i miss him.![]()
Not sure if you're being facetious. But I did always look forward to his take on things--and I usually agreed with him. I liked his writing style. Can't recall why he got the boot, but yeah, it's too bad.
The Wook
i miss him.![]()
Do you even read my posts??
I've said repeatedly that TFA is a mega-hit commercially, but that it stinks artistically--which is why it is not following the Titanic/Avatar box office trajectory. Therefore, it won't have the legs to even approach Avatar's $2.8B record.
I do! It's a great reminder of the guy to not be on the Internet. :thumbsup
TFA is what? 60M shy of 2 billion, the last time I checked? A lot closer than any other film in recent memory has come to the magical 2.8B you're throwing out there. So let's say this film artistically stinks... Sure, It's the worst. Are you saying that Avatar is a better film? It's a visual spectacle, definitely.. I wouldn't call it a great film however.
Why is TFA more highly rated than both Titanic and Avatar on IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes, Metacritic, etc.?.. (The one exception being Avatar's Metacritic.. A whopping 2% higher rating.) Your claim is a movie (TFA) is worse than another (two, in this case. Avatar and Titanic) due to its gross, when at the same time it is being rated higher almost everywhere across the board?
Before you reply with "blarg blah blarghe stupid masses blah blarg," I'd remind you those same stupid masses are the exact reason Avatar and Titanic brought in the money it did...
Dollars inflate. Ticket prices inflate. Audiences watch more movies at home. Etc. There is no directly comparing TFA with anything from even as recently as 2009, let alone 1997.
But the broader point stands. TFA was probably not quite as successful as Avatar or Titanic.
When movies get this big every one is unique. Gone with the Wind was huge because it played to an under-served region. Independence Day was a fresh movie with a leading man who sold well to both black and white audiences (uncommon 22 years ago). Titanic was a well-done movie in a genre that had been neglected for decades. Avatar was a technical breakthrough at the time. Star Wars ANH was a bit of both neglected genre and SFX breakthrough.
TFA is . . . well, none of those things. It's probably the most long-awaited sequel/boot ever. But it comes at a time when people are sick & tired of long-awaited sequel/boots being disappointing (with this very same franchise being the worst offender).
What I'm saying is that TFA had a lot to make it a success but it lacked that extra thing that THE BIGGEST movies always need. Some extra spin to set it apart. TFA didn't even break any new SFX ground at all, unlike almost every single new SW movie before it. Everybody knew what they were seeing before they saw it, and they had seen it before. It was only a question of how well TFA would retread the familiar ground.
@Solo4114 Avatar was pretty impressive in theaters.
Box office numbers is a stupid way to judge the quality of a movie. People go to see the movie because it is called Star Wars and the trailer is good.
Disney knows that Star Wars is going to bring in a lot of money - that is why they bought it. They designed the movie to bring in people for this movie, and made it incomplete at the end to make people would be wanting to see the next movie right away.
I like this video series on Youtube about what the author finds to be the n best movies in the last decade. Yes, there are many youtubers that have made the same thing but what sets this one apart is the comparison of box office earnings of each good movie against a bad movie: Grown Ups 2 with Adam Sandler (7% on Rotten Tomatoes) ... None of the movies on the "best" list earned even half of what Grown Ups 2 did.
Any time someone talks about the best movies, all I ever think of is Dead Poets society..."Avatar had nice 3d and I could dance to it"
As a species we've spent hundreds of years and millions of words to find new ways of discovering what should have been obvious to us from day one, but still...strangely...isn't:
Opinion is subjective. It's the best if you, personally, like it better than the others. And you're not wrong, even if other people like something different.
I don't know why that always pisses us off so much as a species, but it really is how we're built. We don't have objective taste in entertainment. Not even if we use pie charts.
Right, I don't generally disagree with that.
But, so what?
I mean, I can't speak for anyone else, but I certainly haven't been claiming that TFA is THE BIGGEST MOVIE EVAR!!! Frankly, I find the "Well, box office numbers support it, so nyah nyah" line of reasoning to be fairly weak, because, hey, Transformers movies do well at the box office and are undeniably crappy films. Crappy, popular, and successful films, but crappy films nonetheless.
But likewise, it's undeniable that TFA is both popular and successful. Is it AS successful as Avatar or Titanic? Eh, I think it depends on what you mean. Box office-wise, no. Not yet, anyway. We'll see if and when it's re-released in theaters. But the thing is, I don't think anyone was ever saying "We're taking Avatar and Titanic DOWN!! WE WILL BE NUMBER ONE!!!!!", so there's no reason to characterize TFA as having failed somehow because it didn't do that. TFA is a massive, massive success for Disney. It's a huge financial win for them in more ways than one, and it has rejuvenated a franchise that was languishing. It also brought in a bunch of new audience members and younger fans, so by that measure, it's a success, too. The merchandising machine is going full tilt now, including hitherto unrealized (at least by some Hasbro execs) demand for characters like Rey. That means new markets for merchandise (again, at least in the minds of Hasbro execs).
Pretty much across the board, by any business-related standard you pick, TFA is a huge success. So, the whole "Well...it still didn't catch Titanic or Avatar, so....y'know..." line of thinking seems rather beside the point. Doubly so if one takes a rather dim view of Titanic and Avatar as films. Personally, I haven't seen -- and have no real interest in seeing -- Titanic, but I watched and sadly own a copy of Avatar, and as anything other than a tech demo, it's pretty underwhelming. Frankly, even the tech is underwhelming to me, but I digress.
I'm convinced Avatar was such a "success" purely because of it's visual quality--in their minds, average moviegoers interpreted "purty" as "good". Even I, someone who saw Avatar once and didn't care for it, have to admit it's 3D effects were among the best I've seen so far; possibly the best....I have been a little mystified about Avatar since day one. I'm not sure why such an average movie made so much money...
You've made two egregious assumptions in your post, both of which are wrong. One, I didn't like Titanic. Saw it once in the theater. Thought the boat sinking was very well done, but the silly Jack/Rose love story which permeated the film ruined the overall experience. Two, I didn't like Avatar. I saw it on a 13" black & white TV in Canada. Didn't impress me.
So stop putting words in my mouth. I defy you to show me where I said TFA was a worse film than Titanic and/or Avatar--in any way other than box office trajectory and box office haul.
The Wook
I wasn't really trying to diss TFA, so much as just point out that THE BIGGEST movies tend to have some kind of rare circumstance pushing them over the top. TFA just wasn't in the circumstances to be that big no matter how good or bad it was.
Honestly I think TFA made (will make) about as much money as it possibly could have in the theatrical run. It could have been a better movie but I doubt that would have increased the box office by much.
I have been a little mystified about Avatar since day one. I'm not sure why such an average movie made so much money. I'm not sure why such an average screenplay feels more ripped off than every other ripped off screenplay we get every summer. It's not terrible but IMO it just doesn't resonate with audiences like it should. The ingredients are pretty good and it's made pretty well and yet somehow it seems worse than the sum of its parts.
I'm convinced Avatar was such a "success" purely because of it's visual quality--in their minds, average moviegoers interpreted "purty" as "good". Even I, someone who saw Avatar once and didn't care for it, have to admit it's 3D effects were among the best I've seen so far; possibly the best.
That being said, I'm not a fan of 3D movies and still consider 3D to be nothing more than a gimmick to sell more tickets. I've seen a number of 3D movies in both 3D and 2D, and in each case those movies were equally good or bad without the 3D. But, based on the one time I saw it, I can honestly say Avatar was the only movie I've seen that was made better by the use of 3D.