Thursday, February 11, 2010

The Female-driven Blockbuster is on the Rise

With exception of ‘Avatar,’ all recent box-office toppers are chick flicks.

By Daniel Frankel, TheWrap.com
Feb. 10, 2010

Thirteen years before “Dear John” opened to $32.6 million, the New York Times concluded that women had suddenly become a powerful force at the box office. The male studio executives responded as only male studio executives knew how.

“The aim is to do action films that are more women-friendly, that is, having strong women in top roles and taking out a lot of the violence,” chimed then-Fox chairman Bill Mechanic, specifically noting the inclusion of Sandra Bullock in the “Speed” franchise.

While women were merely being invited onto Bullock’s blockbuster bus back in those days, they seem to be driving it now. And not just as male-action-hero stand-ins.

Indeed, the lightly regarded chick flick seems to have given way to a new box-office force: the female-driven tentpole.

Sony/Screen Gems’ “Dear John," which drew an audience last weekend that was 84 percent female -- and 64 percent below age 25 -- is but one example of a major box-office hit fueled almost entirely by women.

The female-driven movie isn’t a new phenomenon. But going back to mid-November -- and also factoring in Summit’s mega-hit “Twilight Saga: New Moon” (which opened to an audience that was 80 percent female) and Warner’s older skewing “The Blind Side” (60 percent female) -- every No. 1 film at the domestic box office not called “Avatar” has been chick movie.

Also performing strongly: Universal’s Nancy Meyers rom-com “It’s Complicated,” which grossed $176 million worldwide under “Avatar’s” shadow.

Meanwhile, Paramount’s Peter Jackson film “The Lovely Bones” was dead in the water until the studio figured out how to recast its marketing toward young women. Finally opening wide in early January to an audience that was 72 percent female and 40 percent under the age of 20, the $65 million film now at least has a remote shot at recouping its $65 million production budget.

In fact, “New Moon” and “Blind Side” only closed out what was an estrogen-fueled year at the box office, with stars like Sandra Bullock and Meryl Streep outperforming their A-list male counterparts in terms of theatrical revenue.

And from Disney’s “The Proposal” (with an audience that was 63 percent female) to Sony’s “Julie and Julia” (67 percent women), studios didn’t just release successful movies with a narrow audience-composition edge favoring women, like, say, “Titanic."

These were hits driven almost entirely by female audience members.

And it's not that there is some big new trend of more women going to the movies. Rather, said Vinny Bruzzese, executive vice president of the motion-picture group for research firm OTX, the over-performance among women for certain films shows that “studios are catching on that you have to make the movie for someone. Movies that are for a specific audience tend to overperform.”

Martha Lauzen, executive director of the Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San Diego State University, concurred. “Women are just as likely to go to the movies as men,” she told CNN, right after the huge premiere of “The Blind Side.” Instead, she noted, studios are making more movies now that accurately reflect women’s experiences and interests.

Even misfires aren’t costly
And the studios executives are often more surpised than anyone with the results.

In 2004, New Line adapted Nicholas Sparks’ best-seller “The Notebook” into a sleeper hit that opened to $13.5 million.

The next Sparks adaptation, “Dear John,” outperformed the most optimistic pre-release estimates by over $7 million last weekend -- more than doubling “The Notebook’s” opening in the process.

“It’s hard to wrap your head around this, because it’s never happened before,” Sony distribution president Rory Bruer told TheWrap.

Of course, narrowly targeting the female audience quadrants doesn’t guarantee success. In mid-January, Universal tried to counter-program a box office full of male-driven hits (“Avatar” specifically) with the Amy Adams-led romantic comedy “Leap Year.” The film made only $25.4 million. Likewise, Disney endured similarly middling results ($21.3 million) with the Kristen Bell rom-com “When in Rome” two weeks later.

But these were hardly costly misfires -- “Leap Year,” for example, costs only $19 million to make. And on the upside, Relativity Media said it paid only $25 million to fully finance “Dear John.”

In fact, grossing $704.7 million worldwide on a production budget of just $50 million, “Twilight Saga: New Moon’s” profitability actually surpassed the two male-driven tentpoles that ranked ahead of it in 2009, “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince”($934 million in global box office on a production budget of $250 million) and “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” ($836.3 million/$200 million).

Certainly, with Summit ready to debut the next “Twilight” this spring, as well as another Robert Pattinson drama, “Remember Me,” on March 12, the female-driven tentpole might become even more ubiquitous in 2010. This isn't even accounting for Warner's upcoming follow-up to "Sex and the City," which grossed $415.3 million on a production budget of just $65 million two years ago.

“It’s getting all those young girls Tweeting and telling their friends how good the movie is,” noted Relativity marketing chief Geoffrey Ammer, following “Dear John’s” big score over the weekend. “That’s the key.”

Monday, February 8, 2010

'Avatar' Ends Impressive Seven-Week Box-Office Reign

Pandora finally met its match with 'Dear John,' but we take a look back at its weeks at #1.

By Eric Ditzian, MTV.com
02.08.10

It had to happen sometime. After Mel Gibson, Denzel Washington, Dwayne Johnson and a handful of other Hollywood heavyweights couldn't take down "Avatar" at the box office, two rising stars stepped in to conquer Pandora: Channing Tatum and Amanda Seyfried of "Dear John."

As we welcome a new film into the top weekend spot for the first time since mid-December, it's worth taking a look back at the record-breaking reign of Cameron's alien epic.

Weekend One
As a blizzard locked down much of the Northeast in an icy mess, "Avatar" got off to an impressive but not record-shattering start, collecting $77 million in its first three days in theaters after its December 18 release. It didn't have much in the way of competition: the number two slot went to holdover "The Princess and the Frog" and its $12 million haul. At this point, no one — not even James Cameron — thought "Avatar" would hold the #1 spot for another six weeks.

Weekend Two
Despite the arrival of two significant rivals — "Sherlock Holmes" and "Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel" — "Avatar" dropped just 1.8 percent in B.O. dollars from its first weekend to its second, the 10th-smallest drop since 1982. Blockbusters can typically fall as much as 60 percent in their second weekend. With $212 million in total domestic business and another holiday weekend in front of it, "Avatar" was well positioned to continue its successful run.

Weekend Three
Could "Avatar" beat out "Titanic" to become the all-time B.O. champ? It wasn't until the new year that the topic was raised with any seriousness. The film's third weekend suggested it might. Dropping only 9.7 percent, "Avatar" crossed the $350 million plateau, moving into second place on the 2009 list behind "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen." With its premium IMAX and 3-D ticket prices, positive word of mouth and lack of serious theatrical competition throughout January, "Avatar" seemed at least guaranteed to challenge "Titanic," if not overtake it.

Weekend Four
Before the weekend even began, "Avatar" established itself as the #2 all-time record holder, with over $1.1 billion in worldwide sales. Its $50 million domestic weekend total again beat out "Sherlock" and "Chipmunks." The closest opening-weekend competition came from "Daybreakers" with $15 million. After dropping 26 percent in weekend four, could it keep the fifth-weekend drop to a reasonable number?

Weekend Five
The answer was yes. A drop of just 15 percent gave "Avatar" $43 million for a domestic total of $493 million. Not even a very respectable $33 million haul by Denzel Washington's "The Book of Eli" stood a chance. When you factor in the Martin Luther King holiday, "Avatar" walked away with $54 million. Across the country, IMAX showings were still routinely selling out, and "Avatar" was poised to continue its B.O. dominance. By Sunday, it stood as the fourth-biggest movie domestically, fast on the heels of "The Dark Knight."

Weekend Six
For the second weekend in a row, "Avatar" dropped a smaller percentage than it had in weekend four, securing $35 million after an 18 percent drop. By comparison, "Titanic" pulled in $25 million in its sixth week of release (down 16 percent) for a total of $275 million. With $552 in total domestic sales for "Avatar," the question was not if it would unseat "Titanic," but when.

Weekend Seven
The weekend had not even started before "Avatar" became the top worldwide B.O. earner with $1.858 billion. Come Friday, it had no problem dispatching Mel Gibson and "Edge of Darkness," reeling in $31 million (dropping 11 percent). Days later "Avatar" dispatched "Titanic" to become the top domestic flick in history.

Weekend Eight
But the magic could only last for so long. Facing off against Channing Tatum — who won big at the box office last year with "G.I. Joe: The Rise of the Cobra" — and "Dear John," "Avatar" fell nearly 25 percent for a weekend total of $24 million. Finally, the country had a new #1.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Week 2: Road Films



ED
Now, I owe it to myself to tell you, Mr. Griswold,
that if you are thinking of taking the tribe cross country,
this is your automobile: The Wagon Queen Family Truckster.
You think you hate it now, but wait till you drive it.

—Eugene Levy as Ed
in Vacation (Ramis, 1983 USA)

M 2.8/W 2.10: Road Films
In-class: “An Introduction to Road Films, Pt. I”
Screening: It Happened One Night (Capra, 1934 USA)
Due: OSR 1 (Silent Era to 1939)

Upcoming:

M 2.15/W 2.17: WGHS Winter Break
NO CLASS

Road Movies, 1980 to Present

Trailer for The Cannonball Run (Needham, 1980 USA)


Scene from Stand By Me (Reiner, 1986 USA)


Trailer for Midnight Run (Brest, 1988 USA)


Trailer for My Own Private Idaho (Van Sant, 1991 USA)


Trailer for Kalifornia (Sena, 1993 USA)


Trailer for Tommy Boy (Segal, 1995 USA)


Trailer for To Wong Foo Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar (Kidron, 1995 USA)


Scene from Almost Famous (Crowe, 2000 USA)


Scene from Road Trip (Phillips, 2000 USA)


Trailer for Sideways (Payne, 2004 USA)


Trailer for Diarios de motocicleta (The Motorcycle Diaries) (Salles, 2004 Argentina/US/et al.)



Trailer for The Road (Hillcoat, 2009 USA)

Road Movies, 1930-1979

Scene from The Wizard of Oz (Fleming, 1939 USA)


Trailer for The Road to Zanzibar (Schertzinger, 1941 USA)


Trailer for The Long, Long Trailer (Minnelli, 1953 USA)


Trailer for The Wild One (Benedek, 1953 USA)


Scene from It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (Kramer, 1963 USA)


Scene from Bonnie and Clyde (Penn, 1967 USA)


Trailer for Easy Rider (Hopper, 1969 USA)


Trailer for Duel (Spielberg, 1971 USA)


Trailer for Big Bad Mama (Carver, 1974 USA)


Trailer for Smokey and The Bandit (Needham, 1977)


Trailer for The Muppet Movie (Frawley, 1979 USA)


Trailer for Mad Max (Miller, 1979 Australia)