

X Budget
Updated
Synopsis
X (2001) is an independent feature that circulated through limited festival and home video channels. Production details, plot information, and a verified synopsis have not been publicly documented at this time.
What Is the Budget of X (2001)?
X (2001) is an independent feature for which no production budget has been publicly disclosed. The title should not be confused with the 2022 Ti West A24 horror film of the same name, the 2011 Jon Hewitt Australian feature, or the 1996 Madhouse Studios anime film X (X/1999). The 2001 entry is a separate, smaller-scale project that circulated through limited festival and home video channels without a wide theatrical release.
Without studio backing, trade-press reporting, or distributor disclosures, the production cost of X (2001) is unknown. Comparable independent features from the contemporaneous late-1990s and early-2000s festival pipeline generally cost between $50,000 and $1,500,000, but no source has confirmed a figure for this specific title.
Key Budget Allocation Categories
Because no production budget for X (2001) has been disclosed, the standard category breakdown that typically anchors a budget profile cannot be presented for this film. In place of a film-specific allocation, the following categories represent how a comparable early-2000s micro-budget independent feature would typically deploy its capital:
- Above-the-Line Talent: Early-2000s indie features typically paid director, writer, and lead actor compensation through SAG-AFTRA modified low-budget agreements, with profit-participation backends in lieu of substantial upfront fees.
- Camera and Film Stock: Many 2001-vintage independents still shot on 16mm or Super 16mm film, with stock and processing as a meaningful line item. The shift to early DV (Sony PD150, Canon XL1) was just beginning to consume the indie marketplace.
- Production Crew: A 12-to-20-person crew working at indie or favored-nations rates was typical, with each department typically staffed by a head and one assistant rather than a full union complement.
- Locations and Permits: Late-1990s and early-2000s indie productions relied heavily on free or favored-rate locations sourced through personal networks, with minimum-permit jurisdictions such as low-cost county-level California or rural state permits used to control costs.
- Post-Production: Picture editing on Avid Media Composer or early Final Cut Pro 1.0 systems, sound design completed at small post houses, and color timing (still primarily a photochemical process in 2001) were typical line items.
- Festival Submissions and Distribution: Independent features at this scale typically allocated $5,000 to $20,000 toward festival submission fees, screener fulfillment, and self-distributed marketing in support of eventual home video or limited theatrical pickup.
How Does X's Budget Compare to Similar Films?
Without a confirmed budget for X (2001), direct dollar-for-dollar comparison is not possible. The following comparison set illustrates the financial range of contemporaneous 2001 independent features:
- X (2022): Budget approximately $1,000,000 | Worldwide $14,847,000. Ti West's A24 70s-set horror feature is the most prominent unrelated film sharing the X title and offers a benchmark for modern micro-budget horror commercial performance.
- Donnie Darko (2001): Budget $4,500,000 | Worldwide $7,500,000. Richard Kelly's contemporaneous Sundance launch became a cult home-video success and is a benchmark for a 2001 indie that reached limited theatrical and broad home-video distribution.
- In the Bedroom (2001): Budget $1,700,000 | Worldwide $43,000,000. Todd Field's Sundance debut earned a wide independent release through Miramax and grossed more than 25 times its budget worldwide.
- Memento (2000): Budget $9,000,000 | Worldwide $39,723,096. Christopher Nolan's contemporaneous Newmarket Films release illustrates the upper-end of what a critically acclaimed 2000-vintage indie could earn theatrically.
X Box Office Performance
X (2001) did not receive a wide theatrical release and has no publicly reported domestic or international box office gross. As an independent feature, its primary distribution channels were film festival programming and self-distributed home video releases.
- Production Budget: not publicly disclosed
- Estimated Prints & Advertising (P&A): not applicable; no traditional theatrical campaign
- Total Estimated Investment: not publicly disclosed
- Worldwide Gross: no publicly reported theatrical gross
- Net Return: not publicly calculable
- ROI: not publicly calculable
Without trade-press coverage, distributor financial disclosures, or aggregator tracking on Box Office Mojo or The Numbers, the commercial performance of this title cannot be assessed.
X Production History
Documentation of the development, financing, and production history of X (2001) is sparse in publicly available sources. The film does not appear in major industry-tracking databases such as IMDb Pro production-status reports, Variety's development listings, or The Hollywood Reporter's feature-financing coverage that would typically document a feature production.
Anyone holding verified production information about the film is invited to contact us so this page can be updated.
Awards and Recognition
No major industry awards recognition for X (2001) has been publicly recorded. The film does not appear in the official selection or award lists of the major North American or European festivals tracked through this site.
Critical Reception
No aggregated critic scores from Rotten Tomatoes or Metacritic, no significant trade-press reviews from Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, or IndieWire, and no industry-press coverage have been published for X (2001). Without coverage by the standard critical-reception aggregators, a representative critical reception cannot be summarized.
This page will be updated as verified production, distribution, and critical-reception information becomes available. Viewers seeking the better-documented films sharing the X title should consult sources for X (2022) by Ti West, X (2011) by Jon Hewitt, or the 1996 Madhouse anime X.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much did it cost to make X (2001)?
The production budget for X (2001) has not been publicly disclosed. The film is an independent feature without a major studio or distributor backing, and no trade-press coverage of the production has been published.
How much did X (2001) earn at the box office?
X (2001) did not receive a wide theatrical release and has no publicly reported box office gross. Its distribution was limited to film festival programming and self-distributed home video releases.
Is X (2001) the same as the Ti West 2022 film?
No. X (2022) is a separate A24 horror film written and directed by Ti West, set in 1979 Texas. The 2001 entry is an unrelated independent production with a different cast, crew, and production history.
Is X (2001) related to the 1996 anime film?
No. The 1996 anime X (also known as X/1999) is a Madhouse Studios animated feature directed by Rintaro and based on the CLAMP manga. The 2001 entry is an unrelated live-action independent feature.
Who directed X (2001)?
The director credit for X (2001) has not been verified through publicly accessible sources. If you have confirmed information about the production, please contact us so this page can be updated.
Where was X (2001) filmed?
Filming locations for X (2001) have not been publicly documented.
How does X (2001) compare to other independent films of that year?
Without a disclosed budget or box office figure, direct comparison is not possible. Contemporaneous 2001 independent features such as Donnie Darko cost $4,500,000 and grossed $7,500,000 worldwide, and In the Bedroom cost $1,700,000 and grossed $43,000,000 worldwide.
Where can I watch X (2001)?
Distribution channels and current availability of X (2001) have not been publicly documented. Independent features of this type are typically available through targeted festival screenings, niche streaming platforms, or direct purchase from the filmmakers.
Did X (2001) play at any major film festivals?
There is no public record of X (2001) being selected for the official program of Sundance, SXSW, Tribeca, TIFF, Venice, Cannes, Berlin, or BFI London.
What did critics think of X (2001)?
No critical reviews from Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic, Variety, The Hollywood Reporter, or IndieWire have been aggregated for X (2001).
Filmmakers
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