New Featurette (spoilers)
"UNDER ATTACK"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZeBpKXM0xZg
[YT]ZeBpKXM0xZg[/YT]
"UNDER ATTACK"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZeBpKXM0xZg
[YT]ZeBpKXM0xZg[/YT]
I want to know as well? I do see the marketing but it's not amazing or anything. Like I said, if this movie succeeds it's going to be because of the big robots and or a very good response from the audience because the marketing has been tepid. The fact is Rim needs at least a 60mil opening domestically and sadly Warners isn't marketing it like it does. Even before the split the movie's marketing was too fanboy based. I guess all I can do is support the movie and hope it overcomes.Where is all this heavy lifting?
WB has been very busy with Great Gatsby and Man Of Steel, this is truly now that the heavylifting starts.
WB also has less of a stake in Pacific Rim and they are splitting with Legendary Pictures. So . . . I mean . . . maybe their lifting will be lighter.
The way I see it Pacific Rim is to del Toro what Jack the Giant Slayer was to Bryan Singer. They were both under contract to do another movie for a respective studio after their previous project fell through so they opted for a personal reward piece.
As far as marketing goes, since WB only invested about 25% of the production budget into PR but are financing 80% of the marketing/distribution they probably don't want to spent too much if they are seeing (internally) that it isn't tracking well.
New Featurette (spoilers)
"UNDER ATTACK"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZeBpKXM0xZg
[YT]ZeBpKXM0xZg[/YT]
Which seems self destructive. If its not tracking well its because of the weak marketing at this point. If robots vs monsters isn't selling then you find something else in the movie to sell.
Anyone? I haven't watched it yet.
It's not self destructive, it's hedging your bets.
If they invested $50 mil into production and only think they'll top out (at most) making $150 mil in returns they'll only put about $100 mil into marketing and distribution to make sure they get their money back. Remember, it's not THEIR movie. It's a Legendary movie first and foremost. Like Godzilla.
Why would you throw $150 mil into marketing if your risk analysis shows you probably won't get it back? It's a business.
I guess you haven't read the Variey article. Its being reported that 70% of the marketing budget hasn't even been spent yet. So they haven't even used the majority of the marketing budget and its two weeks to release. That is throwing their hands up and saying "oh well".
If they had spent all the marketing budget and it still wasn't tracking well then yeah I can see them not wanting to put more money into it. However, this late in the game with 70% of the marketing budget not having been spent there is an attitude of them not even trying.
And that is self destructive, and the reason for the poor tracking.
I did read the Variety piece. And what I took from it is that WB still seems unsure whether to spend that additional 70%.
Why would they do that? Maybe because they don't feel they would get it back REGARDLESS if they spent it or not.
Risk assessment. Hedging bets. Call it what you will, but it's not self destruction. It's self preservation.
A part of me thinks Del Toro is playing it up like Andrew Stanton before John Carter.
And for Del Toro to say this close out they are just basically starting the campaign is worrying.
The problem with John Carters advertising was in fact that Stanton demanded to basically control most aspects of it, even choosing the music for the superbowl spots. Combined with the most generic title ever, it was kind of a marketing disaster.
Directors aren't marketing execs, or at least they usually shouldn't be.
John Carter was also way over budget due to lengthy re-shoots and the like. Pacific Rim, while it had a large budget, didn't go wildly over budget and the majority of its marketing budget hasn't even been spent.
Its in an odd situation.
Which seems self destructive. If its not tracking well its because of the weak marketing at this point. If robots vs monsters isn't selling then you find something else in the movie to sell. Throwing up their hands and saying "oh well" certainly won't help the film.
Bingo!The thing is you don't even need to spend that much money to generate interest. The general audience seems to be rejecting PR because the trailers gave us tons of action scenes but hardly any character-centric scenes.
None of the trailers have even managed to establish who the main character is in the film! We are just getting clips after clips of robots punching monsters in the rain.
Bingo!
Transformers anyone? As far as I know, nobody gave a **** about the characters in those movies. Let's not fool ourselves, a big blockbuster like this, do you really believe that the general audience cares about the characters that much? So many ******ed blockbusters did loads of money based on action alone.