Showing posts with label trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trends. Show all posts

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Is the box office really being taken over by nonfiction stories?

Would you rather see King George VI attending public events and weighing in on the brewing war in Europe, or as an anxious king who finally conquers his stutter? The box-office and critical success of 2009 Best Picture Oscar-winner The King's Speech proved that most audiences preferred the latter. As described in an article in the New York Times, recent Hollywood movies from last year's Argo, Zero Dark Thirty and Lincoln to this year's Fruitvale Station and Captain Philips all
Fruitvale stationdrew from real-life happenings to compose their stories. The question is whether this constitutes a trend.


In the ranks of recent Best Picture Oscar winners, actual based-on-a-true-story movies are rare. When they do exist, they often focus on a "Great Man," like the 2002 winner A Beautiful Mind, Gandhi from 1983, The King's Speech in 2009, Schindler's List in 1993 or The Last Emperor in 1988. If there's any trend, I wouldn't say it's nonfiction, but a specific kind of nonfiction that tends to hone in on one aspect of a person's life, avoiding the downfalls of a sweeping biopic.

If you look at the "great man" theory of history, it's about exploring how single people changed the world. Now that view has fallen out of favor, both among historians and, it appears, audiences.
Captain phillipsFilmmakers are more using pathos to connect us to characters. That's what The King's Speech did with King George's speech impediment, and that's what last year's Hyde Park on Hudson failed to do with its view of FDR as a womanizer. Fruitvale Station, which just released, focuses on one day in the life of a man who is later killed, offering the tiniest glimpse of his life--and it's more powerful for it. Captain Philips, coming out in October, stars Tom Hanks as the captain of a ship taken over by Somali pirates--heroism in a small situation. Last year's Oscar nominee Argo was a funny, polished take at a corner of the Iranian hostage crisis that was inconsequential enough (and confidential enough) that its failure or success wouldn't have changed history (sorry). And George Clooney's Monuments Men, coming out this December, isn't about fighting World War II but saving art from Nazis. You can't get more tangential than that.


These days, it appears that people are more interested in the real people and small events that occurred lockstep with the events in a history book, rather than a Saving Private Ryan kind of story that immerses its characters right in the heart of one of the most pivotal battles in all of WWII, D-Day. Certainly, in this day-and-age of social media, more private glimpses of people's lives are occurring in public than ever before. We can follow celebrities on Instagram and Twitter, and politicians appear on casual late-night shows and Oprah. People aren't as interested in idolizing characters. They're more interested in empathizing with them. The small event, small man view of history is an appealing tactic that has already worked with audiences. The success or failure of this year's crop of nonfiction contenders may predict whether this trend will continue in years to come.


 



Tuesday, March 1, 2011

50+ filmgoers fill the multiplex


By Sarah Sluis

This week, The New York Times pointed out that older moviegoers, who have long underrepresented themselves at the box office, are returning. During the last fifteen years, there's been a 67% increase in the number of 50+ moviegoers who report attending a movie in the past six months. Of all the reasons cited for this shift, the most important is content. Summer is seen as the season for "kid" movies, and many older viewers have more conservative standards and resent the "filth" they see on screen. The production code may not be coming back to keep sex, drugs, and violence in check, but this year's Oscar nominees and winners, in particular, highlight the kind of content that has strong appeal to older viewers.



Kings-speech-2 The King's Speech, recently crowned Best Picture, was a film I knew immediately would appeal to those turned off by racy content in the theatres (in fact, it's being recut to a PG-13 by bleeping out its uses of the F-word). The movie has already crossed the $100 million mark, in large part thanks to those "once a year" moviegoers who will turn out doubly in light of the movie's Oscar win. The other nine movies nominated for an Academy Award all have appeal in the over-fifty range, even among the outliers: Inception was remarkably cerebral (unless that's code for confusing?) for a blockbuster, and Toy Story 3 drew plenty of adult audiences who know about Pixar's reputation for quality. Movies like True Grit and The Fighter, however, were the core, commercially successful and well-reviewed movies that drew in 50+ filmgoers.



The Times also draws attention to the atmosphere of a theatre--dirty cinemas with hordes of unruly teens can turn away older customers in a heartbeat. For an upcoming feature, I spoke with Skip Huston, owner of the Avon Theatre in Decatur, Illinois. His small theatre showed many of this year's Oscar films, including True Grit and Black Swan, to an older-skewing, more discerning audience. He has a staff that keeps the theatre spotless, popcorn that draws raves, and a historic "destination" cinema. Places like these show that older people will come to the theatre, if it has the right environment and a well-curated selection of films. If older filmgoers mean more adult movies and fewer dumb action films and comedies, please, fire away, but I suspect this means we're also going to be in for many more iterations of The Bucket List.



Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Netflix data reveals stark geographical contrasts in movie popularity


By Sarah Sluis

Netflix has long been public with their data, even offering a prize of a million dollars to the group that could improve its recommendation system. The contest, of course, required an open sharing of the data. The New York Times released a fascinating infographic last weekend that overlays Netflix rental patterns with Google Maps of twelve U.S. cities. I took it upon myself to analyze the results.

Netflix transformers "The White Hole" For a number of reasons, the movies rented in a city center tended to be different than those rented in more suburban areas, leading many maps with a white hole in the center to indicate no "Top 50" rentals. Most obviously, Paul Blart: Mall Cop played well in areas outside cities, presumably populated with malls and Segway-using security guards. Nights in Rodanthe also played better outside the city, where older females might live. A lot of run-of-the-mill genre films and other drivel played well outside city centers (Dallas loved Knowing), while many art films played better in cities. Is it any wonder that Taken was a "surprise" hit, given that the movie is not in the Top 50 rentals for most of Manhattan and Brooklyn, the center of media? But exceptions prove the rule: Last Chance Harvey, an indie film, played best outside city centers. Perhaps the younger demographics in most cities bumped it out of the top 50 list? Children, too, can account for the "white hole" effect. Bedtime Stories played best outside of city centers. Pixar's Wall-E, however, had more rentals within the city. Here, I suspect a confounding factor. Families in the suburbs likely bought Wall-E (and rented the lesser-reviewed Bedtime Stories), while city dwellers rented Wall-E and passed by Bedtime Stories.

The "Made Locally" Effect Do you remember New in Town, the Renee Zellweger flop about a Miami transplant having a go of Minneapolis? Well, apparently the only people that do live in Minneapolis. The romantic comedy had no traction anywhere else. While most cities shunned romantic comedies--even well-reviewed ones, like The Proposal, did better further outside the city, Confessions of a Shopaholic was a modest exception. The frothy shopping film had a good ranking in the Upper East Side,

Midtown, and West Side neighborhoods in Manhattan, but was utterly absent in the East Village, Lower East Side, and West Brooklyn neighborhoods (like Williamsburg and Park Slope). Here, again, there are two possible solutions. The hipster-populated neighborhoods either saw the film in theatres, and that was enough, or they were simply too cool for the movie. Given the tiny box-office take, I suspect the latter. Other films appealed to niche populations tied to a geographical location, even if the movie wasn't set in that city. Appaloosa, a Western set in Albuquerque, did exceptionally well in parts of Dallas and L.A., but little business in the other big cities.

Netflix"The Black Boost" Films with black actors in lead roles did really, really well in the areas of cities with large black populations, while showing little or no "Top 50" activity anywhere else. Atlanta and Washington D.C. lit up for films like Lakeview Terrace, Traitor, Obsessed,

The Secret Life of Bees, T
yler Perry's The Family that Preys, Tyler Perry's Madea Goes to Jail, The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3, Not Easily Broken,

and Cadillac Records. That's a lot of movies. The South side of Chicago, areas of Dallas, spots all over New York City, and wee sections of Boston, Miami and L.A. also showed heavy activity on these movies. The exception was Seven Pounds, the Will Smith would-be awards movie that was dark red everywhere, indicating heavy rentals.

"The Blue State Boost" Surprise, surprise. People who saw Bush-lambasting W. were concentrated in blue state areas. Milk, set in San Francisco and appealing to liberal, gay-friendly, and awards film audiences, had high levels of rentals in the Bay Area and the liberal areas of other cities, though it bled more easily into other areas than W. Religulous did better in Western states, which have a reputation for being less church-going. Denver, followed by Seattle, was hot for the religion-mocking documentary.

After noting these trends, I'd also like to point out some confounding variables. People who subscribe to Netflix have something in common--they enjoy movies, have enough income to pay for monthly deliveries of said movies, and probably have some other demographic information in common, whether it's race, gender, age, income, or level of education. That can skew results. Netlfix is not the only sign of a movie's popularity in a particular location, since it doesn't know if someone saw the movie in theatres or bought the movie. As noted, that's why I suspected Wall-E was being rented in urban areas and bought (and thus off the map) in areas outside cities. That being said, this data can provide valuable information to distributors and exhibitors wondering why some films that do well at the box office flop for their theatres, and vice versa.



Friday, January 30, 2009

Horror & romcom go head to head on Superbowl weekend


By Sarah Sluis

It's Super Bowl Weekend, when studios shy from male-oriented fare at the box office and usually lob a Renee zellweger new in town

chick flick. Although the Sunday afternoon/evening event doesn't seem like the biggest deterrent against a Friday or Saturday night movie, for some, the pre-game anticipation makes other events verboten: it's also the least-booked weekend for weddings.

Still, Fox has decided to release male-oriented Taken (3,183 screens), hoping to generate enough business Friday and Saturday to make up for a weak Sunday. Our critic Jon Frosch called the Liam Neeson kidnapping thriller a "toxic combination of grim and

silly" that he "alternately yawned and scoffed" his way through before realizing "the real hostage in this mess is you." Viewer beware.

New in Town, the Renee Zellweger film that underwent a name change in hopes of giving a facelift to the soulless comedy, releases on a concentrated 1,941 screens. With more people in a theatre, maybe the laughter will seem louder and more contagious? According to our reviewer Harvey Karten, who saw the film in a fairly packed theatre of critics, the "shortage of laughs comes close to emulating our current budget deficits."

Joining the parade of Japanese horror remakes, The Uninvited (2,344 screens) seems a promising ifElizabeth banks uninvited



formulaic remake of Korea's A Tale of Two Sisters. The idea of an evil, infiltrating stepmother is compelling and delicious to teen audiences, and is my pick for number one at the box office this weekend. As an added bonus, the cast includes Elizabeth Banks. Making her fourth appearance in the past four months (following Role Models, Zack and Miri Make a Porno, and W.), she just might be the new Kevin Bacon.


For those living in New York, a trio of somberly titled movies releases: Blessed is the Match: the Life and Death of Hannah Senesh, Medicine for Melancholy, and Shadows. Each qualify for my loose definition of "somber" in a different way. Shadows is a Holocaust documentary "bereft of...emotion and fire," Medicine for Melancholy could be loosely described as Before Sunrise, plus depressing racial commentary conducted with "self-indulgence and sluggishness," and Shadows is a creepy Macedonian-language thriller whose villain "Monster Mom," "dug up a few graves of refugees, suicides and unbaptized babies to

use for medical research." All in all, a charming array of options for those looking to complement their weekend of hot wings and seven-layer dip.