Last weekend, moviegoers could find a film at their multiplex that emanated radical originality and depth of feeling, told on the grandest scale. It was sweeping science fiction with a beating heart, crafted by a master storyteller. Amid claims of the most perilous moment in the mediums history, there was a tour de force in theaters for all to see.
That movie, of course, is Steven Spielbergs Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, Spielbergs alien-contact parable returned to 901 theaters for a limited Labor Day run and was met with $1.8 million in ticket sales, enough to take 13th place at the box office. This turn of events was both hearteningClose Encounters is one of the directors clearest and most resounding worksand a bit troubling for many film distributors. A week ago, in the face of Hurricane Harvey, a fight of the century, and the conclusion of the monocultures last true symbol, the box office turned in its worst performance since September 2001. This one marked the weakest Labor Day performance since Bill Clinton was in office, down 45 percent from last years overall receipts. And the doubt is coming from inside the house: For the first time in decades, the major studios did not release a new movie over this holiday weekend. On the year, domestic box office is down 6.2 percent. The sky is falling. Movies are done. Hope your kids taught you how to use Snapchat.
There is no life in the movies if it cant be threatened from time to time. We have reached that time of year, immediately after a long and IP-choked summer, when gravestones for the industry are being etched. The culprits this year have been manifold: unwanted sequels, botched new properties, useless reboots, the scourge of Rotten Tomatoes. This weekend, Deadline asked in typically overstated fashion, Is Moviegoing Dead? before carefully clarifying in a column by Anthony DAlessandro that it is, in fact, not. (This happens every year or so.) But there are curiosities worth unpacking and lies worth dispelling. Because the narrative is about to change in four days time.
This week brings a new movie with all of the symptoms we have been warned against. Warner Bros. rebooted adaptation of Stephen Kings novel It arrives in theaters on Friday. Here are the strikes against it: 1. Its a reimagining of beloved source material. 2. This has been done before, as a memorable (if imperfect) 1990 ABC miniseries starring Tim Curry as the demon clown Pennywise. 3. Its a prefab expanded universe movie with a built-in sequel meant to continue the half of Kings story that is not featured in the first film. 4. Its helmed by a largely unknown filmmaker with just one credit to his name (2013s successful but small-scale Jessica Chastain horror movie Mama), continuing the trend of entrusting unproven directors with big-budget properties (see: Trank, Josh). 5. The film has been in a development hell for nearly a decade. For years, it was in the hands of True Detective director Cary Fukunaga before he abruptly departed the project in 2015 due to creative differences with the studio. These five factors look like warning signs of an apocalypse already in process, like flares fired into a burning building.
But guess what? Director Andy Muschiettis version of It is the best studio horror film since The Conjuring 2a massive hitand arguably the best King adaptation since 1995s Dolores Claiborne. Its also been expertly marketed, on track to earn $60 millionsome have speculated as high as $80 millionat next weekends box office. Coincidentally, Muschiettis sister and producing partner Barbara cited a memorable filmgoing touchstone in an interview last week: I remember one of the films that scared the bejesus out of Andy in particular was Close Encounters. It was a seminal experience, he says, both an introduction to the magic of movies but also to the horror of movies. It is no Close Encounters, but its in pursuit of a similar blend of the sentimental and the heart-clutching. The Muschiettis are from Argentina, but they came to Kings story of the monster who kills the children of Derry, Maine, in a familiar way, reading the book and becoming ensnared in the worlds the author could build inside a small town. Their movie is a reminder that something based on something else isnt always a cynical gambit.
This month brings another sequel, one less predictable than the inevitable It, Part II. Kingsman: The Golden Circle is the follow-up to 2015s Kingsman: The Secret Service, Matthew Vaughns hyperviolent millennial spin on James Bond based on the Mark Millar comics series. The first movie was a ludicrously staged, cheekily told piece of exploding pop artthe sequel is even more violent, more arch, and more star-stacked, featuring appearances by Channing Tatum, Halle Berry, Jeff Bridges, Julianne Moore, and an extended (and exceptional) Elton John cameo, joining the originals stars, Taron Egerton and Colin Firth. It is, in a word, fun. And like It, the new Kingsman and the forthcoming The Lego Ninjago Movie are pegged to make more than $40 million in their opening weekendif that comes true, it would be the first time, DAlessandro noted, that three September releases opened that big. How can that be? Its as if someone repaired the hole in the sky.
The production, scheduling, marketing, and release of movies is not a crapshoot, but its not an exact science, either. The studios are often reactive not proactive, scanning the calendar dates aggressively claimed by their competitors and responding accordingly. There are three Marvel movies planned per year through 2020. The weekends in which those movies will be released are unimpeachableto open against them is to risk death. To schedule in their vicinity is to tempt the fates: Consider the truly disastrous month of May in Hollywood. After the success of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, the following tentpole movieseach fitted with an unnecessary after-the-colon titleflopped domestically in consecutive weeks: King Arthur: Legend of the Sword, Alien: Covenant, and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales. A week after that, Wonder Woman opened and kick-started a new conversation about opportunity and empowerment, redefined the DC universes identity, minted a new star, reignited a filmmakers career, and set Warner Bros. up for a strong 2017. Things change quickly though. By the end of June, after Transformers: The Last Knight and The Mummy, movies were imperiled once again. By the end of July, riding an unexpected wave off Dunkirk, Baby Driver, and Girls Trip, Hollywood had rediscovered a creative mojo. By August, the business was fucked again, buoyed only by a horror sequel about a possessed doll. But September is promising! The hamster circles the wheel.
No one in Hollywood sets out to make a bad movie, but sometimes they make them under cynical pretense. Most of this summers fiascoes were made in bad faith, particularly the fifth installments of the Pirates of the Caribbean series and Michael Bays Transformers movies, two movies American audiences didnt much want that were only bolstered by international ticket sales. (Notably, overseas box office is up this year, by more than 3 percent.) To commit to making movies like this, studios decrease the number of annual productions theyre willing to invest in, pursuing a home run strategy that often has disastrous consequences. These movies embody a sin that the author and critic Tom Shone identified in his essential 2004 book, Blockbuster: How Hollywood Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Summer. In writing about James Camerons Aliens, Shone cites the typical sequel trajectory for pre-Rocky films.
During the sixties and seventies, [sequels] generally followed a law of diminishing returns, with each film expected to make only about 60 percent of its predecessors money. Thus the first Airport movie made $90 million, the second $50, the last $30. Some of the Rocky movies, on the other hand, made more money than the firstRocky grossed $117 million and Rocky III $123 milliona pattern swiftly followed by the Star Wars sequels
In describing why Cameron pursued a sequel to Ridley Scotts Alien, he finds a filmmaker with a purpose, looking to answer questions about the originals intent. There were unanswered elements in Scotts vision, and space for Camerons militaristic, mechanical interpretation. That it came seven years after the first film only emboldened Cameron and the other filmmakersit wasnt a cash grab, it was inspired. And ultimately Aliens did outearn its predecessor. The same cant be said for the most recent edition in the Alien story. Adjusted for domestic inflation, Alien: Covenant is the least successful movie in the canon. But if you include its haul overseas and unadjust for inflation, it becomes the second-biggest, behind only Scotts Prometheus. The least successful internationally? The original Alien, which counts only 23 percent of its gross from international sales. Some of this is a product of the vagaries of an evolving industry, some of it is inexplicable, and some of it is related to Scotts confounding late-life allegiance to telling the story of idiotic space travelers and their willingness to get close to the membrane of intergalactic spores.
Alien: Covenant may not have been made for the wrong reasons, but its not a movie that captured the imagination eitherhardcore fans were bemused, and the general population just didnt care to meet seven more Xenomorph entres. Its never quite clear why we need to see the movie in the first place. The same cant be said for Steven Soderberghs Logan Lucky, a well-made, clever, and entertaining caperso, a Soderbergh flickthat touted its funding and distribution scheme but failed to verify its thesis. For a movie that stars James Bond, Kylo Ren, and Magic Mike robbing a NASCAR racetrack, Logan Lucky didnt exactly intoxicate the public imagination. The film was distributed by the tiny Bleecker Street Media, and awareness was fairly low, likely the result of a marketing strategy that deemphasized Los Angeles and New YorkSoderberghs bread and butterand waited until a scant few weeks before release to start aggressively promoting it. For a movie that exists in a middle ground Hollywood hasnt been able to reconcile of late, Logan Lucky suffered a fate similar to many other recent Soderbergh projects. It is neither forgettable, nor essential. The market for a movie like that is unclear.
Harvey Weinstein, once a master manipulator able to sell moviegoers on romantic period pieces better than anyone, sat on the beleaguered Tulip Fever for three years only to unfurl it into fewer theaters than the 40-year-old Close Encounters. Unsurprisingly, it wilted. This is a movie based on a bestseller starring three Oscar winners, including Tomb Raidertobe Alicia Vikander. Harvey Scissorhands couldnt cut it into a shape he wanted us to see. Maybe hes lost something essential, just four years removed from a 2013 slate that included Lee Daniels The Butler, Silver Linings Playbook, and Django Unchained. Only, he also is responsible for one of the only success stories of recent weeks, the slow rise of Taylor Sheridans dour Wind River, which has steadily added theaters and cash to its portfolio since opening in limited release the first week of August. As always, Hollywood is built upon contradiction. The New Hollywood of the 70s begat the blockbuster age begat the indie rebels of the 90s begat the superhero globalization of this century. This summer in Hollywoodby turns crass and inspiring, confounding and crystal clearcould trigger a new era. But more likely, its business as usual.
See the rest here:
Sequels and Lies: What Hollywood's Disastrous Summer Really Means for the Future of Movies - The Ringer (blog)
- Netflix Controversial R-Rated Adaptation Is A Horror Comedy Masterpiece - Giant Freakin Robot - July 25th, 2024
- Longlegs' Twist Ending Disappointed Me, And That Final Shot Left Me With A Major Question - CinemaBlend - July 25th, 2024
- Red-Band Trailer For The Heavy Metal Horror Film WOLVES AGAINST THE WORLD - GeekTyrant - July 25th, 2024
- The Summers Best Indie and Art-House Horror Movies Are All Out This Month - Vogue - July 25th, 2024
- The Exorcism of Emily Rose (2005) WTF Really Happened to This Horror Movie? - JoBlo.com - July 25th, 2024
- Second Time's a Charm: 4 of the Best Horror Remakes of the 1980s - The Lineup - July 25th, 2024
- How Chris Stuckmann Went From YouTube Film Critic to Making His Own Horror Movie Courting Neon and Mike Flanagan in the Process - Variety - July 25th, 2024
- Friday, July 19: These 5 New Horror Movies Just Released Today - Bloody Disgusting - July 25th, 2024
- Terrifier 3 teaser trailer promises the scariest & goriest horror movie of 2024 - Dexerto - July 25th, 2024
- The 10 Best Horror Movies of the 2020s So Far, According to Letterboxd - Collider - July 25th, 2024
- New 'terrifying' horror movie thats left audiences 'screaming' in theatres draws near-perfect Rotten Tomatoes score - UNILAD - July 25th, 2024
- A New Horror Movie Is Over 95% Fresh On Rotten Tomatoes, But You Might Not Have Heard Of It Yet - CinemaBlend - July 25th, 2024
- The Terrifying Monsters in This Nicolas Cage Horror Movie Were Inspired by Goofy - Collider - July 25th, 2024
- Netflix Horror Movie Goes Beyond Disturbing Within The First Few Minutes - Giant Freakin Robot - July 25th, 2024
- What is Longlegs about? Everything to know about the hit horror movie starring Nicolas Cage - Entertainment Weekly News - July 25th, 2024
- Oddity is THE scariest film of the year: Critics rave about new horror movie - The Independent - July 25th, 2024
- Eric Banas Only Appearance in a Horror Film Was Based on a True Story - MovieWeb - July 25th, 2024
- 1970s Horror TV Movie Thrilled A Generation But No One Remembers It - Giant Freakin Robot - July 25th, 2024
- The Beast Within Exclusive Clip Kit Harington Transforms in Werewolf Horror Movie - Bloody Disgusting - July 25th, 2024
- This Is the Hands Down The Weirdest Horror Film on Prime Video Right Now - Collider - July 25th, 2024
- Maika Monroe Sells the Terror of Oregon-set Horror Film Longlegs With Her Eyes - Willamette Week - July 17th, 2024
- Nicolas Cage's New 86% RT Horror Movie Is The Silence Of The Lambs Replacement I've Wanted For Years - Screen Rant - July 17th, 2024
- Review: Longlegs is the Silliest Horror Film of the Year - The Cosmic Circus - July 17th, 2024
- How Longlegs Shocked the Box Office to Become the Summers Breakout Horror Hit - Variety - July 17th, 2024
- Longlegs: The scariest horror movie of the year knows exactly how to weaponise Nicolas Cage - The Indian Express - July 17th, 2024
- Budget horror movie earns $22 million at the box office all by hiding its A-list star - UNILAD - July 17th, 2024
- The New Horror Film That Knows How to Rattle the Nerves - The Daily Beast - July 17th, 2024
- 'The Deliverance' Trailer - Netflix Spent Big Money on This Horror Movie from Director Lee Daniels - Bloody Disgusting - July 17th, 2024
- Apple's brilliant new iPhone ad is a mini horror movie meant to scare Android users - PhoneArena - July 17th, 2024
- Bride of Re-Animator (1990) WTF Happened to This Horror Movie? - JoBlo.com - July 17th, 2024
- Review: Starve Acre Is an Homage to Classic Folk Horror - The Mary Sue - July 17th, 2024
- The Most Acclaimed Horror Movie of the Year Is Here. Is It As Scary As Everyone Is Saying? - Slate - July 17th, 2024
- This Maika Monroe Movie Gave Us One of the Most Chilling Moments in Recent Horror - Collider - July 17th, 2024
- Celebrating Film Nostalgia With Ooze and Ahhs at Blobfest - The New York Times - July 17th, 2024
- Horror movie Longlegs has gone viral with its creepy marketing campaign. But is it more than just a stunt? - Northeastern University - July 17th, 2024
- Five Sci-Fi/Horror Movies That Take Place Inside an Apartment Building - Reactor - July 17th, 2024
- 8 New Horror Movies Releasing This Week Including Longlegs - Bloody Disgusting - July 17th, 2024
- Neons Longlegs scaring up strong box office as big-budget Fly Me to the Moon struggles - Los Angeles Times - July 17th, 2024
- The Deliverance: release date, trailer, cast and everything we know about the Lee Daniels horror movie - What To Watch - July 17th, 2024
- POLL: What Are The Best Horror Movies of 2024 (So Far)? - JoBlo.com - July 17th, 2024
- The Exorcism's Adam Goldberg, Ryan Simpkins and Filmmakers on Making the Meta Horror Film (Interview) - Nerd Reactor - June 20th, 2024
- Hanky Panky Review: The Right Kind of Silly - Fangirlish - June 20th, 2024
- 40th Anniversary screening of Children of the Corn coming up in July in Whiting - KTIV Siouxland's News Channel - June 20th, 2024
- Who Watches The Watchers? Unfortunately, Me - Reactor - June 20th, 2024
- 10 Best Horror Sequels Of The 1990s - Screen Rant - June 20th, 2024
- The Inheritance trailer: Alejandro Brugus horror film reaches theatres and VOD in July - JoBlo.com - June 20th, 2024
- Metal & Movies Mash-Up: Motorhead and Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth - JoBlo.com - June 20th, 2024
- Live-Action Horror Film Sayuri to Open on August 23 - Anime News Network - June 20th, 2024
- The Netflix Sci-Fi Horror Action Blockbuster That Kicked Off A Mega Franchise - Giant Freakin Robot - June 20th, 2024
- Peyton List Wishes She Was Left Out of the Will in New 'The Inheritance' Trailer - Collider - June 20th, 2024
- Can't wait to never sleep again!: The Horror Film That Could Make or Break Mike Flanagan's Stellar Career Gets ... - FandomWire - June 20th, 2024
- MaXXXine team discuss blending fact and fiction by including a real-life serial killer in the horror movie sequel - Gamesradar - June 20th, 2024
- Where suspense and silliness collide - theSun - June 20th, 2024
- NWA wrestler Max the Impaler to star in horror movie - Figure Four Online - June 20th, 2024
- NWAs Max The Impaler To Star In Dolly Horror Movie - Wrestlezone - June 20th, 2024
- Fans all notice one particular thing as trailer drops to sequel 'so gory and disgusting' that star vomited - UNILAD - June 20th, 2024
- Shriek If You Know What I Did Last Friday the 13th: The Forgotten Horror Parody Movie - Flickering Myth - June 20th, 2024
- The Exorcism review: "The Russell Crowe horror veers more ridiculous than terrifying" - Gamesradar - June 20th, 2024
- Bloody Smile 2 trailer finally explains movie's mysterious marketing and promises a bigger scale for sequel to the hit ... - Gamesradar - June 19th, 2024
- Award-Winning Horror Movie Fang is Now Streaming on Amazon Prime and Apple TV - EIN News - June 19th, 2024
- My most anticipated horror movie of the year just got a whole lot creepier thanks to Nicolas Cage - Yahoo News UK - June 19th, 2024
- The Best Horror Anthology Ever Is Being Kept Away From The New Generation - Giant Freakin Robot - June 19th, 2024
- Kit Harington Shows Off the Real 'Beast Within' in New Horror Film - Collider - June 19th, 2024
- A sequel to the Netflix cult horror film Circle is in the works - imdb - June 19th, 2024
- Nicolas Cage's upcoming horror movie debuts to perfect Rotten Tomatoes score, with critics calling it "the scariest film ... - Gamesradar - June 19th, 2024
- 5 best horror movies on Prime Video with 90% or higher on Rotten Tomatoes - Tom's Guide - June 19th, 2024
- Max The Impaler To Star In New Horror Film 'Dolly' - Fightful - June 19th, 2024
- Jordan Peele, Lee Cronin Have New Horror Films On The Way - Bleeding Cool News - June 19th, 2024
- This Horror Film Was Livestreamed: One More Round With Generation Loss - Alternate Reality Gaming Network - June 19th, 2024
- I'm Delighted This Horror Movie Is Now A Streaming Success After Its $53M Box Office Letdown 2 Months Ago - Screen Rant - June 19th, 2024
- Nicolas Cage's new apocalyptic horror movie often leaves viewers in the dark, but that's actually a good thing - Gamesradar - June 19th, 2024
- Fans and celebrities to gather for Tampa Bay Screams Horror Convention - Tampa Bay Newspapers - June 19th, 2024
- This Classic Horror Movie Influenced the Harkonnens of Denis Villeneuve's Dune - Collider - June 19th, 2024
- The Nasty Torture Horror Movie That the UK Branded Too Depraved for Release - Collider - June 19th, 2024
- Critics are shocked by Nicolas Cage's new horror movie and it's 100% on Rotten Tomatoes - Tom's Guide - June 19th, 2024
- Joko Anwars Nightmares and Daydreams: Cast and Plot - Netflix Tudum - June 19th, 2024
- NWAs Max The Impaler To Star In Dolly Horror Film - eWrestlingNews - June 19th, 2024
- Bizarre dance with the unexpected - theSun - June 19th, 2024
- The Best Horror Movies on Max to Watch Right Now - CNET - June 1st, 2024
- This New Winnie-The-Pooh Horror Movie Might Actually Be Better Than Blood & Honey - Screen Rant - June 1st, 2024
Reviewed and Recommended by Erik Baquero