LOL!  And I would hand you the whip!

  _____  

From: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com [mailto:scifino...@yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of keithbjohn...@comcast.net
Sent: Saturday, December 20, 2008 10:06 PM
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [scifinoir2] 'The Day the Earth' Stalls




Well, if you'd liked the movie, I'd really have something to say about you! 
 

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "Reece Jennings" <mcjennings...@yahoo.com> 




I hear you, A-A!  I'm REALLY easy on my critique of movies, including
remakes.  The original had MUCH more
substance, and a bit of a cerebral tone, making us look at how contact with
other planets might happen.
 
I left this one wishing I had gone to see the animated Disney movie next
door!
 
Maurice (only one.  snicker...)
:o)
Nice to meetcha!
 
Don't believe anything Keith or Martin say about me!  NOBODY is that
bad...now Tracey...well...she speaks the truth!

  _____  

From: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com [mailto:scifino...@yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of Augustus Augustus
Sent: Friday, December 19, 2008 8:56 PM
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] 'The Day the Earth' Stalls


 



Raven,

i totally agree with the reviewer.  i went and saw it and was totally
disappointed!  there was no emotion to follow the characters.  the only
plausable character was will smith's son.  there was no message at the end.
in the original at least Klaatu gave a message of hope and warning.  in this
one, Klaatu disintegrates into a swarm of metal flies?  get real!  and the
robot???????????????????????????? again, another storyline that could have
been so great!  what a shame.  i hope that the remake of 'creature from the
black lagoon' is better.

SA

--- On Fri, 12/19/08, ravenadal <ravena...@yahoo.com> wrote:



From: ravenadal <ravena...@yahoo.com>
Subject: [scifinoir2] 'The Day the Earth' Stalls
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
Date: Friday, December 19, 2008, 8:33 PM



http://boxofficemoj o.com/news/
<http://boxofficemojo.com/news/?id=2522&p=.htm> ?id=2522& p=.htm

`The Day the Earth' Stalls

by Brandon Gray

Keanu Reeves in The Day the Earth Stood Still



December 15, 2008

his is typically the timeframe where the December box office starts to 
pick up, but it stalled this year due to a paucity of enticing new 
releases. The opening of intended event picture, science fiction 
remake The Day the Earth Stood Still, paled compared to the sci-fi 
remake that opened on the same weekend last year, I Am Legend, and 
overall business was down more than 40 percent.

The Day the Earth Stood Still generated a placid $30.5 million on 
approximately 5,900 screens at 3,560 sites, compared to I Am Legend's 
$77.2 million last year. The remake of the 1951 sci-fi drama, which 
distributor 20th Century Fox claimed cost a relatively modest $80 
m illion to produce, also had much less impact than such similar 
pictures as The Day After Tomorrow, War of the Worlds and Fantastic 
Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer. Fox's exit polling indicated that 55 
percent of the audience was male and 51 percent was over 25 years old.

Included in The Day the Earth Stood Still's numbers were 123 IMAX 
engagements that accounted for $3.7 million or over 12 percent of the 
gross. That was the highest IMAX share yet for a two-dimensional 
title. IMAX, which Fox heavily promoted, claimed 19 of the movie's top 
20 grossing theaters. Considering the usual performances for December 
releases, a month when opening weekends tend to be muted and grosses 
are spread throughout the week, and the receipts for an IMAX run, 
where ticket prices run 25 to 40 percent higher than the norm, Day 
still has the potential to exceed $100 million.

The marketing campaign for The Day the Earth Stood Still eschewed the 
human drama of the original and focused on the swarming destruction of 
buildings and trucks, making the picture look like a generic alien 
invasion or disaster movie. In bold print, ads declared the end of 
humanity, yet showed no humanity to begin with, such as relatable 
characters or storylines. Even the famous robot Gort received no play, 
just fleeting glimpses. The remake's environmentalist propaganda (that 
man is destroying earth and must stop or be wiped out) was a different 
message from the original's plea for peace and was obfuscated amidst 
the special effects chaos, contradicting the contemplative nature of 
the movie's title. All told, few compelling reasons to see Day were 
offered to potential moviegoers beyond the vague spectacle and the 
promise of the new trailer for X-Men Origins: Wolverine.

The other new nationwide releases were negligible. Christmas family 
gathering comedy Nothing Like the Holidays served up $3.5 m illion at 
1,671, which was a bit better than The Perfect Holiday at the same 
time last year. Meanwhile, Delgo had by far the worst opening ever for 
a movie playing at over 2,000 theaters. The computer-animated fantasy 
scrounged up $511,920 at 2,160 sites, far less than the already record 
low $916,000 the movie's distributor estimated on Sunday.






 

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