ITT: Films that were probably money laundering schemes
>>71302540
Jack and Jill
>>71302540
Tuxedo is hilarious though. How can you dislike anything with Jackie Chan?
>>71302830
This. Also JLH.
>>71302540
Master of Disguise
>>71302799
This.
Starring Sir Ben Kingsley in a bad wig!
>He's not looking for trouble
>He's wearing it
Whoever came up with this line should be publicly executed
>he's not looking for trabble
Did they seriously put that on the poster
>>71302540
Went to see that in theatres just for JLH.
Every Uwe Boll film
>>71302540
>Films that were probably money laundering schemes
Literally all Uwe Boll movies
>>71302540
All of them. How the heck can a movie cost more than a million dollars to make?
>>71304872
Actors my nigga
Also inflation and sets and crew members and props
It takes a lot to make a film
>>71305002
dlete this
>>71304872
i think this but more along the lines of special effects
special effects should not cost more than a hundred fucking million bucks, i want to see the statistics on how much movie budgets are spent on this shit because that's where the real laundering is
>>71302947
How does Ben Kingsley show up in so much fucking garbage all the time
>>71305002
>"Great film very creative"
Did an illegal mexican immigrant made this review of $5 ?
>>71303019
Kek
This!
>>71303279
What even is that film
>>71305104
He doesn't say no
>the obvious still hasn't been posted
>>71305445
Have you read The Disaster Artist?
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
>The film's original distributor was Bryanston Distribution Company, in fact a Mafia front operated by Louis Peraino ("Butchie"), who used the movie to launder profits he made from Deep Throat (1972). In return, the production received only enough money to reimburse the investors and pay the cast and crew $405 a piece. The producers eventually discovered that Peraino had lied to them about the film's profits; after Peraino was arrested on obscenity charges when his role in Deep Throat was revealed, the cast and crew filed a suit against him and were awarded $25,000 each. New Line Cinema, which obtained the rights to "Chain Saw" from the bankrupt Bryanston, paid the cast and crew as part of the purchase agreement.