buggs0268 said:
Superman the Movie was in the #1 spot for 13 weeks. So had SR been in the #1 slot till the week of Aug 27th, then it could talk.
The original Star Wars was in the theaters ( on and off ) for years...and I forget know how many releases it had. same with movies like Jaws, The Exorcist, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and others. They just kept playing and playing and playing, and
then getting re-releases. This is in the era just before VHS. Some of you may not be old enough to remember that, but I do ( although just barely lol ) Movies made their money from theatrical dstribution and that's it. You say the original Superman was the #1 movie for 13 weeks. Very impressive for the time, but that's just unheard of today. Even a huge blockbuster like Pirates 2 is unusual as it was #1 for 3 whole weeks...nowadays in the summer it just almost never happens. There simply wasn't the same amount of "event films" to choose from back in the day. Also, there is simply the law of diminishing returns on older franchises...it is inevitable. Look at James Bond. The originals were
Huge movie events of their day. Just to make my point clear, Here are the top 007 films grosses ( Worldwide and Adjusted for inflation )
1. THUNDERBALL: $803.7 million
2. GOLDFINGER: $722.4 million
3. YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE: $599.1 million
4. THE SPY WHO LOVED ME: $548.5 million
5. MOONRAKER: $500.6 million
6. DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER: $515 million
7. LIVE AND LET DIE: $510.4 million
8. FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE: $456.3 million
9. DIE ANOTHER DAY: $424.7 million
10. GOLDENEYE: $412.6 million
The only two modern Bond films in the top 10 are Die Another Day and Goldeneye. The originals were far more profitable. However, Goldeneye is seen as succesful re-launch of the Bond franchise after the previous installments in the 80's failed to catch on in a big way
In a similar fashion, SR ( as well as Batman Begins ) had the same task as Goldeneye back in '95: take an old dead franchise and revive it to respectability. There was no way that any of these franchises were going to reach the dizzying heights of their original outings ( No matter what the fans or even Warners thought ). There are far too many Average Joe movie goers who only want to see what's new and fresh, not what's old and re-vamped. But that doesn't mean you just stop making Bond films, or Batman or even Superman.
I still think that if this movie had cost less, we wouldn't even all be having this conversation. Batman Begins only made like $5 million more, and in everyone's eyes it's considered a successfal re-start, not a flop.
In a seemingly unrelated not, a new book is making all kinds of headlines; The 101 Most Influential People Who Never Lived. And the characters I was just discussing? Well, here are their rankings:
#51: James Bond
#60: Batman
#64: Superman
For those of you who wanna see the whole list, here's the link:
http://books.aol.com/feature/_a/excerpt-101-most-influential-people/20061020155509990001
( There's no way I would have put The Marlboro Man over Santa Clause though. I mean, c'mon...it's Santa! Plus Spidey is not on the list...he really should be )