They talk about a movie “opening big”, meaning it raked in
big money on its opening weekend. Why is
that good? Because, first, it’s big
money, and raking in big money is
better than raking in small money. Second, having a big opening weekend affords
the Publicity Department the opportunity to tout the movie as, for example,
“The Number One Movie In America”, or “The Country’s Most Popular Slasher
Picture.”
Conventional Wisdom says that seeing the “Number One” designation
influences people’s decision-making when selecting a movie:
(TO BE READ SLOW-WITTEDLY):
“It’s ‘Number One’, so it must be pretty good.”
They then go to the movie because it’s “Number One”, and by
so doing, the movie remains “Number
One.”
Okay, let us step back for a moment.
There are numerous elements contributing to a movie’s “opening
big” – the stars acting in it, its being a sequel to a previously successful
movie (the words after “sequel” being redundant, because they don’t make
sequels to previously unsuccessful
movies), it’s a movie based on hit book, or comic book, or possibly a website –
Just Thinking: The Movie...
Nah.
To some people’s thinking, however, the most decisive element
in getting a film off to a fast start is the movie’s pre-release promotional campaign.
The way the film is marketed to the public.
The implication here is that a movie – like a presidential
candidate – is a product. And the range
of possibilities for promoting that product are virtually unlimited.
Okay, here’s me, being endearingly but embarrassingly naive.
“Why not sell the movie as exactly what it is?”
(TO BE READ WITH CONCERN FOR MY ABILITY TO FUNCTION ON THE
PLANET): “Oh, Earlo.”
Say a movie is sweet and charming with flashes of insight,
and humor drawn from character. Is that
really how you want to promote it?
“Sweet and Charming”
(They had considered an exclamation point – “Sweet and Charming!” – but
it didn’t really seem to fit.)
You drumroll the movie as it is, no more, no less. Report in Variety
on the movie’s opening weekend?
“‘Sweet’ Has Sour
Debut!” (Exclamation point deserved, due to record-low attendance.)
“Sweet and Charming” could not get the audience out of the
house.
“We’re sweet and
charming. Would you want to see a movie
about us?”
“P.R.” professionals are highly adept at knowing what
buttons to push to draw people into the theaters. There are limits, of course. You can not sell a war picture as a musical.
“They played ‘Taps’ when the soldiers died.”
No!
You take the movie, and you showcase the elements of maximum
appeal, while deemphasizing what might possibly turn people off. A recent example: Ted
the Family Guy’s movie about the man
troubled by a talking Teddy Bear may trigger taste concerns, especially among
women. Females like stuffed animals:
“Look at the cuddly, Teddy Bear. This movie is for you!”
Okay, I get it. You
do whatever it takes to get them into the theater. My question is,
“Then what?”
You have this packed Opening Weekend audience, eager to see
the picture they were promised in the ad.
The movie starts to play, and
This isn’t it.
Wouldn’t that make you angry?
You’re set up on a blind date with a guy, touted as having a
glorious head of hair. The guy shows up,
he’s entirely bald, except for a rapidly thinning tuft in the front.
“It’s a glorious tuft though, isn’t it?”
Stop it!
Mission Accomplished – Stage One. You got them in there on Opening
Weekend. But by achieving this
objective, haven’t you simply expanded the army of attendees who will now leave
theater and, through the proverbial “word of mouth”, tell potential future attendees not to go?
“Number One Movie
Plummets In Second Week Collapse”
Short run victory.
Long run “Chapter Eleven.”
Generally speaking, are you not better off, as someone whose
name escapes me at the moment once suggested, selling the movie as exactly what
it is?
By the way, Studio Bosses, if you are not a fan of “what it
is”, why did you agree to make it in the first place?
Of course, I could be wrong about this. I have never understood the motives behind
the stars of Reality Shows. I mean, I
know about the fame and money and attention.
But does this concern never cross their minds?
“I am a truly unlikable person. And with a Reality Show, that failing with no
longer be a secret.”
Apparently, it doesn’t.
People continue signing up for Reality Shows.
And they continue marketing movies as what they’re not.
1 comment:
I am of the opinion that opening weekends should be measured in ticket sales numbers, rather than the accumulated money. That way, we won't get new "records" set every damn year through inflation alone.
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