http://enjoyment.independent.co.uk/film/news/story.jsp?story=650172
As one mega-production after another bombs, Hollywood is suffering the worst
box-office slump in a generation. Is the problem more than just a failure to
produce the right films, asks Andrew Gumbel
Published : 28 June 2005

Every summer, Hollywood goes through the same little comedy. The studio
executives - who have staked reputation, career and tens, if not hundreds,
of millions of dollars on the latest mindless blockbuster they feel sure
will break through to the key target audience of disaffected suburban
teenagers - watch with trepidation and awe as one supposedly sure-fire hit
after another stumbles at the box office.

The real hits, meanwhile, invariably come from somewhere entirely
unexpected - a low-budget buddy comedy, say, or an entirely
counter-intuitive hits such as Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ, which
no studio executive would have ever bet on making a cent but which earned
more than $600m (£330m) worldwide.

This year, though, is a little different. For sure, the usual quota of
mega-productions has either underperformed or bombed altogether - everything
from Ridley Scott's crusading epic Kingdom of Heaven, to Ron Howard's
Depression-era boxing movie Cinderella Man. But, unusually, nothing much
else has grabbed the imagination of the mass American audience either.

The result is the longest year-on-year box-office slump in memory. This past
weekend was the 18th in a row in which ticket receipts came in lower than
they had in 2004. Nothing like this has happened since detailed records on
movie grosses began a generation ago.

The biggest new release, a wacky movie version of the old television series
Bewitched starring Nicole Kidman, got slammed by the critics and, in spite
of a no-holds-barred publicity push, couldn't even make top billing in the
weekend box-office charts. The number one spot was held instead by last
week's not-quite-blockbuster, Batman Begins, which has done decent but less
than stellar business.

Meanwhile, the film primed to clean up the tween and younger girl market,
Disney's revival of the Herbie sentient car series, Herbie Reloaded, was
also a disappointment, coming in fourth despite the popularity of its star,
Lindsay Lohan.

It has been like this almost every weekend since February. Total box office
is down about 7 per cent on last year. In the period from early May to
mid-June, traditionally a fecund earning period in the United States because
of the Memorial Day holiday, the numbers were down as much as 11 per cent.

Just a handful of films can be said to have performed strongly. Chief among
them is Revenge of the Sith, the sixth and final instalment of George
Lucas's Star Wars saga, which was just about the only thing motivating the
multiplexes to keep the lights burning at the end of last month.

On a more modest scale, Steven Soderbergh's Ocean's Twelve, the follow-up to
his reworking of the old Rat Pack caper Ocean's Eleven, made a handsome
return on its backers' investment, as did Meet The Fockers, the lowbrow
follow-up to the equally lowbrow in-law comedy Meet The Parents, starring
Ben Stiller and Robert De Niro.

Otherwise it has been one disaster after another, for reasons that are being
debated ever more hotly on Hollywood studio lots and in the ulcer-inducing
tension of the big shots' executive offices.

It's not just a matter of quality, or critical reception: seemingly
promising prestige projects like The Lords of Dogtown, about the skateboard
and surfing culture of Venice Beach, have fallen away just as surely as a
lazy, dumb shoot-'em-up like XXX: State of the Union.

It's not just a matter of poorly judged marketing, although Russell Crowe,
the star of Cinderella Man, certainly didn't help his movie by throwing a
telephone at an employee at a New York hotel and getting himself arrested on
the film's opening weekend. Ditto Tom Cruise, whose eyebrow-raising antics
on behalf of Scientology and the alleged new love of his life, Katie Holmes,
have raised so many hackles that an organised boycott of his forthcoming War
of the Worlds, directed by Steven Spielberg, is now in full swing.

What, then, is the matter? In Hollywood, there are two broad schools of
thought. The first says that, ultimately, it is about the appeal of the
films, and that the big studios have simply failed to deliver. It is
undeniable that the men and women who green-light $100m productions are
guilty of a spectacular failure of imagination. The movie landscape is
littered with remakes, sequels, screen adaptations of superhero comics and
ideas repackaged from television series popular when the executives, not
their target audience, were young and impressionable.



Not all of these have bombed (otherwise they wouldn't keep making them): the
Spider-Man series, for example, has certainly reaped big financial rewards.
But, taken together, they do form an impression of an industry suffering
either from a failure of nerve or a failure to understand people are looking
for the next big thing, not a facsimile of the last one, or the one before
that.

The second school of thought blames the slump on the fast-evolving culture
of entertainment, and the increasing distraction of DVDs, video games and
the internet eating into traditional outings to the big screen. Hollywood's
slump, the advocates of this school argue, is really a three-year slump, not
a one-year slump - box-office revenues have indeed been in marked decline
since 2002, when Spider-Man, Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings and Star Wars
all gave the industry a noticeable lift. And those three years coincide with
the explosion in the DVD revolution. US consumer spending on DVDs jumped 71
per cent between 2001 and 2002 alone and has continued to grow at a rapid
pace since. Americans now spend 53 per cent more time watching videos and
DVDs than they did in 2000, according to the Motion Picture Association of
America.

Over the same period, time spent on the internet has soared 76.6 per cent,
and video game usage has increased 20.3 per cent.

It is not just the availability of new forms of entertainment. It is also
the context in which they take place. Consider this choice. One, sitting at
home with a bowl of freshly popped popcorn and watching a DVD on a 42-inch
plasma screen with surround sound (total cost for even a largish gathering
after the initial equipment outlay: no more than a few dollars). Or two,
going to the mall, paying for parking, paying for baby-sitting, paying as
much as $10 per ticket, paying for overpriced stale snacks and sitting
through a tsunami of obnoxiously loud advertising while waiting for the main
feature, on screens whose sound and picture quality can be unpredictable at
best, downright lousy at worst.

Is it any wonder that more and more people are staying away from the
multiplexes? A poll by Associated Press and AOL last week found that 73 per
cent of Americans would rather watch a film at home. And, increasingly, the
industry is tailoring its products to that constituency.

The time lag between cinema and DVD release has shrunk down to an average of
four months, and analysts expect that gap to narrow further. Renting is
becoming ever easier, especially thanks to companies like Netflix, which
operate entirely by mail and have abolished forever the scourge of late
fees.

Exhibitors - the companies that own and operate the cinema screens - are
certainly feeling the squeeze. Last week, the number two and number three
exhibitors in the US announced that they were merging - a sure sign of
industry weakness.

It would be a mistake, however, to write off the movies too quickly. After
all, their death has been foretold many times before. First, in the 1950s,
it was television that was going to do in the big screen. Then it was video.
Now, supposedly, it is DVDs and the internet.

Most industry insiders are too savvy to fall for such easy gloom-and-doom
thinking. Cinema-going is clearly still popular - with movie box offices
doing almost $10bn in business every year in the US alone. And audiences are
almost bound to keep coming, just as long as they have sufficient
motivation.

That might mean rethinking how movies are marketed and experienced. (The
smaller, more comfortable, less corporate houses are doing rather better
than their multiplex brethren.) And it also means riding the lows along with
the highs and waiting for a more worthy crop of movies than 2005 has managed
to offer.

John Fithian, president of the National Association of Theatre Owners, told
the Los Angeles Times: "When the quality and the quantity of the movies come
back, our patrons will come back to see them. The sky is not falling."

Tracey deMorsella, Managing Producer
Convergence Media, Inc.
Home of The Multicultural Advantage
Phone: 215-849-0946
E-mail:  tdemorsella @multiculturaladvantage.com
http://www.multiculturaladvantage.com
--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.323 / Virus Database: 267.8.2/29 - Release Date: 6/27/2005


--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.323 / Virus Database: 267.8.2/29 - Release Date: 6/27/2005



 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/scifinoir2/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to