Boom
I got nothin'
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2003
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A young Oppenheimer reminds me of an actor but for the life of me I cannot place him.
Maybe a bit of Jude Law.
A young Oppenheimer reminds me of an actor but for the life of me I cannot place him.
Yeah, I don't think he's getting 120, but I think he's negotiating aggressively and hoping to secure 90. Probably also trying to use his power and try to help set a precedent for longer theatrical windows. I'm betting he wants to make it a case-in-point for the viability of it as a business model. Which could be a pretty smart move actually. If it worked, studios would definitely take notice.
I assume Universal might be pitching this for Awards season as well. Could potentially be something that builds over the holidays.
I get that he wants to preserve the theatrical window, but things have changed. Because as soon as the movie loses enough screens, Uni is releasing it for digital purchase and PVOD.
I understand Nolan is a good filmmaker, but he sometimes makes demands as if he’s living in a different era completely removed from how most in the general audience see movies.
Or, you know, that's just your opinion. Tenet was mixed for a lot of people but Interstellar was loved by the majority of the GA, even more than by the critics.Inception was great. Tenet and Interstellar were not.
I think, from what I've seen, there's layers to why people are annoyed by the "filmmaker" over the studio. The anti theatrical experience people seem to really dislike Nolan and Denis villeneuve lately because they champion going to the cinema. Accusing Nolan and others of not being sympathetic to the pandemic is pretty ignorant, but regardless, it's really about the fact that they don't like the cinema experience and would love for the streaming and theater same day stuff to continue even if it meant the movie losing money. It's an example of "I want what I want and **** everything else".Sometimes I wonder why people are champions of the studio over the filmmaker. So what if he has demands? How does it affect you? Don’t we want filmmakers to push their passion. Some I feel only want either indie low budget or big budget comic book movies. As if there isn’t so much more that can be done.
This “people’s tastes have changed”. No, they take what you give them. But they’ll also adapt to what you give them. You don’t have to always give in to the lowest possible denominator. People don’t really know what they want until it happens. Studios only want to follow trends and algorithms until it implodes on themselves. I’ll bet on long term artists who’ve proven themselves over what’s hot in the moment.
Absolutely, but that's what hype is for. Building hype to get people to go to the cinema to experience these kinds of movies. Though, with Joker, people instantly were interested once they knew the film was actually about one of the most popular villains in history, so that certainly helped. But 1917 is an even better example. I do hope we get more stuff like that.But you know, just before the pandemic hit, 1917 and Joker both were huge blockbusters. And I wouldn’t necessarily call them “mainstream” in the traditional sense. They were certainly not films the studios think people want.
Again, I think sometimes some things will break through. Sometimes the audience doesn’t have a clue until they see it. That’s the fun of movies!
Thanks for the LAUGH!Quite right.
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