did A Night of a 1,000 Vampires with The Damned October 2019 plus as you say Mal The Lodge 2019/2020.
Most budget figs are from IMDb & Box office Mojo which are the same company, as reliable as most in films.
Moo. 🐮
Reading the introductory timeline in The Encyclopedia of Hammer Films reveals some things about the company that were not, as far as I know, made public at the time. We knew that Hammer's sister company, Spitfire, had had a financial disaster with Rush and that this had put an end to Exclusive but I was unaware that this caused Hammer to cease "...to be an active film company" in 2014. The Woman in Black: Angel of Death was already in the can by then. Dasym (formerly Cyrte) sold Hammer to Marc Schipper and Simon Oakes in 2016. So Hammer (unless circumstances have changed again) seems to be a much smaller set up without the backing of a major investment company. So far, The Lodge is the only project they've managed to get off the ground and its box office take has been very disappointing, particularly considering its quality.
What happened to The Lodge? If a film company can't get its pictures shown on a widescale theatrical release, it's not a good sign.