writer0327
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Next weekend is Sonic and Fantasy Island. There's a real chance this finishes in 3rd.
Both films have pros and cons. ITSV is animated (are animated films at a disadvantage?), but it's also more family friendly and features the most famous and popular superhero in the world: Spider-Man. Those are advantages, including its awards cred, that should've given it a boost. BOP is rated R and features a rising in popularity star/character in Margot/Harley; she's still not as popular as Spider-Man, though. The animated and R rating kind of cancel each other out as possible disadvantages. Meanwhile, both received good reviews and responses from audiences, generally speaking. They're both relatively standalone without obvious connections to the larger Marvel or DC cinematic universes, which could be a good or bad thing. I certainly think it helped Captain Marvel, which itself was more family friendly and was part of the build up to Endgame.
If I had to guess, the issue with BOP is that it's so unique. It doesn't look like a typical comic book movie, so it's not necessarily going to grab those viewers keen on that kind of content, and it doesn't come across as the serious cinematic take Joker was. It's this weird hybrid of darkness with humor and color. Margot said she had to fight for the R rating, and I wonder if R is more viable with male-driven films or with films that present themselves as serious or straight horror. MOS and BvS may have struggled for similar mismatch reasons. That said, I wouldn't have wanted BOP to be any different and don't think the marketing could've presented it any other way than what it is. This is new territory for comic book movies and female-led movies, so it's understandable that it'll be more of a baby step than a giant leap.
was there any more insight on the narrative of "the first cut was poor so Hamada rescued it, but the marketing team didn't have enough to play with until late in the game"?
That's either true, or team hamada telling Deadline s*** to
Marketing is tricky. Its too simple to say "oh the marketing was just terrible for this movie", because that begs the question...what exactly makes for good marketing? Is it amount of money spent, is it how good the trailers are, is it the number of trailers and TV spots released? Is it actor interviews? Is it billboards plastered everywhere? We know it when it works, of course, because the buzz is everywhere and the box office explodes, but plenty of movies have been made with equally tremendous marketing campaigns that also bombed.
I agree you can make anyone like anything if you sell it correctly, but in the case of this film, I think ultimately this bad OW performance comes down to people just didn't really want to see it anyway. Not saying marketing didn't have something to do with it, but if I'm carving up the box office blame pie, I think "no one asked for it" gets the biggest piece.
Someone please explain to me how the marketing was bad.
You would think that an animated Spider-Man film would make bank but the fact that ITSV couldn't find the audience as compared to it's live action counterparts leads me to believe that it's because it's animated. For the most part the only high grossing movies usually come from Disney/Pixar or Illuminations.Both films have pros and cons. ITSV is animated (are animated films at a disadvantage?), but it's also more family friendly and features the most famous and popular superhero in the world: Spider-Man. Those are advantages, including its awards cred, that should've given it a boost. BOP is rated R and features a rising in popularity star/character in Margot/Harley; she's still not as popular as Spider-Man, though. The animated and R rating kind of cancel each other out as possible disadvantages. Meanwhile, both received good reviews and responses from audiences, generally speaking. They're both relatively standalone without obvious connections to the larger Marvel or DC cinematic universes, which could be a good or bad thing. I certainly think it helped Captain Marvel, which itself was more family friendly and was part of the build up to Endgame.
I just got done watching the 1st and 2nd trailers again, and maybe they had to punch up the action specifically fight scenes? I think they even repeated several things in the 2nd trailer in the 1st.If I had to guess, the issue with BOP is that it's so unique. It doesn't look like a typical comic book movie, so it's not necessarily going to grab those viewers keen on that kind of content, and it doesn't come across as the serious cinematic take Joker was. It's this weird hybrid of darkness with humor and color. Margot said she had to fight for the R rating, and I wonder if R is more viable with male-driven films or with films that present themselves as serious or straight horror. MOS and BvS may have struggled for similar mismatch reasons. That said, I wouldn't have wanted BOP to be any different and don't think the marketing could've presented it any other way than what it is. This is new territory for comic book movies and female-led movies, so it's understandable that it'll be more of a baby step than a giant leap.
Someone please explain to me how the marketing was bad.
What? Every single DC movie in the DCEU has made bank in the USA besides Shazam and Birds of Prey which are two movies that didn’t do well anywhere.Audience in US are not supporting DC movies (Aquaman and Joker are the exceptions)
Its great that DC movies are doing well in countries like Brazil, Mexico, Australia and South Korea but it needs to do well in US too, which is the place of origin.
Don't think JL can be considered making bank.What? Every single DC movie in the DCEU has made bank in the USA besides Shazam and Birds of Prey which are two movies that didn’t do well anywhere.
While true. Exits polls do show teens especially female teens liked it the most but were only like 7% of the audience. WB played their cards wrong hereThis had very low trailer views and never tended high on Twitter when the trailers/posters were released- that is a marketing issue not an r rated issue
It's kinda hard to believe that this is gonna get creamed by Sonic the Hedgehog, but that's probably what's going to happen.Next weekend is Sonic and Fantasy Island. There's a real chance this finishes in 3rd.
This movie had bad marketing because the movie gives it nothing to market. It’s R-rated but there isn’t much of anything in the movie that warrants an R-rating except the swearing. The violence and action sequences are tame for a rated R film. There are no big set pieces. So from that end the marketing team doesn’t have much to work with.
The bits of humor the movie has works in the context of the film but doesn’t really work if you put it in trailers.
The actual Birds of Prey are side characters so featuring them too much and you’re ruining their parts in the trailers.
WB didn’t market this correctly but it’s not just on the marketing team. This movie would have done well and would have been marketed well had the creators either went all in with the R-rating or made it PG-13. But the movie itself doesn’t know whether it wants to be PG-13 or Rated R which is why the marketing itself was all over the place.
Sorry but I disagree. The quality of the movie would not have been affected had they made it PG-13 and then marketed at such. It was a very tame R which is why the movie wasn’t marketed to reflect an R-rated movie.It is R-rated and knows it is, sometimes people act as if the R-rating automatically meant "eXtREMe! Gore, ****, drugs, dicks." It doesn't. Birds of Prey knows it's R-rated just as much as Die Hard, Speed, Deadpool, John Wick, Mad Max Fury Road and others.
Also, this ain't exactly Wonder Woman, Supergirl and Batgirl.
I'm glad WB allowed this to be R-rated and unique and glad for the kind of movie it ultimately is. They could have made a tame, pale, sugarcoated version of this and this sure isn't.
Thank God, Warner Bros., Walter Hamada, Margot Robbie, Cathy Yan and Christine Hodson for this fun, funny, whacky, pulpy and at times cartoonish crime action movie.
Sometimes the world needs their new Gremlins 2s, even if they don't get imminent reward.
So, if you liked the movie, just spread the word about it. Let's not get caught up in "should they"s. We're film fans and often get too caught up in that vile crap.
A title they thought was clever, but came across as pretentious. Posters which conveyed nothing. Awful trailers which made the film look dumb as opposed to delightfully zany. Most importantly, you have a character like Harley where so much social media stuff can be done with, this should have been the film where women 18-25 would be greatly anticipating...and now this
Sorry but I disagree. The quality of the movie would not have been affected had they made it PG-13 and then marketed at such. It was a very tame R which is why the movie wasn’t marketed to reflect an R-rated movie.
Apparently it was. The studio meddled in the directors 'vision'It would have been a different movie.
A title they thought was clever, but came across as pretentious. Posters which conveyed nothing. Awful trailers which made the film look dumb as opposed to delightfully zany. Most importantly, you have a character like Harley where so much social media stuff can be done with, this should have been the film where women 18-25 would be greatly anticipating...and now this
We have known that Chad Stahelski helped punch up the action for quite a while, but still the movie was prepped and shot for an R-rating to begin with.