I think that's actually happening with Feb.
The one month where it's tough to overcome will always be Sept due to school. Nothing can really change that. In fact, I think that's the one month where the movies make less money than the movies in Jan. But I'm pulling that data out of my butt.
I agree.We getting lot of unnecessary sequels, cash-grabs made on first movies exceeding expectations on box-office. And studios green-lit those trying for same results, instead first making good movie in return. And those usually end up disasters giving there is no passion behind project, script is wrote just for sake of it, etc. And not mention not many people want to see sequel of something which doesnt need sequel in first place.
I guess few bombs on box-office should take message to studios.
Could the blockbuster bubble finally burst, allowing more original autuer-driven films to find funding in the Hollywood system? Wishful thinking, but I can dream.
What happens to Bourne when Matt Damon walks? It isn't like the character is a cultural icon that can be recast and still have people show up in droves.
Hollywood is running out of IP's to adapt. The YA novel boom is gone with Potter/Twilight and comic books that aren't Marvel/DC haven't proven themselves.
If they can't figure out video games and anime adaptations, Hollywood will have to adapt more original blockbusters or re-reboot failures.
i am kinda shocked TMNT 2 didn't do well i knew the film would get bad reviews but it looked a hell of alot better and more fun looking than the first one it seemed right up the demogrpahic of family/kids alley
I've seen some people in this thread say "vote with your wallet". Isn't that what people are already doing and have always done?
With all the talk, though, it seems like they vote for the stuff they complain about.
The majority of film-goers don't hang around superhero forums. The call for more independent movies comes from a loud minority if you look at the movie-going audience as a whole.
What about millions of novels? What about gazillions of obscure comic books and graphic novels.
What about original ideas screenwriters are trying to pitch to studios, but they won't invest in.
There's an infinite stream of possible films and IPs to adapt. Let's not kid ourselves.
This is far from a "new" problem.
Can look back decades to when a film came out of nowhere to be a big hit. Cut to studios (out of greed) taking something that was clearly a one-and-done and deciding to make it an IP. Then the sequel comes out and audiences stayed away.
The real problem, and the imminent disaster that Spielberg and Lucas warned about... to deaf ears (Because why listen to the two guys responsible for defining the industry for the last 40 years?), is Hollywood's want of turning every weekend into summer.
I've seen some people in this thread say "vote with your wallet". Isn't that what people are already doing and have always done?
I'm completely aware of that. It's just that, even with non-film buffs, a common topic which comes up when talking about films is that "there are too many sequels, too many reboots - nothing original," and then fail to show up whenever there is something original.
A lot of these sequels are movie #2 of their franchise and I'm just glad that Apocalypse is already the ninth movie in the series.
I hope Kingsman does well next year!
You're crazy. TMNT is about as obscure a property as comics get and even that took 20 years to cultivate as a property. Hollywood isn't going to pump 100 million into another Hellboy or LOEXG just because comic fans consider them top shelf properties.
If Hollywood was into adapting whatever new Sci-fi comic/novel was exciting, we wouldn't have Marvel/DC running as hot as they are.
Novels with large fanbases that justify that large price tag like THE MARTIAN are what gets adapted.
We've had original sci-fi properties like District 9 clean up and it doesn't move the needle in getting more original products. They just take the director and put him onto one of their Marvel/DC/Aliens/Godzilla/Predator Ips.
What the hell are you talkin' 'bout, kid? Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was the highest grossing independent film ever in 1990.
And to me you are backwards thinking. People didn't know who Deadpool was before the film grossed more than $770 million worldwide this year.
For God's sake, non-comic book readers didn't even have a clue about what Avengers was a decade ago. Let alone Thor, or Iron Man, Ant-Man, or the Guardians of the Galaxy. Let's not kid ourselves.
That is the crux of Hollywood's problem. Not everything is supposed to be a blockbuster. Just because Iron Man made this doesn't mean Flash will make that amount automatically just because he has name recognition.It doesn't matter if a property is well known, or not. Everything can be turned into a blockbuster.
In the end what matters is the film itself and its marketing campaign. The "he's not a well known argument" simply doesn't hold up, because otherwise we'd only have Batman, Superman, Spider-Man and Hulk films now.
If original autuer-driven films regularly made money and drew large audiences then studios would make more of those films. You can't really blame the studios for making what is most profitable to them.
Kinda.
I'm saying if all the people who complained about nothing "original" then maybe there would be change.
But if you clamor for original properties, but then don't go see the good ones when they come out.
I was talking with a family member and my cousin this past weekend and they basically were trashing every major blockbuster. The Marvel movies, Casino Royale, Skyfall, Fast and Furious movies, even "original" stuff like Gravity (but they liked BvS which is weird to me). They also were saying that there are too many superhero movies, not enough original properties
But when I asked them why don't they not see these movies or why don't they see the original movies that come out they just shrugged
And I feel like that's the same thing a lot of the people who complain about movies and unoriginality, sequels, etc do. They don't care enough to actually put their money where their mouth is.
So no I don't think people have been voting with their wallets in a lot of cases.
It's like...there are people who hate the Transformers movies, but still paying to see them and thereby supporting them. Why pay for something you don't support. You don't support reboots, sequels, etc? Then don't pay money to see them
On an unrelated note my one family member is the first guy in real life that i heard that thinks that the critics are in the pocket of Disney...which is still one of the stupidest things Ive heard.
The real problem, and the imminent disaster that Spielberg and Lucas warned about... to deaf ears (Because why listen to the two guys responsible for defining the industry for the last 40 years?), is Hollywood's want of turning every weekend into summer.
Who in the world wanted a sequel to a 30+ year old box-office bomb whose biggest influence is music videos and filmmakers who studied its visuals religiously in their adolescence? And what fools would spend a fortune to make it expecting a profit?
I understand all that. Of course the studios are going to make good business decisions and PTA films are never going to make 200 million dollars. That's not what I'm talking about. There is a a real problem in the industry when STEVEN SPIELBERG and DANIEL DAY LEWIS can't get funding from a film about ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Spielberg wasn't exaggerating when he said LINCOLN was almost an HBO film because no studio was interested in it. You have the world's biggest director and the world's biggest actor telling a story about one of the biggest figures in history and the studios are scared stiff of it? That's not a healthy culture in the industry. They are THAT afraid of non-blockbuster films.
1. Everybody above the line works either free or for scale. If an actor asks for a trailer or other frills, hell tell them, "You can have all those things, but you have to pay for it yourself. But more often than not, those things go away."
2. Never work with first time directors. "We work with experienced directors. We make a deal were not going to pay you a lot, but you get to do what you want to do. Most directors get final cut. Its auteur filmmaking, but for commercial movies I tell directors: I cant promise you a hit, but I can promise you the movies is going to be yours. When you work for a studio, they pay you a lot of money, but in exchange for that, they tell you what to do.
3. Cut down on time spent negotiating. The way we structure our backend, we key the payments to the box office so that cuts the negotiating way down and its very transparent. One of the things Im most proud of is that were really transparent with our process."
4. Dont release every movie wide. "One of the benefits of doing low-budget movies is you dont have to release them wide to recoup. You can release it in a smaller way, make your money back and keep going."