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The Cable Guy Movie Pictures

In the 1990s, Jim Carrey was an unstoppable force.

After a stint on In Living Color , where he created a rococo list of characters like Fire Marshall Bill and Vera De Milo, the rubber-faced comic seamlessly made the transition to the big screen.

Despite a critical drubbing, Ace Ventura: Pet Detective became a sleeper hit in the spring of 1994, grossing more than US$100 million (approx. $129 million) on a US$15 million (approx. $19 million) budget.

Jim Carrey attends the Showtime Golden Globe nominees celebration at the Sunset Tower Hotel on January 05, 2019 in West Hollywood, California.
Jim Carrey attends the Golden Globes party in 2019 in West Hollywood, California. (Getty)

Carrey followed that up with blockbusters like The Mask , Dumb and Dumber and Batman Forever , assuming the role of the Riddler, a part once earmarked for Robin Williams . As fans flocked to see his latest movies, Carrey's salary ballooned. When he first played Ace Ventura, Carrey pulled in US$450,000 (approx. $583,000), but by the time he was spiking Jeff Daniels's coffee with ex-lax in Dumb and Dumber , the comic earned a cool US$7 million (approx. $9 million) for his efforts.

So it made sense that when it came to compensation, Carrey would soon be among the top ranks of A-listers, right up there with Arnold and Harrison and Sly. But no one was predicting the financial windfall Carrey was about to enjoy when he signed on to play a psychotic cable installer in the black comedy The Cable Guy .

Jim Carrey stars in the 1996 movie The Cable Guy.
Jim Carrey stars in the 1996 movie The Cable Guy. (Sony Pictures)

The actor received an astounding US$20 million (approx. $25 million) from Columbia Pictures, as well as a 15 per cent backend (meaning his cut of the box office profits). The Cable Guy was released 25 years ago this Monday, and is now primarily appreciated as a minor cult classic, if it is remembered at all, but the impact of Carrey's financial bonanza can still be felt today.

For years, Hollywood executives had been able to hold the line for actor deals at US$15 million (approx. $19 million), but cracks were starting to form in their united front. Just before Carrey became the first member of the $20 million club, Bruce Willis received US$16.5 million (approx. $21 million) for Last Man Standing , Arnold Schwarzenegger nabbed north of US$17 million (approx. $22 million) for Eraser , and Sylvester Stallone picked up US$17.5 million (approx. $22 million) for Daylight .

But this was something else entirely, a move so seismic that as Variety wrote, it sent "heads spinning and tongues wagging". The June 19, 1995, story that accompanied the news of the comic's windfall carried with it a headline that summed up the sense of shock overtaking the industry's higher-ups, "H'wood Finds $20 Million Tab for Carrey Plain Scary."

Matthew Broderick and Jim Carrey at Medieval Times in a scene from the film 'The Cable Guy', 1996.
Matthew Broderick and Jim Carrey at Medieval Times in a scene from the film The Cable Guy in 1996. (Getty)

The news also put Mark Canton, who was in charge of Columbia at the time, on the defensive.

"I'm not saying we didn't stretch things, but I promise others were headed in this direction, and I don't think it's a trend because there aren't many stars establishing themselves in the foreign market the way he has," Canton told Variety .

Others weren't so sure that Carrey's deal wouldn't unleash a new wave of mega-pacts.

"It seems a mild panic has set in at the talent agencies because they don't think they're going to get (those salaries) for their clients," an unnamed producer told the trade.

Mike Fleming Jr., the Variety deals reporter who broke the news that Carrey would earn US$20 million (approx. $25 million), says The Cable Guy payday set off a mad scramble among other top stars.

Leslie Mann and Jim Carrey in a scene from the film 'The Cable Guy', 1996.
Leslie Mann and Jim Carrey in a scene from the film The Cable Guy in 1996. (Getty)

"Every major top-of-the-line movie star got a US$5 million (approx. $6.4 million) raise, that's what happened," Fleming, who now serves as co-editor-in-chief of Deadline , remembers. "There was a lot of grumbling among Mark Canton's peers. They'd set a ceiling and Jim blew past it."

In the short term, Carrey's salary became something of an albatross. It seemed to find its way into any article or profile of the actor. Even an Entertainment Weekly cover tied to the release of 1995's Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls referenced the payday — the story, which was, mind you, about another movie entirely, featured an image of grinning Carrey with the headline, "You'd Be Smiling Too If You Just Got Paid $20 Million."

And when the movie finally opened on June 14, 1996, critics focused as much on Carrey's deal as they did on the film itself. That might have been a good thing, because the resulting movie, an awkward hybrid of broad comedy and slasher movie tropes, was way too dark to be commercially viable. Rather than laud Carrey for taking a risk, however, many reviewers penned the blame for the picture's missteps on the actor and his new tax bracket.

"To judge from the evidence on the screen, Sony Pictures, after paying Mr. Carrey a stupefying fee, had no budget left for making the picture," sniffed the Wall Street Journal 's Joe Morgenstern.

"The erstwhile butt ventriloquist, who took home $20 million for his efforts, is cooking all right, but not with gas," the Washington Post 's Rita Kempley wrote.

Jim Carrey and Jack Black in a scene from the film 'The Cable Guy', 1996.
Jim Carrey and Jack Black in a scene from the film The Cable Guy in 1996. (Getty)

Meanwhile, the Chicago Sun-Times ' Roger Ebert was perhaps the most prescient, in a review that seemed to predict The Cable Guy 's disappointing box office returns.

"Note to the producers: There's an old showbiz saying that 'satire is what closes on Saturday night,'" he wrote. "To which could be added another: 'Black comedy is not what you pay someone $20 million to do.'"

Ebert was right. The Cable Guy opened to a respectable US$20 million and then sank like a stone, weighed down by toxic word of mouth. Its US$102.8 million (approx. $133 million) global haul on a US$47 million (approx. $60 million) budget meant it probably lost money when print and advertising costs are taken into account, or barely broke even when home entertainment revenue factored into the final equation.

But Carrey bounced back. In 1997, he scored a blockbuster hit with Liar Liar , justifying the US$20 million he made for that picture and enjoyed a streak of successes such as The Truman Show , How the Grinch Stole Christmas and Bruce Almighty before his star began to fade in the later aughts.

What's interesting, however, is that after Carrey broke the salary barrier, the new cap remained more or less in place for more than two decades, somehow resistant to inflationary forces.

Jim Carrey and Lauren Holly attend The Cable Guy Hollywood Premiere on June 10, 1996 at the Mann's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, California.
Jim Carrey and Lauren Holly attend The Cable Guy Hollywood Premiere on June 10, 1996 at the Mann's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, California. (Getty)

Even today, Leonardo DiCaprio , Brad Pitt , Denzel Washington and Will Smith still ask for, and receive, US$20 million. Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson gets slightly more, but some of that compensation is for producing movies and agreeing to hawk them on his social media channels. Of course, those fees can get substantially higher when backend deals are taken into account: Just ask Robert Downey Jr . about his Avengers paydays.

The reasons that star salaries have been unable to resist this gravitational pull are complicated. For one thing, the rise of superhero films has made movie stars, at least of the put-butts-in-seats variety, something of an endangered species. People go to movies to see Captain America or Thor save the world, not to check out whichever blonde-haired, blue-eyed Hollywood Chris is wearing the Spandex this go-round.

READ MORE: Jim Carrey gives new car to Sonic the Hedgehog 2 crew member

And these movies are expensive to make, primarily because they rely on special effects. For The Cable Guy , Carrey's pliable face was all the CGI a producer needed, thus studios could justify giving half a film's budget to the star.

Then there's the rise of streaming services like Netflix, which have scrambled the way actors are compensated and demonstrate that, while US$20 million is a headline-grabbing figure, the true riches are to be found in backend deals.

Thus, Will Smith earns both his US$20 million salary and millions more in backend riches when he stars in Netflix's Bright , or agrees to let Warner Bros. debut King Richard in cinemas at the same time it bows on HBO Max. If movie stars are going to become streaming stars, the message goes, they need to be rewarded handsomely for their efforts and paid out as though their films weren't just hits, but blockbuster smashes.

READ MORE: British actor Martin Freeman blasts Jim Carrey's method acting on Man On The Moon: 'Absolute pretentious nonsense'

In the 1990s, star salaries were a status symbol, with agents and managers gleefully leaking the details of their clients' paydays. It wasn't all that different from the way that sports stars' salaries are reported by the media, with fans learning everything about LeBron James' new pact or Tom Brady 's contract.

In 21st century Hollywood, things are different. Perhaps it's because the film studios have grown so big, merging or being swallowed up by telecoms and tech giants, that they have become less transparent in how they share news. Leo's next paycheck is a lot less likely to warrant coverage on the nightly news as Carrey's Cable Guy deal did in its day.

"I do find it harder to be specific about someone's big paycheck on a movie than it was back in the day," says Fleming. "The business is a little more buttoned-up and stars don't want to have their laundry out there in the same way."

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The Cable Guy Movie Pictures

Source: https://celebrity.nine.com.au/latest/how-jim-carrey-20-million-salary-the-cable-shook-up-hollywood/a70a9e95-bdea-46e4-834a-cfe7f1693e41