Monday, October 31, 2011

The Painful Death of Hollywood's Producers: No First Class, No Calls Back

Even high-flying big names are being treated badly as studio economics mean cutbacks; says one producer, "I feel like Willy Loman."

You aren't going to get me to talk about how awful the studios are!" says one veteran producer before launching into a tirade on the subject. "The studios just don't respect what producers do. They'd rather not have them around. … Studios have way too many executives and waste way too much money on that."

Says another producer who ranks among the Hollywood elite: "The bigger the movies get, the more executives feel they're producing them. I believe there are more executives being dispatched to locations than ever before. … When the executive says 'my' movie, it drives you crazy, and it's happening more and more."

With the movie business undergoing a historic realignment as DVD revenue has shriveled and new technology has not yet generated cash to take its place, the issues facing the business are squeezing the top rank of producers, including those who still have generous deals with studios -- on paper. It's trickle-up economics, and those who have long been used to having their voices respected are finding that sometimes -- ouch -- their calls aren't even returned.

Some believe that life has changed forever in the movie business, while others -- noting that studios are making increasingly homogeneous movies -- are hoping that eventually it will become clear that audiences crave something different and that producers are the ones with the experience and skill to develop and execute original, sometimes even great, material.

Evidence of the pressure studios are imposing on big-name producers is everywhere. Jerry Bruckheimer just underwent what he described to THR as the most difficult negotiation of his career with Disney to launch The Lone Ranger with Johnny Depp. Ron Howard and Brian Grazer of Imagine have seen their rich deal at Universal cut back and the studio pull the plug on their ambitious fantasy Western The Dark Tower, based on a series of books by Stephen King. A-list producers Frank Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy just departed from Sony after two years without a green light. Even the industry's ultimate 800-pound gorilla, Steven Spielberg, has had struggles raising money.

Some of the industry's most successful producers say the studios are making them feel, as one puts it, increasingly "irrelevant." And a top executive at one studio acknowledges that in many cases, they have a point. "I wish I could tell you they're wrong or they're being babies," he says. "But [their complaints] are legitimate. And it doesn't feel like it's to the benefit of the movie business. But studios are more involved in movies because the stakes are so high. You get pressure from the bosses to be sure you're managing the projects well -- but that used to be the producer's job."

And that's from an executive at a studio that is considered relatively respectful. Not all are. There seems to be broad agreement among high-level producers that Fox has long been the most contentious with producers, even before the economics became so challenging, largely due to a strong-arm culture created by studio chief Tom Rothman. Disney, with suppliers such as Marvel and Pixar and its focus on branded entertainment, now makes few movies of its own and scarcely seems to need producers. Paramount and Universal also seem largely indifferent, except for a clutch of stars like J.J. Abrams (who, notably, is a filmmaker himself). Sony and Warner Bros. -- in that order -- get the highest marks.

"Even when they're f--ing you, they're apologetic," says one prominent producer. "Fox, Paramount, Universal -- it's simply: 'This is what we're doing. Sorry we forgot to tell you.' "

Says producer Laurence Mark (Julie & Julia): "Sony's the only studio that sort of harks back to the old studio days. Amy [Pascal] deals with the big picture. She's happy to make bold moves. They have great relationships that pay off." Notably, Sony has made The Social Network and Moneyball with powerhouse producer Scott Rudin -- films that other studios would have been unlikely to make. (In fact, one producer says he has heard executives at other studios make snide comments about Sony's decision to take a chance on Moneyball.) But some with ties to the studio say even Pascal has had to trim her sails in the current environment.

"The studios trust a smaller and smaller number of producers," says Marshall Herskovitz, president emeritus of the Producers Guild of America. But he adds that he got that memo long ago. "I don't have a deal anymore," says Herskovitz. "Am I upset? Yes. But there's no point in crying about it." Instead, he says, he and many others have adapted: "Every producer I know has had to learn about independent financing. It may be that these tectonic shifts are finally hitting people who thought they were invulnerable, but most people have adapted. Producers have moved into television and new media and looked for other ways to finance features because that's what producers do. They're coping." (One producer says he has, like many others, sought opportunities in television, but even that is a struggle. "Suddenly you're going from office to office, peddling TV," he says. "There's a little bit of a Willy Loman aspect to it.")

"We can yell our heads off, but we collectively need to adapt to changes in the business," says current guild co-president Mark Gordon. "The world is changing, and we have to change with it."

Perhaps nothing illustrates more vividly the difference between then and now for producers than the Imagine experience. Last decade, Universal was giving Howard and Grazer a hefty $17 million a year in overhead as well as fees of $2 million up front against at least 5 percent of gross (more if Howard was directing). The partners even had two "put" pictures -- meaning they could force projects into Universal's pipeline -- though they never exercised that option. Their deal has since been trimmed to $8 million-plus a year, according to a knowledgeable source, but when the time comes for renegotiation (it runs through 2013), they are sure to face further pressure.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Box Office Report: 'Puss in Boots' Braves Halloween Weekend to Collect a Record $34 Million

Justin Timberlake's "In Time" and Johnny Depp's "The Rum Diary" don't scare up much business, but "Tintin" made a mark overseas.

Competing against Halloween parties and contending with an unseasonal blizzard in the Northeast, DreamWorks Animation’s Puss in Boots, distributed by Paramount, purred its way to the top spot at the North American boxoffice with an estimated $34 million. That amounted to a new Halloween weekend record, leaping over the $33.6 million that Saw III registered in 2006.

But the weekend’s two other new wide releases displayed far less derring-do. Fox’s sci-fi tale In Time, starring Justin Timberlake, debuted in third place with $12 million, while the Johnny Depp starrer, The Rum Diary, released by FilmDistrict had to settle for a sobering $5 million and a fifth place showing.
Meanwhile, another animated movie, Steven Spielberg's Tintin got off to a strong start in 19 foreign markets where it collected an estimated $55.8 million. In 17 of those markets, it opened at number one, including the United Kingdom, where it took in $10.7 million and France, where it amassed $21.5 million. While Paramount handled the film in the U.K., Sony rolled it out in the other territories. The movie opens stateside via Paramount on Dec. 21.

While Puss challenged the holiday – Halloween weekend is usually reserved for scary movies rather than family fare – a ghost story did hold down the second slot as Paramount’s Paranormal Activity 3 slid 65 percent as it entered its second weekend. The second prequel to 2009’s original Paranormal Activity, the new movie took in an additional $18.5 million to bring its domestic gross to $81.3 million.

In addition to Puss and Paranormal, Paramount also had a third entry in the top five as the toe-tapping Footloose, in its third weekend, took in $5.4 million for fourth-place standing, bringing its domestic total to $38.4 million.

Overall, business in North America totalled $96.3 million, up eight percent from the comperable weekend last year, but it would have been higher if it were not for the freak snowstorm that affected the Northeast. While Saturday grosses in Los Angeles were up 36 percent over Friday's numbers, the Saturday returns in New York were up only seven percent. DWA estimated that Puss would probably have grossed a few million dollars more if it hadn't encountered the bad weather.

A spin-off from DWA's popular Shrek franchise, the PG-rated Puss, directed by Chris Miller, opened below the norm for most of DWA's movies. The company, though, made a calculated move by shifting the film's release, originally scheduled for Nov. 4 up a week to a weekend not traditionally used to launch family films because of the competing holiday activities. Now, Puss, which earned an A- CinemaScore,  has two more open weekends ahead of it before an onslaught of family movies that begin to hit theaters on Nov. 18 when Warners' Happy Feet Two opens.

"The movie came in close to where we expected, given the holiday weekend," said DWA chief marketing officer Anne Globe. "We think we're well positioned to take advantage of the next two weekends."
In terms of its audience, the animated flick, which opened in 3,952 theaters, skewed female (59 percent) and 55 percent of moviegoers were 25 or over. Kids under 12 made up 32 percent of the audience, while parents represented 36 percent of the total.

The film did particularly well with Latinos, who made up 35 percent of its audience. DWA had made a particular bid for that demographic, given that the movie features Antonio Banderas and Salma Hayek, voicing the feline characters. The studio had a major tie-in with Univision, and four of the top-ten theaters showing the movie turned out to be in the Miami area.

The film, which got a number of good reviews for its use of 3D, also saw an uptick in the percentage of its gross which came from 3D theaters, with 51 percent of the total coming from 3D houses and seven percent of its total coming from Imax screens.

In Time's $12 million debut won't boost Timberlake's standing as a box office draw, "But even though we were up against game seven of the World Series on Friday and a pretty severe storm on Saturday, we still came in right around pre-release expectations," Fox distribution exec Chris Aronson said. The PG-13 movie, produced by New Regency for $35 million, directed by Andrew Niccol and also starring Amanda Seyfried, opened in 3,122 theaters. While its overall CinemaScore rating was B-, younger audiences were more positive about the movie, set in a world where no one ages over 25. Younger males gave it an A- and younger females gave it a B+, "So we think there's a lot of playability in the picture, Aronson said.
With Rum Diary, Depp returned to the world of gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson. Depp, a friend of Thompson's, played him in the 1998 film version of the writer's psychedlic Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. And the character he plays in Rum Diary, based on a novel that Thompson published in 1998, is a fictionalized version of the author, recounting his earlier adventures in Puerto Rico in the 1950s. The mass audience wasn't buying, though.

Directed by Bruce Robinson and produced by Depp's Infinitum Nihil and Graham King's GK Films, the R-rated movie opened in 2,272 theaters, where it found just $5 million. Depp himself did a lot of grass roots promotion on behalf of the film, which was shot in 2009, but held back from release until Depp was free from commitments to his most recent Pirates of the Caribbean movie and filming of the upcoming Dark Shadows, so he could go on the road to promote the movie. In addition to a Vanity Fair cover, he did a college tour, visiting UC Berkeley, the University of Texas at Austin and Columbia University.

But said FilmDistrict president of theatrical distribution president Bob Berney, "Probably at the end of the day the whole Hunter thing attracts more of a cult audience. While he and Johnny were best friends and the movie is a tribute to Hunter, Hunter is stilll a little too extreme for the mainstream." While the film played well in Manhattan and Los Angeles, the futher it went into the suburbs, the more it dropped off, Berney noted, predicting it would find an audience in home video like Fear and Loathing, which only grossed $10.7 million domestically, did.

On other fronts, Sony, which pulled back Roland Emmerich's Shakespearean conspiracy tale Anonymous from wide release a few weeks ago, introduced the PG-13 movie starring Rhys Ifans in 265 theaters, where it collected $1 million for a per-screen average of $3,774. The movie, which played to an older crowd (65 percent were over 30), earned a CinemaScore of  A-, which bodes well, the studio said, for its larger rollout.

As it entered its second weekend, Paranormal Activity 3 experienced a drop-off typical of most horror movies, but it still took home an added $18.5 million, bringing its domestic tally to $81.3 million. That puts it ahead of the $65.7 million that last year's Paranormal movie grossed by the end of its second weekend. "We're having a lot of fun with it," said Megan Colligan, Paramount president of domestic marketing and distribution. "it's got a great fan base that gets out there in the social media and really talks about the movie."
Paramount also used the weekend to debut Like Crazy on the specialty front in four theaters in New York and Los Angeles under its Paramount Vantage label. Directed by Drake Doremus, the PG-13 movie, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, stars Anton Yelchin and Felicity Jones as college-age lovers torn apart by visa problems. It grossed $120,000 for a powerful per-screen average of $30,000.
Next weekend, the movie will move up to 16 theaters in ten markets. "I think we have a very nice window here," Colligan said, "because the movie plays strongly to both 20-something moviegoers and the older, more sophisticated art house audience."

Also in limited release, Roadside's financial thriller Margin Call began its second weekend by moving from 56 theaters into 140 and picked up $713,285 to bring its domestic total to $1.5 million. Also entering week two, Fox Searchlight's Martha Marcy May Marlene moved from four theaters to 32, taking in $240,550 to bring its total to $439,544.

And, proving that there is money to be made in alternative programming, the Metropolitan Opera’s live broadcast of Don Giovanni, beamed to 805 screens in North America via The Met: Live in HD, attracted an estimated 107,000 patrons and a gross of $2.3 million in North

Saturday, October 29, 2011

The 7 Best Viral Marketing Campaigns in Movie History

'Super 8' hits theaters June 10, and the viral marketing campaigns for it have been spinning like mad. Director J.J. Abrams loves a good viral campaign and is probably one of the few directors who actually thinks about it as he's constructing the initial movie. The success of 'Super 8''s marketing remains to be seen, but there are plenty of online hints and movie references that nerds (ourselves included) will be digging through for months.

'Super 8' already has intrigue and mystery down, which you'll see are two big factors in a successful online promotion. Below, we take a look at the seven best viral marketing campaigns in movie history.

7. 'Snakes on a Plane' (2006)

Some consider 'Snakes on a Plane' a disappointment at the box office. However, the movie grossed over $62m. That is staggering considering almost every person who paid to see it, did so "ironically." The movie became a hit simply because of its name making the rounds online. New Line already had a Internet phenomenon before they even started marketing it, proving names do matter.

6. 'Inception' (2010)

After Christopher Nolan's 'The Dark Knight' enjoyed overwhelming success -- due in some part to its viral campaign -- it stood to reason the progressive director would want the same for 'Inception.' Keeping most of the film under wraps, the stealth marketing team put together the 'Mind Crime' virtual game online and produced a series of "real" interviews with scientists who specialize in dreams. Fans were already interested, but these efforts pushed their intrigue past the tipping point.

5. 'Paranormal Activity' (2009)

Made for a mere $15,000, 'Paranormal Activity' grossed over $193 million. The filmmakers owe a lot of their success to hitting the social networks hard, especially Twitter. After the film's limited release, they encouraged viewers to "Tweet Their Screams" and write 140-character-long reviews. After Paramount saw the online interest, the studio announced they'd launch it nationally if the movie received one million "demands" on Eventful. They made people work for it and, therefore, gave them a vested interest before even seeing it.

4. 'Cloverfield' (2008)

Director J.J. Abrams already had experience with viral marketing from his TV show 'Lost,' which had 'The Lost Experience' online. The studio used similar online tie-ins for 'Cloverfield.' However, wanting to keep the film as much of a secret from scoopers as possible, they misdirected information online, calling the movie 'Slusho' and 'Colossus,' despite already knowing the title. Fans started looking for hints everywhere before 'Cloverfield' was even close to theaters.

3. 'The Dark Knight' (2008)

Like 'Cloverfield,' 'The Dark Knight' used misdirection. One of the first marketing stunts was a fake website for Harvey Dent's campaign for district attorney, complete with shareable "I Believe in Harvey Dent" political posters. The posters slowly changed to an image of the Joker with the text, "see you in December." The final push launched WhySoSerious.com, which revealed more images of the Joker as well as the first teaser trailer, helping the film gross more than $1 billion.

2. 'Toy Story 3' (2010)

Instead of using misdirection to provoke interest, 'Toy Story 3' launched a unique viral video campaign with fake, vintage '80s commercials for the toy Lots o' Huggin Bear; Internet-only videos like one with Woody and Buzz on an IM chat; and hilarious '70s-themed interviews with the Ken doll called 'Groovin' With Ken'; as well as his advice series 'Ken's Dating Tips.' All of this excess creative content, as well as a Facebook application that allowed fans to purchase advance tickets through the site and update their friends when doing so, pushed the Pixar flick past $1 billion in sales.

1. 'The Blair Witch Project' (1999)

Before YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, MySpace and even Friendster, 'The Blair Witch Project' set the standard for guerilla marketing done virally. Shot on a shoestring budget at a time when fake documentaries weren't commonplace, the film gave the impression this was real, actual "found footage." The filmmakers and Artisan Entertainment supported that by building a website that backed this claim; they also circulated the rumors via online message boards. The film terrified audiences all the more when, in the back of their heads, they thought it might just be real.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Studios Mull 60-Day Delay on Netflix, Redbox DVD Rentals

The news comes after Kevin Tsujihara, president of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, said the studio is looking at possibly lengthening the current 28 days delay.

NEW YORK - Several Hollywood studios are considering doubling a 28-day delay on DVD rentals offered by the likes of Netflix and Coinstar's Redbox DVD rental kiosk operator, Bloomberg News reported.
Hollywood executives are discussing a delay of 60 days from the time DVDs go on sale and studios continue to explore ways to bolster DVD sales and digital purchases, it said.

The news comes after Kevin Tsujihara, president of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, told the Financial Times this week that the studio is looking at lengthening the current 28 days delay.

Bloomberg didn't detail which studios may seek a longer delay, but highlighted that beyond Warner, Universal Pictures, part of Comcast-controlled NBCUniversal, and News Corp.’s Fox currently impose the 28-day rental window on Netflix and Redbox.

Coinstar CEO Paul Davis told Bloomberg that the company has the option of buying DVDs elsewhere, but that it will continue to work with studios. “Some studios want a window and we try to work with them,” he said. “There’s a point to where it might not make sense.”

Redbox announced Thursday that it will raise DVD rental prices by 20 percent per day

The State of the Studio Deals: Who's Doing What Where

Overstuffed studio stables mostly perished in the WGA-strike housecleaning. Now, surviving producers fight for stingier deals and fewer film slots in an environment of belt-tightening and cold creative calculation.
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DISNEY
Active producer deals 2011: 18
Active producer deals 2003: 24
Disney has been through some uncomfortable contortions lately. Even long-standing powerhouse producer Jerry Bruckheimer has faced challenges as the company has made executive changes, brought in Marvel Studios and locked in a distribution deal with DreamWorks. Meanwhile, the studio's roster, which includes Debra Martin Chase's Martin Chase Productions and Andrew Panay's Panay Films, is fighting over a handful of live-action movie slots. David Hoberman and Todd Lieberman's Mandeville Films provides a grab bag of pictures, including this fall's Muppets rebirth. But Miles Millar and Alfred Gough's Millar Gough Ink hasn't seen a Disney green light since 2009's Hannah Montana: The Movie. New blood comes in the form of ABC Studios supplier Mark Gordon's Mark Gordon Co., which cut a first-look film deal in April.
Highlights:
Mandeville Films: David Hoberman & Todd Lieberman
In 2009, Mandeville supplied Disney with the impressive $317 million worldwide gross of The Proposal and the middling performance of Surrogates. After The Muppets in November, the duo has projects filming for Summit and Relativity and Here There Be Monsters set up at Warner Bros. but nothing approaching the runway at their home studio.
Junction Entertainment: Jon Turteltaub
Director Turteltaub delivered hits with the National Treasure films in 2004 and 2007, but The Sorcerer's Apprentice turned out less than magical last year. He now has Last Vegas casting for CBS Films, but only one Disney project -- a potential third National Treasure film -- napping in development.
Jerry Bruckheimer FIlms: Jerry Bruckheimer
The fourth Pirates of the Caribbean film triumphed, but the run-up to it -- Confessions of a ShopaholicG-ForcePrince of Persia: The Sands of Time and Apprentice -- failed to reach blockbuster status, forcing the mega-producer into an atypical public wrestling match with the studio to get The Lone Ranger greenlighted.
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DREAMWORKS
Active producer deals 2011: 5
Active producer deals 2003: 22
Just before it left Paramount three years ago, DreamWorks still had a dozen deals in place that included pacts with Ira GlassEddie Murphy and Ben Stiller's Red Hour Films. Since rebuilding as an independent, the studio's deals are few but targeted: director John Hamburg for comedy, Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci's K/O Paper Products for action/sci-fi tentpoles and screenwriter Steven Zaillian's Film Rites for smaller dramas. But because DW makes so few movies, many in its stable go elsewhere (Zaillian has Moneyball and The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo at Sony). Steven Spielberg favorites Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall's Kennedy/Marshall Co., which is producing the director's War Horse and Lincoln for DW, just nabbed a first-look deal.
Highlights:
MacDonald/Parkes Productions: Laurie MacDonald & Walter F. Parkes
The longtime DreamWorks producers (The RingCatch Me If You Can) lined up $10 million in financing from Imagenation Abu Dhabi two years ago and have been using it to buy and develop their own projects. Dinner for Schmucks underperformed in 2010, and films such as Motorcade and The Trial of the Chicago 7 have been gestating at the studio for years without forward movement. But the awards-bait drama Flight, which Robert Zemeckis is directing with Denzel Washington in the lead role, has just gone before cameras.
K/O Paper Products: Alex Kurtzman & Roberto Orci
The writer-producers are frequent Spielberg collaborators who had a rare stumble with Cowboys & Aliens this summer. They go small for the first time with Kurtzman's directorial debut, Welcome to People, which is wrapped but awaiting a release date. After that, the pair has half a dozen big-budget projects -- including Racing DreamsDeep Sea Cowboys and The Defenders -- at the studio waiting for the go-ahead from CEO Stacey Snider, but their deal is up at the end of the year.
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20TH CENTURY FOX
Active producer deals 2011: 20
Active producer deals 2003: 26
The quantity of deals hasn't changed much at Fox since the heyday of first-look pacts a decade ago. But the studio -- which includes Fox 2000, Fox Searchlight and Fox Animation -- has consummated two key deals in the past two years, with Peter Chernin's Chernin Entertainment and screenwriter Simon Kinberg's Genre Films. James Cameron's Lightstorm Entertainment and its Avatar juggernaut are more important to the studio than ever, director Shawn Levy's 21 Laps Entertainment continues to grow in its sixth year, and Ridley and Tony Scott's Scott Free Productions provides a mix of fare. Walden Media and Davis Entertainment are healthy mainstays, and New Regency remains a major co-financing partner. Searchlight's deals with Danny Boyle's Decibel Films and Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor's Ad Hominem Enterprises provide potential awards-season fodder. 
Highlights:
Chernin Entertainment: Peter Chernin
The former News Corp. COO came out of the gate strong this summer with franchise reboot Rise of the Planet of the Apes and its $438 million worldwide gross after segueing into his producer position in 2009. His Billy Crystal comedy Parental Guidance is next for Fox, but Chernin also is producing the big-budget Joseph Kosinski-directed sci-fi epic Horizons for Universal.
Lightstorm Entertainment: James Cameron
Avatar contributed $2.78 billion in gross revenue to Fox's coffers in 2009 and 2010; it was the first picture the company had delivered to the studio since Solaris in 2002. And while Lightstorm has other projects in the works, including a big-budget remake of Fantastic Voyage, the forthcoming Avatar sequels are what really matter.
21 Laps Entertainment: Shawn Levy
Levy's outfit has been a hit machine for the studio (minus The Rocker) since Night at the Museum in 2006, with more than $1.3 billion in global grosses generated so far. The ensemble sci-fi comedy Neighborhood Watch is filming for a summer release, and the Museum franchise could always be extended.
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PARAMOUNT
Active producer deals 2011: 12
Active producer deals 2003: 22
In the past decade, Paramount has shed producers like it's on a crash diet. But if anything, its stable is stronger. Such heavy hitters as Cruise/Wagner Productions and Gary Sanchez Productions were let go along the way, but the studio now boasts a mix of such old-school mainstays as Lorenzo di Bonaventura's Di Bonaventura Pictures and Lorne Michaels and John Goldwyn's Michaels Goldwyn Co. and newer reliables such as J.J. Abrams and Bryan Burk's Bad Robot, Michael Bay's Platinum Dunes and Ivan Reitman and Tom Pollock's Montecito Picture Co. With Mary Parent's Disruption Entertainment and Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage's Fake Empire recently added to the roster, the studio looks well situated to cover its bases with filmmaker deals and traditional producers. But really, is there a reason Robert Evans still has a deal here?
Highlights:
Bad Robot: J.J. Abrams & Bryan Burk
Abrams and company joined the studio in 2006, and Paramount CEO Brad Grey made the easiest decision of his career by re-upping the shingle's deal through 2013. Aside from the underwhelming performance of Morning Glory in 2010, Bad Robot has turned out successes Cloverfield, the Star Trek reboot and Super 8, totaling $875 million in worldwide grosses. Next are Mission: Impossible -- Ghost Protocol and a Trek sequel.
Skydance Productions: David Ellison
Ellison brought $350 million to the table last year to co-finance films as part of his four-year deal with the studio, which is up in late 2013, and he's putting it to good use: The tentpoles M:I -- Ghost ProtocolWorld War Z and G.I. Joe 2 are making their way to theaters.
Plan B Entertainment: Brad Pitt
Since coming over from Warner Bros. in 2005, Pitt has barely made a film for the studio where he has an overall deal (A Mighty Heart was last produced for Paramount Vantage in 2007). Among a dozen projects set up there, only World War Z is in front of cameras.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Showtime Renews 'Homeland' for Second Season


"Homeland" Showtime has renewed freshman drama Homeland for a 12-episode second season.

The series, from 24's Howard Gordon and Alex Gansa and based on the Israeli series Hatufim (Prisoners of War) from Keshet Broadcasting, has been a steady performer for the premium cable network.

“Homeland is just getting started,” said David Nevins, president of entertainment at Showtime. “Clearly, the overall audience growth from week one to week four demonstrates that this show is hitting a nerve in the cultural zeitgeist. Alex and Howard have created a psychological thriller that holds special relevance in the post 9/11 world. I’m quite confident that its passionate audience will be riveted as the season unfolds and people discover where this story is going.”

The political drama starring Claire Danes, Damian Lewis and Mandy Patinkin became Showtime's highest-rated drama premiere in eight years, drawing 1.08 million viewers at 10 p.m. in its Oct. 2 bow.

The drama held most of its premiere viewership in Week 2 and, when factoring in total viewers across encore airings, Sunday's episode drew 1.33 million viewers, topping the series opener. Sunday's episode built on its second week viewership 15 percent, drawing 1.07 million viewers, nearly matching its series premiere.

The series now ranks as Showtime's No. 1 freshman drama, with 5.5 million viewers having viewed the premiere.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Weekend Report: 'Paranormal' Possesses Fall Record


Paranormal Activity 3 proved there's definitely still a lot of life left in the franchise by opening to an estimated $54 million this weekend. Besides marking a significant improvement over Paranormal Activity 2's $40.7 million, it also topped last year's Jackass 3-D to claim a new record for highest Fall opening ever (September and October). Unfortunately, The Three Musketeers, Johnny English Reborn and The Mighty Macs all missed modest targets, and as a result the weekend fell a bit short of the same frame last year.

Aside from setting the Fall record, Paranormal Activity 3 also bested its predecessor to take the top opening ever for a pure horror movie. For a slightly less impressive metric, the horror three-quel's earnings were incredibly front-loaded: its Friday box office represented 48.6 percent of its opening weekend gross, which ranks ninth all-time. It was a slight improvement over Paranormal Activity 2's 49.4 percent, at least. Distributor Paramount Pictures reports that the audience was 54 percent female and 53 percent under 25 years old (down from Paranormal Activity 2's 60 percent). A CinemaScore is not currently available.

After leading for the past two weekends, Real Steel eased just 31 percent to an estimated $11.3 million. That brings the robot boxing movie's 17-day total to a respectable $67.2 million.

Footloose took the third spot and dipped a light 30 percent to $10.9 million. That's an excellent hold for a movie targeted at teenage audiences, and it's a notable improvement over nearly all comparable titles including the entire Step Up series, Stomp the Yard, and Save the Last Dance. Through 10 days in theaters, the remake has earned $30.9 million.

The Three Musketeers debuted in fourth place with an estimated $8.8 million. That's off from Fall adventure movies like The Legend of Zorro ($16.3 million) and Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow ($15.6 million), and it was even a bit behind 2001's The Musketeer ($10.3 million). The movie was presented in 3D at over 2,400 locations, and screenings in the format accounted for roughly 55 percent of the weekend gross. A Summit spokesperson reported that the audience was split evenly between men and women, and was 64 percent over the age of 25. The Three Musketeers earned an okay "B" CinemaScore.

The Ides of March rounded out the Top Five by declining just 31 percent to an estimated $4.9 million. Its total of $29.2 million is slightly ahead of George Clooney's Michael Clayton ($28.7 million) through the same point.

Dolphin Tale had another strong hold, easing 33 percent to $4.2 million for a total of $64.4 million. Moneyball was even more impressive. The Brad Pitt baseball drama yielded 26 percent to $4.05 million for a total of $63.7 million.

The love that overseas audiences are showing Johnny English Reborn ($104.5 million and counting) didn't translate domestically this weekend. The spy spoof sequel debuted to just $3.8 million, which is less than half of the original's $9.1 million start. The audience was 57 percent male and 35 percent parents with children 12 years old and younger.

Much further down the chart, religious basketball drama The Mighty Macs opened to an estimated $1.06 million at 975 locations. That's lower than Seven Days in Utopia's opening last month at just 561 theaters.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Forecast: 'Paranormal' Set to Deliver More Scares


Friday A.M. Update: Paranormal Activity 3 earned an estimated $8 million from midnight screenings at 2,200 locations last night. That's a marked improvement over Paranormal Activity 2, which earned $6.3 million from 1,800 theaters at midnight.

Forecast: After a few quiet weeks, Paranormal Activity 3 looks to provide the jolt needed to bring the box office back to life. At the very least, the horror three-quel shouldn't have any trouble hitting the top spot against mild competition from The Three Musketeers, Johnny English Reborn and The Mighty Macs. Paranormal Activity 3 is set to haunt around 4,500 screens at 3,321 locations, while The Three Musketeers battles on roughly 3,800 screens at 3,017 locations (a 3D theater count is not currently available). Johnny English Reborn and The Mighty Macs have much lighter releases, hitting 1,551 and 975 mostly single-screen locations, respectively.

Coming off the enormous success of the first Paranormal Activity ($107.9 million), Paranormal Activity 2 debuted to a huge $40.7 million on the same weekend last October. It wasn't as well received as the first installment, though, and horror movies generally haven't been performing over the last few months, so a slight decline for the third chapter in the series can be expected. At the same time, there was a slight uptick from Saw II to Saw III (which basically had the same release date), so there is a chance Paranormal Activity 3 exceeds its predecessor. Paramount is expecting a mid-$30 million opening followed by a better hold than Paranormal Activity 2 given the lack of horror competition (Paranormal Activity 2 faced Saw 3D in its second weekend).

The U.S. is just one of many territories for The Three Musketeers and Johnny English Reborn. Both have already been playing for a while overseas and have so far earned over $50 million and $90 million, respectively. The Three Musketeers has received a stronger marketing push, though, and its swashbuckling nature brings with it higher expectations. With the redundant story (this is the at least the third version of the Musketeer story in the past 20 years) and the oddly anachronistic effects, though, it's going to struggle to break out. A Summit spokesperson said that the movie is tracking best with older males and is in line for a low double-digits opening.

The first Johnny English movie opened to $9.1 million on its way to $28.1 million in 2003. It was the strong $133 million foreign performance, though, along with star Rowan Atkinson's enduring worldwide popularity, that prompted the sequel. Johnny English Reborn is opening at fewer locations and looks like a retread of the first go-around, so it's going to be tough to reach the first one's numbers. No matter—a Universal spokesman anticipates the movie will ultimately earn at least $200 million worldwide anyway.

After being shelved for a few years, basketball drama The Mighty Macs is hitting theaters with the aim to reach the faith-based audience that drove Courageous to a $9.1 million opening last month. It doesn't have the same marketing muscle behind it, nor do the filmmakers have the same brand recognition within the Christian community, so a debut closer to last month's Seven Days in Utopia ($1.3 million from 561 locations) is more likely.

Paranormal Activity 3 is leading the way in Box Office Mojo's "When Will You See It" polling with over 23 percent of users opting for opening weekend. That's actually a slight improvement over Paranormal Activity 2 (20.3 percent). The Three Musketeers tallied a solid 16 percent opening weekend score, which is identical to Fall 2005's The Legend of Zorro. Johnny English Reborn scored an 11 percent, up from Rowan Atkinson's Mr. Bean's Holiday (9.6 percent), while The Mighty Macs barely registered with just 3 percent.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

7 Gadgets That Won't Be Around In 2020

By Seth Fiegerman, MainStreet

Hindsight may always be 20-20, but you don’t need particularly great foresight to know many of the gadgets on today’s market won’t be around in 2020 given how quickly the tech industry keeps changing. In the first half of the 2000s, retailers were buzzing about the prospects of MP3 players and netbooks, but by the end of the decade, those products had largely been replaced by smartphones and tablets.

As tempting as it may be to imagine otherwise, some of the gadgets you may rely on most right now will likely suffer the same fate and be killed off or made obsolete by the end of this decade. Sure, you may still be able to find these products for sale in certain niche stores, but they will no longer be produced for a mass-market audience.

“You can still find and buy VCRs and there are people still using mainframes from 1992, so it’s not like this stuff disappears forever,” says Stephen Baker, an industry analyst at the NPD Group. Baker notes that the main reason retailers continue to market and sell outdated products is to cater to shoppers who buy them for nostalgia’s sake, but for all intents and purposes the market has left these products in the dust. So which popular products today will join the likes of VCRs, cassette players and transistor radios in the next few years? MainStreet asked five tech analysts to offer their thoughts on the gadgets that will largely be phased out by the end of this decade.

Standalone GPS Systems
The days of spending $200 or more on a standalone GPS device won’t last much longer, analysts say.

“Portable navigation devices like those sold by TomTom and Garmin will probably not be sold in 2020, just because mobile phones will have taken on that function themselves and because GPS systems will be standard equipment in cars,” says Charles S. Golvin, an analyst at Forrester, a market research firm. As a result, there won’t be much of a need to buy a product whose only function is to tell you directions.

If there is a demand for these GPS systems, it will likely come from a very specific segment of consumers.

“Maybe you could argue there will be a market for guys climbing Mount Everest or long-distance truckers or the military, but for the vast majority of consumers, standalone GPS systems will be irrelevant and redundant,” Baker says.

E-Readers
The e-reader has already undergone significant changes in its short history, evolving from a product with a keyboard to one with a touchscreen and more recently being integrated into a kind of a tablet-hybrid, but according to Golvin, the market for e-readers will mostly disappear by the end of the decade.

“The tablet will largely supplant the e-reader in the same way that the iPod increasingly gets displaced by smartphones,” Golvin says. “Tablets will take on the e-reader function of handling magazine, newspaper and book reading.” In essence, spending money on an e-reader that can only handle reading when tablets can do this and more will come to seem as useless as buying a GPS system that can only look up directions when other technology does this as well.

Just how small the e-reader market becomes may depend somewhat on advancements in display technology. One of the biggest incentives for consumers to buy a pure e-reader is to have an e-ink display (like reading from a book) rather than a backlit display (like reading from a computer screen), but according to Golvin, manufacturers are already working on ways to merge the two reading experiences and create a tablet that doubles as an authentic e-reader.

Even then, there may be still be some e-readers on the market at the beginning of next decade, but not many.

“It could be that by 2020 you can still buy a super cheap e-reader for $20, but by and large, the volume of sales will be so close to zero as to be indistinguishable, like CD players are now,” he says.

Feature Phones
Several of the products that are likely to be phased out will ultimately be the victim of advances to smartphones, and none more directly than feature phones.

Tim Bajarin, a technology columnist and principle analyst with Creative Strategies, predicts that 80% of all phones sold in 2015 will be smartphones and every phone sold in 2018 will be a smartphone. This rapid decline will come about thanks to a drop in prices for consumers and an increase in revenue opportunities for carriers.

“Even today, the money that is made is not on the phone itself but on the services,” Bajarin says, noting that carriers will opt to “fade out” their feature phone option in favor of smartphones with more services.

Low-End Digital Cameras
When Apple unveiled the iPhone 4S, smartphone competitors probably weren’t the only ones beginning to sweat. Digital camera makers also have much to be worried about. Apple’s newest phone has a killer 8-megapixel camera that takes in more light and records video at 1080p HD video. Until recently, those kind of specs were unique to digital cameras, but increasingly smartphones are taking over the market.

“Flip cameras went bye-bye and now low-end camera functions are being taken over by smartphones,” says Rob Enderle, principle analyst for the Enderle Group. Going forward, consumers will have less incentive to carry around a camera when they already have a phone in their pocket that takes quality pictures. “The point-and-shooters – and particularly the cameras that sell for under $200 – will eventually go away and be replaced by cellphones that do the same thing.”

On the other hand, Enderle predicts more expensive and high-tech cameras may have a brighter future, though not by much, as a smaller market of photo enthusiasts seek out professional-quality cameras that go above and beyond what’s offered on a phone.

DVD Players
DVD players are in the process of being phased out now by Blu-ray players and will likely be erased from the consumer landscape by the end of the decade.

“The DVD player should be replaced by digital delivery,” says Ian Olgeirson, a senior analyst at SNL Kagan, who points to streaming movie services like Netflix as being the future. “Blu-rays and whatever the next generation high-end movie format emerges could prolong the lifespan because of challenges around streaming, but eventually the disc is going to be phased out.”

The idea of placing a disc into a DVD player to watch a movie will eventually seem as outdated as placing a record on a turntable, which brings us to the next product on our list…

Recordable CDs and DVDs
Using CDs and DVDs to view and store content will soon be a thing of the past.

“CDs are clearly not going to make it over the next 10 years because everything will shift over to pure digital distribution, so all those shiny discs will be gone,” Bajarin says. This will be due in part to more streaming options for music and movies and a greater reliance on digital downloads, combined with more efficient storage options for consumers, including USB drives, external hard drives and of course the cloud.

“All a CD is is a medium for distribution of content … and within 10 years, you won’t need a physical transport medium,” Bajarin says.

Video Game Consoles

Popular video game systems such as the Wii, PlayStation and Xbox may still be in homes next decade, but they will look much different. Rather than buy a separate console, Enderle expects that consumers will instead buy smart televisions with a gaming system built into it, not to mention tablets and smartphones that will continue to ramp up their gaming options.

“It looks like analog game systems won’t make it until the end of the decade,” Enderle says. “You are already seeing the Wii have a tough time holding on to the market and PlayStation has been struggling for a while.”

The gaming systems that will succeed in the future will be those that manage to move away from being focused solely on video games and more on other entertainment options such as movies, evolving

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Weekend Report: Remakes Can't Retire 'Real Steel'


Two 80s remakes and a bird-watching movie weren't able to knock down Real Steel, which held well enough to repeat in first place this weekend. Footloose wasn't far behind, but also wasn't all that impressive, while The Thing missed the mark and The Big Year bombed. Overall box office was off around 33 percent from the same frame last year when Jackass 3-D led with $50.3 million.

Real Steel dipped 40 percent to an estimated $16.3 million. That hold isn't quite as strong as Secretariat or Red from last October, but it's still solid in its own right. Through 10 days in theaters, the Hugh Jackman robot boxing movie has earned $51.7 million.

Footloose was a close second with an estimated $16.1 million. It debuted below Stomp the Yard ($21.8 million and the first two Step Up movies ($20.7 million and $18.9 million), but did end up slightly above Step Up 3-D ($15.8 million). It also had lower initial attendance than the original Footloose, which opened to roughly $20 million when adjusting for ticket price inflation. Distributor Paramount Pictures is reporting that 75 percent of Footloose's audience was female, and 27 percent was under the age of 18. The movie played best in the South, Southwest and Midwest, and earned a strong "A" CinemaScore.

While the Footloose remake at least held its own, The Thing was an outright disappointment with a meager estimated $8.7 million. That's lower than most horror remakes from the last decade, including second-tier ones like The Fog ($11.7 million) and The Stepfather ($11.6 million). According to distributor Universal Pictures, the audience was 57 percent male and 56 percent under 30 years old. The CinemaScore was a weak "B-," indicating that the movie is going to have a tough time surviving opposite Paranormal Activity 3 next weekend.

The movies occupying fourth through eighth place were all holdovers that experienced very light declines. The Ides of March eased just 28 percent to an estimated $7.5 million. That's an improvement on star George Clooney's Michael Clayton, which declined 36 percent around the same time in 2007. Ides's 10-day tally reached $22.2 million.

Dolphin Tale dipped 31 percent to an estimated $6.4 million for a total of $58.7 million. Moneyball was off 26 percent to $5.5 million, and has now made $57.7 million. 50/50 had the best hold among all wide releases, falling just 24 percent to $4.3 million. Through three weekends, the cancer comedy has earned a solid $24.3 million. Finally, Courageous eased 30 percent to $3.4 million for a total of $21.4 million.

Opening all the way down in ninth place with an estimated $3.3 million, The Big Year was a big disaster. That debut is just a tiny fraction of director David Frankel's The Devil Wears Prada ($27.5 million) and Marley and Me ($36.4 million). It's only slightly better than star Jack Black's Tenacious D in: The Pick of Destiny ($3.24 million), and is Steve Martin's lowest wide opening since 1994's Mixed Nuts. The Big Year even opened a bit lower than Owen Wilson's 2004 bomb The Big Bounce ($3.336 million). This is distributor 20th Century Fox's third-straight disappointment following Glee The 3D Concert Movie ($6 million) and What's Your Number? ($5.4 million). Demographics and exit polling are not currently available.

Friday, October 14, 2011

ABC Cancels 'Charlie's Angels'

ABC has canceled its Charlie’s Angels reboot.

Despite built-in brand recognition and heavy marketing blitz during the summer, the Miami-set reboot from Smallville duo Alfred Gough and Miles Millar failed to make a dent against heavy Thursday night competition.

Production has already been shut been shut down. The remaining episodes will continue to air until the network makes a decision on what will take its place and when. On Thursday, Oct. 27, ABC will air The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown at 8 p.m.

In its Sept. 22 premiere, the Minka Kelly, Rachael Taylor and Annie Ilonzeh starrer attracted 8.7 million viewers and a 2.1 rating in the advertiser-coveted adults 18-49 demographic against competition including the second night of Fox’s X Factor premiere. As the season progressed, the hourlong drama failed to match its debut ratings, sinking each week.

After critics and viewers blasted the show following its premiere, the action drama that counts Drew Barrymore as an executive producer dropped 29 percent, collecting 7.2 million viewers and a 1.5 in the demo. For its third episode on Oct. 6, Angels attracted 5.9 million viewers and a 1.2 in the demo, matching the CW's The Vampire Diaries. Last night, Angels saw a slight uptick, improving to a 1.3 rating.
ABC recently picked up Suburgatory and Revenge for full seasons and ordered additional scripts for Happy Endings. The net rolls out Man Up! and ambitious fairytale drama Once Upon a Time next.
Angels joins NBC’s The Playboy Club and Free Agents, as well as CBS' How to Be a Gentleman and the CW's unscripted show H8R as rookie series that failed to catch on.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Hollywood downloads a post-DVD future

By Ben Fritz, Los Angeles Times

The movie studio business model is poised for its biggest shift in years as Hollywood turns to Internet delivery as the only way to boost home entertainment revenues.


Across Hollywood, a quiet revolution is brewing that's about to transform living rooms around the world.

After desperate attempts to prop up the industry's once-thriving DVD business, studio executives now believe the only hope of turning around a 40% decline in home entertainment revenue lies in rapidly accelerating the delivery of movies over the Internet.

In the next few years, the growing number of consumers with Internet-connected televisions, tablets and smartphones will face a dizzying array of options designed to make digital movie consumption a lot more convenient and to entice users to spend more money.

With films that can be accessed on any digital device, downloaded as iPhone apps or shared on Facebook as easily as a photo, it may be the biggest shift in Hollywood's business model since the explosion of the DVD in the late 1990s.

"The days of baby steps on the Internet are over," said David Bishop, president of Sony Pictures' home entertainment unit. "It's now critical that we experiment as much as possible and determine how to build a vibrant market for collecting digital movies."

Though the online movie business has been growing at a healthy clip for the last few years, driven in large part by the majority of Netflix's 24 million U.S. subscribers who stream video, it hasn't come close to making up for the rapid drop in DVD revenue. Insiders attribute that to the lack of selection — thousands of movies available on disc still can't be found online — and to the complexity of downloading a film on one device and watching it on another.

Studios are eager to change that by offering more movies in easier ways, but there's not yet a consensus on how. As a result, people who connect their TVs to the Internet or buy iPads will face a vastly expanded but potentially confusing menu of options to access films from different sources in various ways.

"What you have now is a lot of people pursuing a lot of different paths to figure out how to reverse the trends we've been seeing," Paramount Pictures Vice Chairman Rob Moore said.

One thing is certain: People who like inexpensive movie rentals are going to have to get used to waiting longer than they do now. Studios are beginning to use the Internet to slice up the market so that people who are willing to buy a movie or pay more to rent it can get it sooner.

Four studios have already experimented with so-called premium video on demand, in which consumers pay $30 to rent a movie only two months after it debuts in theaters. Recently Sony Pictures began selling some movies online two weeks before they become available on DVD.

At the same time, some studios that make Netflix and kiosk rental company Redbox wait until 28 days after a DVD goes on sale before they can offer it for rent want to lengthen that delay. They believe such a move will encourage consumers to pay more to buy or rent a movie digitally.

By next year, consumers may have to wait two months or longer after a movie goes on sale before they can get it in a Redbox kiosk or Netflix envelope. Those who want to stream films online for a flat monthly fee from Netflix, Amazon or Blockbuster will in many cases wait years until those titles have completed their runs on cable networks like HBO.

"I see movies going down a path over time from premium sell-through all the way to the lowest-price rentals," said Craig Kornblau, president of Universal Studios Home Entertainment. "If we get digital right, consumers are going to get what they're willing to pay for."

Until now, most people have been largely uninterested in buying movies online, no matter the price or timing. Purchasing digitally typically means downloading a file to a single device, less convenient than a disc that can be moved from a bedroom to a minivan to a portable DVD player. Research firm IHS Screen Digest estimates that Internet movie purchases will be flat this year compared to last, while online rentals will surge 41%.

Hollywood's solution is to put movies in the "cloud," creating virtual copies that people can access, after purchase, from any Internet-connected device. An initiative called UltraViolet will launch this year, when Blu-ray discs for films like "Green Lantern" and "The Smurfs" will come with free cloud copies. By next year, most online and DVD purchases will connect to UltraViolet's "virtual locker," and Apple's iTunes is expected to have a similar offering.

To encourage people to embrace the cloud, studios are even considering offering digital copies of DVDs they already own for a nominal fee.

"Historically when you bought a DVD you were really just buying the physical copy," said Edward Lichty, general manager of Wal-Mart Stores' digital service Vudu. "It's a profound development to say you own the movie itself and it can't be broken or lost."

Studios are rethinking not only how to sell movies online but where. The next frontier, many agree, is Facebook. Some have already started renting movies to people who click "like," but many executives hope to do more. People could use social networks to watch films with friends, share clips and play social games related to movies. They could also get recommendations based on the "likes" of people on their friends list.

Similarly, many in the entertainment industry are hoping that smartphones and tablets will be more than just another screen for watching movies. They're looking for ways to create movie-specific apps, as Warner Bros. has already done for titles like "Inception," and to use the devices as "second screens" with additional content such as director commentaries.

"On these new platforms we have to forget the way we have thought about movies as 'transactions' and think about them more as 'experiences,'" Lionsgate President Steve Beeks said.

On a recent Tuesday afternoon in Los Angeles, the need for Hollywood to make the great digital leap was evident as customers searched for bargains at Rocket Video's going-out-of-business sale.

A mecca for L.A. cinephiles for more than 30 years, Rocket offered tough-to-find art-house and foreign films. But like giant chain Blockbuster, which shuttered more than 1,750 stores in the last year alone, Rocket saw revenue plummet as customers flocked to less expensive and on-demand alternatives.

"I used to buy a lot of DVDs, but since two years ago I've just been using Netflix and iTunes," said Katherine Canipe, a 26-year-old actress clutching a copy of "Pet Sematary" that she had just plucked off the shelf. "I hate to see places like this going away, but I know I'm part of the problem."

As he sold off the store's more than 50,000 DVDs and VHS tapes, longtime store manager Jeff Miller remembered the days when Rocket was packed on Friday and Saturday nights with young people stocking up for a weekend of movie watching.

"It just became obvious we weren't making as much as we used to and there was a shift to an older crowd," he said.

Now the remaining customers have been asking Miller what they should do.

"I don't know what to tell them," the self-professed technophobe admitted. "But recently I've been thinking even I have to figure out how to get movies on the Internet."

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Weekend Report: 'Real Steel' Wins Middleweight Bout


Real Steel fought its way to the top of the box office this weekend, though its debut didn't quite reach heavyweight levels. The Ides of March was the runner-up with a standard George Clooney opening, while Dolphin Tale and Moneyball continued to hold well in their third frames.

Real Steel scored an estimated $27.3 million, which tops Rocky IV's $20 million for highest boxing debut ever (though it obviously lags in estimated attendance). It was also the second highest-grossing opening for a sports drama behind The Blind Side's $34.1 million. Still, Real Steel had an average start for movies involving robots, and even wound up behind A.I. Artificial Intelligence ($29.4 million). According to distributor Walt Disney Pictures' exit polling, the audience was 66 percent male and 70 percent under the age of 35, and the movie earned a strong "A" CinemaScore ("A+" for the under-25 crowd).

While Real Steel does feature an "absentee father reunites with estranged son" story similar to many of executive producer Steven Spielberg's movies, that element never came to the forefront of the marketing campaign. Instead, Real Steel was primarily billed as a sci-fi boxing movie, which explains how the audience was skewed towards young males instead of the family audience that would likely have pushed Real Steel's opening a bit higher. Movies that play to young male audiences tend to be fairly front-loaded, and with The Thing, Paranormal Activity 3 and The Three Musketeers on the immediate horizon, it's tough to see how Real Steel gets close to $100 million.

The Ides of March earned an estimated $10.4 million on its opening weekend. That's just a bit ahead of George Clooney's Michael Clayton ($10.37 million) but behind his last directorial effort Leatherheads ($12.7 million). It was also slightly off from star Ryan Gosling's Drive ($11.3 million), and it lagged a bit behind Primary Colors ($12 million) among comparable campaign movies. The audience was 58 percent female and 65 percent under the age of 35, and it tallied an okay "B" CinemaScore ("B+" for the under-25 demographic).

The Ides of March was billed as a thriller, but previews were light on action and heavy on political intrigue. That didn't prove to be enough to mobilize a large number of people, most of whom are probably content to get their fill of politics from the non-stop Republican primary news coverage. The movie's mild debut also reemphasizes that while George Clooney and Ryan Gosling are Hollywood darlings, neither are very big box office draws. With solid but unspectacular reviews and a middling CinemaScore, there's virtually no chance The Ides of March ultimately matches Michael Clayton's $49 million.

Thanks to The Ides of March, Moneyball and Courageous, Sony passed $1 billion in 2011 domestic box office on Friday. It's the sixth straight year the studio has reached that milestone, and Sony is the fourth studio to earn $1 billion this year following Paramount, Warner Bros. and Disney.

Last weekend's winner Dolphin Tale eased 34 percent to an estimated $9.16 million for a total of $49.1 million. It's still slightly behind Moneyball, which dipped 38 percent to $7.5 million for a total of $49.3 million.

50/50 had the best hold among last weekend's newcomers. It declined 36 percent to an estimated $5.5 million, and the movie has now earned $17.3 million. Courageous on the other hand fell a rough 50 percent to $4.6 million. That's notably worse than Fireproof's 42 percent decline, though Courageous's $15.9 million total is still running ahead of Fireproof's $12.4 million through the same point.

With the Blu-ray finally in stores, The Lion King (in 3D) plummeted 57 percent to $4.55 million. That brings the re-release's total to $86 million and the movie's overall total to $414.5 million. Within the next few days, The Lion King will pass Toy Story 3 ($415 million) to move in to ninth place on the all-time domestic chart.

Dream House fell 45 percent to an estimated $4.5 million for a paltry 10-day total of $14.5 million. What's Your Number? was off 44 percent to $3.05 million for a terrible total of $10.3 million.

In limited release, horror sequel The Human Centipede 2: Full Sequence debuted to an estimated $54,000 from 18 locations ($3,000 per-theater average), most of which were only playing the movie during late shows on Friday and Saturday night. The original Human Centipede earned $181,467 in theaters last year, and the sequel will look to eclipse that figure as it expands throughout the month of October.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Church produced film 'Courageous' lights up box office on opening weekend

By Gabe LaMonica, CNN

(CNN)– A Baptist church in Albany, Georgia, is getting Hollywood's attention - the church, Sherwood Baptist, has developed a movie-production operation, and its latest offering opened last weekend as the Number Four top money-grossing film in the country.

The Christian-themed film, "Courageous," was developed in connection with TriStar, Sony, and Provident Films. It is meant to inspire fathers to not leave their families, to love their children, to not fail.

"Courageous," which opened in just 1,161 theaters this past weekend, depicts four police officers who share a commonality both as fathers and in their effort to become better ones. The movie and its characters, played by amateur actors and members of Sherwood Baptist are enveloped in various ways in a devastating tragedy.

According to boxoffice.com, which tracks movie response nationwide, put "Courageous" at the fourth position for the weekend with gross revenues of just over $9 million. The fifth- and sixth-place movies ("50/50" and "Dreamhouse") both opened at far more theaters but did not come close to the weekend box-office income of "Courageous."

"Courageous" takes on a timely topic - fatherhood.

The National Fatherhood Initiative, an organization dedicated to "educating and engaging fathers across the country," lists wide-ranging adverse affects that correlate to children growing up in fatherless households. Fatherless households are common in the United States, and there is no causal evidence linking fatherless households to increased suicide rates, incarcerations, aggression, behavioral disorders, delinquency, criminal activity, confused identities, low achievement, and criminal activity.

But the correlating evidence is so strong that in a country where the most recent census lists 24 million children - one in three - living apart from their biological fathers, it is remiss to discount it.
"No matter what your scenario is - you're single or married or whatnot - we want to really inspire and encourage men to see the value of their role as a dad," says Alex Kendrick, the co-writer, director, and actor who plays the character Adam Mitchell in "Courageous."

Kendrick, who co-writes with his brother Steven, says, "The reason we put it in a law enforcement setting was that, as you know, a motto from law enforcement is to serve and protect, and then we drew a correlation to what a father is supposed to do."

"We drew that correlation and said, 'Wouldn't it be interesting if we put this in the context of police officers who are also dads, and they may be heroic on the streets but it also takes courage to be a great dad - not just a good enough dad.'"

Ken Bevel, who plays Nathan Hayes, a sheriffs' deputy in the film, says that everyone has a dad and can relate to a fatherhood story. "We just pray that this movie resonates in the hearts of men and women and families across the globe," he says.

"If you go to Sherwood (Baptist Church) on any given day you will see a bunch of people that are in the movie," says Bevel, who played Kirk Cameron's fellow firefighter in "Fireproof," the last film from Sherwood Pictures.

"Our desire is not to become the next movie-making sensation or to make millions and millions of dollars at the box office," he says, "our desire is to see hearts changed and families touched."
Kendrick's character, Adam Mitchell, makes a general statement over grilled steaks to his fellow officers in the movie: "Half of the fathers in this country are already failing," he says, "and I don't want to be one of them."

The Christians at Sherwood Baptist Church, says Kendrick, "want especially men to walk out of the movie theater saying, "This movie makes me want to be a better dad and really a better man as a model and mentor to my children.'"

"You will see a difference and it will make a difference in our culture," he says

Media Center Faces New Challenges

I’m sure you’re wondering about the progress of the new media center. As you might remember, thanks to a generous offer we acquired space to house our new media training center—Storytellers Media Center. We planned on starting renovations in October 2011 with a possible opening date of January 2012. However, renovations have been postponed due to a lack of funding. There is no firm date at this time for the opening of the center.

But there is some good news to report. We have an offer from another Christian organization that will give us access to video and editing equipment. Obviously, this can save the ministry thousands of dollars. We also have a number of volunteers ready to offer their talents in the areas of teaching and training. And, of course, we have the space already. It has to be one of the greatest sweetheart deals of all time. The site at 1530 Tremont is provided rent free and utilities free for the next 18 months. If I search the city over, I would not find a better facility to call home for our new media center.

Our biggest challenge and obstacle is fundraising. This is usually the “boogieman” for most ministries. Back in July, I thought our fundraising looked like a sure thing. However, a number of major donors who expressed interest have simple not committed. To be honest with you, this is very frustrating. We have equipment, volunteers, and space. But, at some point, you need money to continue on.

I am certainly not giving up, and I am committed to the cause. The truth is we really don’t need that much money to get the project off the ground. We can do it with a rock bottom budget of $75,000 for the year 2012. That won’t get everything up and running, but it would get the doors open. Our six-month live-in program would not be launched until 2013 or 2014.

But, if we get the doors open and start with some small projects, I think we have a better chance to attract major donors. We don’t need the entire $75,000 up front. But we do need to raise $30,000 by January 1, 2012. That will include money for basic renovations and improvements that need to occur before the center can open, along with a small operating budget to turn on the phones, web access and other basic monthly expenses. And my personal mission support and salary for four months is included in the $30,000.

Over the years, I have demonstrated the ability to stretch a dollar. Storytellers Media Center will be no exception. This center is the first of its kind, a training facility for the development of media missionaries who are pursuing careers in mainstream media and entertainment. There is no comprehensive training of this type anywhere in the country. We have a real opportunity here to redeem culture and change the direction of our society. I’m not going to go into detail because I’ve written a number of articles that you can access at mediamissionaryschool.com, along with a video describing in detail the entire project.

To be honest with you, fundraising has never been one of my strong points. I really hate to ask for money. But I believe in this ministry with all my heart and I believe that God has called me to do this. So I am going to ask for your support and your money. Frankly, we need to get back on track. Until the center is up and running, Media Missionary School will be too cutting edge and innovative for most big donors to get behind the project. If every person who came to this blog and website contributed $10, $15, or $25 each month though PayPal, Storytellers Media Center could be open by April 2012. So I need your help. We need to raise $30,000 by January 2012. If we do not, it is very unlikely the center will open. If you want to give an end-of-year gift, I can’t think of a better time than right now.

We have a 90-day window, that’s it. As always, your contributions are tax deductible because we are a 501c3 nonprofit organization. I know $75,000 is a lot of money, but in light of starting a media training center that sum would be a small amount and nothing short of a miracle to make this happen. Through your generosity, we can get this done. That’s what it’s all about, the Body of Christ working together to further the Gospel.
Storytellers Media Training Center from Media Missionary School on Vimeo.



Sunday, October 2, 2011

Weekend Report: 'Dolphin Tale' Leaps Into Lead

On strong word-of-mouth, Dolphin Tale managed to leap over Moneyball and The Lion King (in 3D) to take first place on its second weekend in theaters. 50/50 faltered but was tops among newcomers, though faith-based movie Courageous had the most impressive showing at far fewer locations. Dream House disappointed in its debut, while What's Your Number? tallied one of the worst numbers for a super-saturated (3,000+ theaters) release ever.

Dolphin Tale eased just 26 percent to an estimated $14.3 million, which brought its 10-day total to a solid $37.5 million. It had a better hold than Soul Surfer and was about even with last Fall's Secretariat, albeit with a much higher total than either of those movies at the same point. Still, it couldn't hold a candle to The Blind Side (which actually improved in its second frame), though that was a holiday weekend so it isn't an apples-to-apples comparison.

Moneyball dipped 36 percent to an estimated $12.5 million. That's a bit steeper than The Social Network's 31 percent decline, though it's still very solid in its own right. The Brad Pitt baseball drama has scored $38.5 million through 10 days in theaters.

After ruling the charts for the past two weeks, The Lion King's 3D re-release fell nearly 50 percent to an estimated $11.1 million and had to settle for third place. That week-over-week decline is a bit steep, though it's not entirely unexpected considering the Blu-ray hits stores on Tuesday and most advertisements pegged the re-release as a two-weeks-only affair. The movie's total has now reached $79.7 million, which brings The Lion King's overall total to $408.2 million. On Saturday, it passed Spider-Man to move in to the Top 10 all-time, and it should be able to climb a few more spots before the end of its run. Thanks in part to The Lion King's impressive performance, Walt Disney Pictures passed the $1 billion mark on Saturday, making it the sixth straight year that the studio reached this milestone.

50/50 opened to an estimated $8.86 million from 2,458 theaters, which is the lowest debut ever for a Seth Rogen movie. Considering the grim subject matter, though, that's not an entirely awful start, and an "A-" CinemaScore should translate in to decent word-of-mouth in coming weeks. The audience was 54 percent female and 57 percent under 30 years old.

Sherwood Pictures' Courageous scored $8.8 million from just 1,161 theaters for a strong per-theater average of $7,580. That's up from the studio's last movie Fireproof ($6.8 million), though the average was off just a bit. The opening ranks fifth all-time for a Christian movie, and only trails The Passion of the Christ and the three Narnia movies. Courageous scored a rare "A+" CinemaScore, and the audience was 53 percent female and 77 percent over the age of 25.

Dream House scared up a meek estimated $8.2 million. That's just a fraction of haunted house movies like The Skeleton Key ($16.1 million) and The Amityville Horror ($23.5 million), and it's even off a bit from Dark Water ($9.9 million). The movie received a "B" CinemaScore and the audience was 54 percent female and 62 percent under the age of 25. Hispanics were the largest ethnic group in attendance at 38 percent, which tends to be the case with supernatural thrillers.

Abduction fell 48 percent to an estimated $5.65 million for a total of $19.1 million. Killer Elite also dipped 48 percent, though it's weekend take was $4.86 million and it's total reached $17.4 million.

What's Your Number? wound up in eighth place with a terrible $5.6 million. That's the fifth-worst debut ever for a movie in more than 3,000 theaters, and is just over one-third of the opening of star Anna Faris's The House Bunny ($14.5 million). The movie received a decent "B" CinemaScore, and the audience was 63 percent female and 63 percent over the age of 25.