Actors are working under a contract which expired last month
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Hollywood studios and the Screen Actors Guild have failed to reach an agreement in their latest meeting over a proposed new pay deal.
Neither side made any comment after they met for two hours in Los Angeles.
The studios want union leaders to allow actors to vote on a new package they say is worth $250m (£126m) in additional payments over three years.
But the guild, which wants more money for actors from DVDs, says the $250m estimate is "highly inflated".
The Alliance of Motion Pictures and Television Producers (AMPTP) offer would boost the minimum wages of members by 3.5% in the first year of the contract, 3% in the second and 3.5% in the third.
But SAG, which has 120,000 members, has claimed the proposed rises would not benefit the higher-paid actors.
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We made it clear our final is our final and that we're not interested in further counterproposals
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Last week, SAG said that, as well as greater compensation for members when their work is released on DVD, it also wanted a greater say in product placement deals.
But AMPTP spokesman replied: "We made it clear our final is our final and that we're not interested in further counterproposals."
In the absence of a new contract, SAG and the AMPTP have agreed to continue working to the terms of their old deal, which expired on 30 June.
But Hollywood has slipped into a "de facto strike", with major studios halting most of their film production to avoid the possibility of costly labour disruptions.
A separate prime-time TV contract was agreed by the AMPTP and smaller acting union the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists early last week.
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