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Most expensive television series (cost per episode) Title Year(s) Est. costs (million US$) Ref. Unadjusted 2023 inflation Game of Thrones 2012 6 8 [16] Boardwalk Empire (season 1: 2010 5 7 [16] House of Cards 2013 4.5 6 [10] House of Cards (seasons 2 and 3) 2014–2015 4.23 5 [17] Hemlock Grove (season 1) 2013 4 5 [18]
HBO’s “House of the Dragon” cost under $20 million per episode to produce its 10-episode first season, which debuts Aug. 21, a source close to production told Variety. For comparison ...
Nowadays, HDTV cameras designed for broadcast television, news, sports, events and other works such as reality TV are termed as professional video cameras. A digital movie camera is designed for movies or scripted television to record files that are then color corrected during post-production .
Visual effects: The cost of computer-generated imagery effects and other visual effect work in post-production depends largely on the amount of work, the desired quality, and the effects company involved (Industrial Light and Magic is the most prestigious and expensive); extensive effect work, as in Avatar or The Lord of the Rings, can easily ...
During Game of Thrones Season 1, the budget was only $6 million per episode, which is roughly $54 million LESS than the new Lord of the Rings show.View Entire Post ›
COVID protocols have added about 5% to the cost of film and TV production budgets, according to an analysis by the California Film Commission. The study is the first to precisely quantify the ...
In September 2016, Vulture reported that the cost per episode for the show was approximately US$7 million to US$8.5 million per hour, with a total cost for the 33 episodes between US$231–US$289 million. Despite receiving tax credits for shooting in Florida, shooting in the Florida Keys was costly.
A take is over when the director calls "Cut!" and the camera and sound stop recording. The ritual helps the general concentration at the location and allows saving costs by only recording the scene rather than the preparation for the scene. Each shot is repeated until the director is satisfied with it.