Episode II Surpasses $116 Million at Box Office 529
Domasi writes "The Force is with George Lucas again as the fifth installment of the Star Wars saga, 'Attack of the Clones,' took in $116.3 million in its first four days and to become the second-fastest film behind only "Spider-Man"." Spider-man is better. But I plan to see both of them again.
No one saw this. (Score:3, Insightful)
I certainly didn't see it coming.
Re:No one saw this. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:No one saw this. (Score:3, Informative)
However, it will be interesting to see what the "2nd week falloff" is like...
Re:No one saw this. (Score:2)
Actually, I saw it coming, and I couldn't be happier!! A friend of mine didn't believe me when I said that Spidey would beat Episode II, and so we placed a nice $50 bet on it.
I just called him up, and he answered the phone with "Fine, you fucker, you win!". I guess he just loaded slashdot too!
Re:No one saw this. (Score:3, Interesting)
Anyone have the per-screen averages?
Per Theater avg: (Score:2, Informative)
it was shown in 3,161 theaters, for an avg of $27,254 PT.
For opening weekend of spiderman:
3,615 $31,769 (yes, the difference in theaters was 454.... screens might have been 1500 but theaters wasn't THAT different it seems)
all numbers from www.the-numbers.com
Re:No one saw this. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No one saw this. (Score:2, Flamebait)
Grab.
Re:No one saw this. (Score:3, Interesting)
I mean not before spider man came out (Score:2)
Except that was after the fact that the numbers were in for spiderman. It's really easy to make that sort of predicition when spiderman reported the most sucessful opening weekened ever. I doesn't suprise me that some thought of this a week ago, but what about a month ago.
Re:I mean not before spider man came out (Score:2)
Ouch. You're mean.
Except that was after the fact that the numbers were in for spiderman. It's really easy to make that sort of predicition when spiderman reported the most sucessful opening weekened ever. I doesn't suprise me that some thought of this a week ago, but what about a month ago.
Well, personally, I can recall alot of my friends being disatisfied with the episode 1, and most of the early reviews of episode 2 were mixed as well. They seemed to indicate that episode 2 was "better" but not great.
Also, in the end, how many years of hiatus was there between episode 6 and episode 1? I think there was a LOT more buzz the first time around.
Finally, Lucas' insistance on "digital only" screens had me worried, though he did cave in the end.
Screens (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Screens (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Screens (Score:2)
Four weeks? IIRC, it's seven, which is a HUGE investment for a theater, and why fewer ones bit on it.
Re:Screens (Score:2)
Hooray!
Re:Screens (Score:3, Informative)
Even though Spider-Man opened with more screens than AOTC it is still making more per screen than AOTC.
I don't think that's the whole story... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Screens (Score:2, Informative)
Spider-Man: 3615 Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones: 3161
from here [boxofficeprophets.com] [boxofficeprophets.com].
500 less screens.
Re:Screens (Score:5, Informative)
By making these arguments about total gross/per theater gross/screens/etc., we are just playing into the Hollywood money machine's hand. But, myself a victim to this game, I believe the 3615/3161 number indicates venues or physical locations where the film is played, whereas the number of actual "Prints" is something like 7500 vs. 6000, which is what the parent was apparently quoting. I don't know if anyone has actually recorded the number of screenings anywhere. Given that AOTC was a little longer than Spidey, this translates into fewer screenings per venue, as well as fewer per print: The difference between 2 hours and 2 hours 20 minutes is enough to reduce the number of screenings at some little theaters from 2 to 1 or from 3 to 2 per day; at multiplexes, it may reduce the number of showings from 15 to 12.
Re:Screens (Score:2, Informative)
But, I might have been misinformed.
Re:Screens (Score:5, Informative)
What's really annoying, is that those numbers you quoted are THEATERS, not SCREENS.
Clones opened up playing on approximately 6,100 screens at 3,161 theaters across North America [boxofficemojo.com]
Spider-man Swinging into 3,615 theaters ... with an estimated 7,500 prints [boxofficemojo.com]
The math still works out that spiderman made more per screen, but of course the Thursday opening isn't taken into account.
Just for Yoda (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Just for Yoda (Score:2, Insightful)
That's when everyone in my theater (12:01 showing, first showing for that theater) erupted into applause for Yoda.
Re:Just for Yoda (Score:2)
> fighting like that, but the way it looked to me,
> he would have won if he hadn't had to save Obi Wan
> and Anakin.
Speaking of, why didn't Yoda simply move Anakin and Obi-Wan out of the way rather than trying to hold up the big whatever-it-was-that-was-going-to-crush-them? It's already been established that it's easier to "force" smaller objects to move.
"So you see, Lone Starr, why evil always triumphs. Because good is dumb..." (Dark Helmet - Spaceballs)
Re:Just for Yoda (Score:2)
Best Lightsaber Duel. Ever.
Re:Just for Yoda (Score:2)
Kintanon
(in the digital theater) just like tron (Score:2)
that being said, the movie suffered from what i call the "tron" effect. all of the live actors seemed to pop out ontop of the computer generated backgrounds or objects (look at people when they sat in chairs or interacted with other CG objects)
It wasn't super annoying, but at that point i think lucas would have been better off just doing CG humans. maybe he will for his next set of movies.
What if no Thursday? (Score:2)
BTW, saw it on Saturday and it is way better than Phantom Menace. It's worth going to see just to see Yoda with a lightsaber and commanding troops! (Pulls a Neo pose)
Re:What if no Thursday? (Score:2)
Spider-man is better? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah I thought so too. I just loved that scene with the New Yorkers on the bridge throwing down junk at the Green Goblin to distract him from beating up Spidey. "You mess with him and you mess with us!".
As plot devices go that's up there with destroying an Alien battle fleet with a PowerMac and Word Macro Virus
While I don't like to whine... (Score:2)
I personally think it will be more interesting to see how business is on the second weekend, which "Spider-Man" did extremely well on [yahoo.com], after everyone's had a chance to hear and read reviews from their friends.
Not that I'm bedrudging "Episode II", mind you. I have yet to see it, but everyone seems suitably pleased with it. I just like to keep everything in perspective, and remember Mark Twain's warning about statistics as the third basic kind of lie.
I'd go see it again (Score:2)
I don't know how to describe it. It was like...Kermit the Frog on crack!
Re:I'd go see it again (Score:2)
'Yoda is like Bruce Lee, Mister Myagi, and Kermit the Frog all rolled into one!!'
Good eye!! It's from my Score:0 Offtopic comment posted right after I saw the movie in digital on opening night. [slashdot.org]
A major Karma burn, but at the time I had to post, and I didn't have a convenient target thread. Here was my review, attacched to the videogame thread that night:
-----
The Indie Game Jam is a yearly game design and programming event designed to encourage experimentation and innovation in the game industry...
Whoop-tee-doo!
OH MY FUCKING GAWD.
(In a jaw-dropped, wide-eyed, wired-at-3am , good kind of way
The big surprise was that we somehow got the "Director's Cut," which according to the theater manager, was 11 minutes longer than the celluloid version. Which makes sense, since we were dispersing behind the 12:05 showing and right alongside the 12:10 showing, both of which were "non-digital" formal.
Valley View Cinemark in Ohio RULES!
Favorite quote was some dude commenting to the media after the movie: "Yoda is like Bruce Lee, Mister Myogi, and Kermit the Frog all rolled into one!!"
:D
$183M International (Score:3, Informative)
Re:$183M International (Score:2)
I do not get this crap about spider-man vs star wars. Can the two movies not co-exist? Can we not see both? If we liked Star Wars more then spider-man are we suposed to see it two times as much?
Im sure spider-man and star wars will do fine internationally
See it again. (Score:2, Interesting)
TheForce.net had a good thread [theforce.net] running about "the little things" in the film.
I think the repeat business will keep Clones going for a little bit.
-techwolf
Only about 86 million when compared to Spider-Man (Score:3, Informative)
Here's a snippet from hollywood.com: 20th Century Fox and Lucasfilm's PG rated franchise installment Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones exploded in first place with an ESTIMATED $86.15 million at 3,161 theaters ($27,254 per theater).
After opening to $30,141,417 for Wednesday midnight screenings and Thursday, its four day cume is approximately $116.29 million. By comparison, Spider-Man's record setting opening was $114.8 million for a normal three day weekend (May 3-5).
Star Wars' average per theater was the highest for any film playing this weekend.
Directed by George Lucas, it stars Ewan McGregor, Natalie Portman and Hayden Christensen.
"That's the third best three day regular weekend opening ever after Spider-Man's $114 million and $90 million for Harry Potter," Fox distribution president Bruce Snyder said Sunday morning.
"It's the second fastest to $100 million. Of course, Spider-Man did it in three days and this is four. The previous record was Star Wars: Episode I in five days. It opened on a Wednesday (May 19, 1999). Its five day number was $105.659 million. So we've kind of blown past that in four days with $116.291 million on this one. It's just terrific and we're delighted."
Looking back at Episode I -- The Phantom Menace, Snyder noted, "Its Wednesday, the opening day, was $28.5 million. That was the high water mark for the run. The next best day was $24.4 million on Saturday (of weekend one). In this case, we opened to $30.1 million, went to $25.2 million on Friday and Saturday looks like $32.25 million, so it's actually above the opening day and the opening day, remember, had the Midnight shows (from Wednesday) folded in. So this is really a spectacular performance."
Phantom Menace wound up grossing $431.1 million in domestic theaters. Its worldwide total (domestic plus international) was $923 million. Asked about reports that Clones' Wednesday midnight shows had ticket sales of approximately $6 million, Snyder replied, "Something in that area. It depends on how they got folded into (the total for Thursday), but I think that's a fair estimate."
Here's the breakdown of box office report [hollywood.com]
Re:Only about 86 million when compared to Spider-M (Score:2)
You don't say. I bet no-one here knew that.
Episode I (Score:2)
I know that our theatre, in the interim, had a $2 hike in prices. I wonder if it is related to the monotonic increasing revenues.
Anyone else find it odd that Episode II garnered more money than Episode I, though?
Re:Episode I (Score:3, Insightful)
arg...it was the begining of the entire saga, not a stand alone movie.....saying episode I was a bad movie is about a brilient as the folks who complained about the ending of Felloship of the rings.
Re:Episode I (Score:2)
I've given up on Lucas. He showed promise with Episodes IV and V, but then he lost his creativity and touch. The best he could do for the series would be to leave it to someone with a vision.
Re:Episode I (Score:2)
I think it's the fact that Episode II was shown on regular and digital screens, so for that reason alone, people (well, fanboys) were more likely to see it twice. And although I don't agree, most people seem to think II was better than I, so thus were also more likely to see it twice.
Lucas borrowing from other hit movies? (Score:2, Interesting)
Count Dooko's speech about "The Dark Lord" and his pleas of "Join me!" caused a little too much deja vu, since it has only been months since watching Lord of the Rings.
The clone factory on Kamino where 'humans are no longer born, they're grown' seemed to be borrowed directly from the matrix.
The gladiatorial style execution seemed to be inspired by another recent film. Besides that, the crab-like monster looked, sounded, and moved a lot like the aliens from Starship Troopers.
Yoda, Anakin, and the other Jedi borrowed quite a few martial arts moves from the characters in the matrix. They didn't fight that way in Episode One.
The cityscape of Corusant and the opening chase sequence was a little too reminiscent of the Fifth Element.
Just a few things I noticed! Hopefully $116M is just the beginning. It may be too optimistic to hope that it unseats Titanic as the box office record holder, but one can hope...
Re:Lucas borrowing from other hit movies? (Score:2)
You're forgetting that the original Star Wars was almost entirely a direct descendant of the sci-fi serials of the 30's and 40's, and that this time-worn format was executed with perfection in the original 3 Star Wars movies. IMHO the deviation from the simplistic good-guy/bad-guy/ cliffhanger mentality and more into "big screen blockbuster" mentality marks the decline of the Star Wars movies.
Re:Lucas borrowing from other hit movies? (Score:2)
You mean that by Hollywood's design we've got to sit through six hours of pointless crap before the real stuff can start? Maybe that's inherit to doing a prequel, but I'd hope that someone in la-la land would stand up and point this out...
Re:Lucas borrowing from other hit movies? (Score:2, Interesting)
Lucas borrowing from Star Wars (Score:2)
The cloning facility.. while it did stylistically look a bit like the Matrix, this wasn't really that avoidable. The way the later books described "cloning cylenders" kind of would make it difficult to do anything that didn't kind of look matrix-ish. And you simply couldn't have come up with a realistic plot for episode 2 that didn't introduce clones being grown in a lab. But then again, the books implied that the clones were grown in the cylenders up until the point of being adults, and then some kind of memory transfer took place-- which would have meant that the image of exclusively fetuses in the clone-growing room was maybe taken from the Matrix. But perhaps this was a practice that didn't arise until the later years of the close wars; or perhaps i misread the books. I'm not sure.
As for "the gladiatorial style execution".. Well, to be honest, you know what that reminded me of? Think about it.. desert planet, jedi and friends are chained up and about to be executed by being eaten by a huge monster in a pit while hundreds of locals watch.. personally, this reminds me more of the beginning of The Return of the Jedi than anything. As such, maybe this was just one of the stylistic nods to the later Star Wars movies-- the tracking device on fett's ship, the image of obi-wan's ship clinging to the side of an asteroid while fett wanders off oblivious, Anakin's hand trapped under a plate of metal while pieces of a battle droid are slapped in place around him-- that pervaded the movie. But then again, all of the visual references that i noticed to specific events in later movies (I mean, as opposed to stormtrooper armor and such) referred to The Empire Strikes Back, and not either of the other two in the trilogy, so maybe this isn't good analisis.
As for the car chase scene.. yeah, i have to admit this was a little bit sketchy, if only for the moments where we get to see anakin plunge down the controls and swerve vertically through multiple lanes of traffic. That one moment, i'm pretty sure everyone in the theatre was thinking of The Fifth Element. And christopher lee, while he did a really great job, probably should not have been given that role in the interest of avoiding echoing LoTR. (You could have joined me, Obi-Wan.. but instead, you have chosen the way of.. PAIN!!!)
I don't know enough about martial arts to comment on the fight scenes
Box Office (Score:2)
I can't fanthom why in this age people still hang around that "Box Office" thing ?
I mean, 40 years ago, it didn't cost an arm and a leg to purchase a movie ticket, ahhh... those are the drive-ins day.
Today, how much does it cost for a ticket to a first-run movie ? $10 ? $ 25 ? $ 40 ?????
Who knows ?
I mean, the "Box Office" figure should have been retired many years ago, since it really DOES NOT REFLECT HOW MANY PEOPLE GO TO SEE THE MOVIE !
Let's say
If the Box Office figure for Episode II is 5 times the amount for Jaws (back in the '70s), do you think Episode II attracts FIVE TIME MORE PEOPLE to see it, than Jaws back in the '70s ?
I really hope that one day we will see the figure for "Box Office" in terms of HOW MANY PEOPLE PURCHASING THE TICKETS, instead of HOW MUCH $$$$.
Re:Box Office (Score:2)
Kindly turn off your caps lock, then point your browser at http://boxofficemojo.com/alltime/adjusted/ [boxofficemojo.com]. It shows the adjusted all-time figures for ticket sales vs. prices at that time.
Why Spidey Beat the Jedis (Score:3, Interesting)
I know this is going to sound strange, but as far as ease of digestion goes, it's almost as if AOTC is the art house gourmet movie and Spiderman is the summer popcorn movie.
Re:Why Spidey Beat the Jedis (Score:3, Interesting)
AOTC on the otherhand exists to both compliment and set the backdrop for the classic Star Wars trilogy. Personally I enjoyed AOTC not in it's own right, but the back story it provided in terms of the origins of Storm Trooper, Boba Fett, the Empire etc. It was brilliant how it all came together in the last 30 minutes.
new headline name suggested (Score:2)
So who would win in a fight? (Score:2)
Anakin Skywalker
Strengths: Superfast reflexes, ability to move objects with the Force, ESP like reflexes, can jump really high.
Has a lightsaber.
Weaknesses:
While he's suppose to be a Jedi, he's as celibate as a Catholic Priest at a nude alter boy convention. Also, tends to get angry, then say really bad lines.
Spider-Man:
Strengths: Superfast reflexes, really strong, ESP like reflexes, can jump really high. Able to climb walls and shoot web from his wrists.
Weaknesses: Can't seem to make a decent business case, hangs around stupidly while people shoot "sleeping gas" into his face. Has a cute girl hot after his body, but can't seem to make the mind-penis connection and "go for the MJ".
Personally, I think Spider-Man could win it, but only if he got "The Rage" when Anakin threatens MJ. Seeing how Anakin has his own love muffin to worry about (unless he decides he likes women who actually have a chest), I think that we'll see Anakin just barely eek out a win.
Or, since Anakin is E-vile, Spider-Man should win, since Good always truimphs over Evil (just ask the folks who used to work for Enron.)
Re:So who would win in a fight? (Score:5, Funny)
No, Anakin wins BECAUSE he's evil. Don't you know that evil will always triumph, because good is dumb?
Very Impressive. (Score:2, Interesting)
Given that fact and good math skill, EP2 did outdo Spider-Man. Either way.. I've seen them both twice anyways.. they both rock.
Re:Very Impressive. (Score:2)
You don't. It was only about 500 more and Spiderman *still* had a better per-screen average.
International Release dates (Score:2, Interesting)
Out of curiousity does anyone know what factors determine whether a film gets a synchronised global release or not?
Re:International Release dates (Score:2)
Celebrity Deathmatch (Score:2)
These statistics seem meaningless... (Score:4, Insightful)
These stats are great for me knowing that yes, Spiderman sold more tickets than Star Wars at the box office this year... But don't tell me it's the best selling movie ever. It's probably not!
I mean, look at how much it costs to buy a ticket today.. What, $8.50 round about?
So what you're telling me that year after year, with inflation, there will always be a bigger and better blockbuster according to gross sales?
Why has no one EVER ajusted for inflation? For all I know the best and most watched movie way Ben Hur... hehe....
Re:These statistics seem meaningless... (Score:3, Informative)
Cheers!
E
Re:These statistics seem meaningless... (Score:5, Informative)
Top 100 Ever Adjusted [the-movie-times.com]
The list makes a lot more sense with this math, though Titanic still gets ranked too highly. Unfortunately, this is only adjusted with the Consumer Price Index. I think someone should adjust for population growth as well.
Re:These statistics seem meaningless... (Score:2)
What does make a difference in america though is the continual growth of the educated middle class, and/or the general growing affluence of even the lower classes, either in the cities or in the country.
More people can afford to go to movies more often, in spite of the increasing prices.
More AotC talk (Score:5, Insightful)
It's hard for me to say Spider-man was better. They were both very good in their own right and I plan on owning both of them. The love scenes in Spider-man were hands-down better, though.
Something to think about (Score:5, Insightful)
I was watching CNN Headline News on Saturday morning when they interviewed the film critic for Entertainment Tonight. My attitude toward the $115 million box office mark is the same as his answer to the AOTC vs. Spider-Man question: Why should I care? I'm not getting a piece of the action.
The important thing is that, for the $9 I paid for my ticket, I got a comfortable seat and an a magical experience watching the film. I thought both movies were very entertaining and already watched Spider-Man twice. I'm going to watch AOTC again because I want to see the digital version (go Yoda!). Now, I couldn't care less about which movie made the more $$$ because I'm not among the people whose net worth was increased by the box office take.
Discussing this box office take rivalry is like arguing who is the coolest millionaire, Ellison or Gates? I don't really care. All I care is how their products perform and how they affect my business.
Cheers!
ERe:Something to think about (OT) (Score:3, Funny)
> arguing who is the coolest millionaire, Ellison or
> Gates? I don't really care. All I care is how their
> products perform and how they affect my business.
Frankly, neither of them is very cool (pure evil and whatnot). My vote has to go for Mr. Buffet. You've got to respect a man who:
1. never got caught up in the tech buying spree
2. was eating a Dilly Bar one day and said, "Damn, this is good. I'm going to buy Dairy Queen."
3. only uses his computer for playing games (bridge) and slapping Bill Gates around (at bridge)
If Warren had a console out, it would cost $1,000, have the best games possible, and come with ice cream. He wouldn't lower the price (like his stock price) because it would actually be worth a grand.
This whole thing is wildly inaccurate... (Score:2, Interesting)
This whole thing is wildly inaccurate. Rounding errors,ballot stuffers, dynamic IPs, firewalls. If you're using these numbers to do anything important, you're insane...
but seriously, this whole "box office" rating thing is pointless.. the #1 box office movie should be rated on # of ticket sales, not # of $$$..
By the current rating standard, a movie with 2x the ticket price only has to sell half as many tickets to be rated as high as the inverse...
I'm not by any means saying that ATOC shouldn't be up there with the greats, but don't base your facts & reports on something variable (such as ticket prices... or even dynamic IP's)
ok, i'm done now *steps off soap box*
Could have used a better name... (Score:2, Funny)
Clones v Spiderman -- the long run (Score:2)
Star Wars vs. the competition (Score:2)
Waiting for video (Score:2)
I was really quite disappointed with spider-man. The dialogue was really bad. The FX were fun and the premise was great, but the dialogue was so contrived as to make it impossible for me to suspend my disbelief and enjoy the good parts of the movie. Which is too bad, because for once, this was a movie that didn't lack in story. It lacked in execution. It could have been a really good movie, and after having read the reviews provided here, I expected a pretty good movie. But what I got was ho-hum and it left me really disappointed.
So if THAT is the standard which AotC fails to achieve, then I think I'll wait for it to be released in a form in which I can watch it for only $4 and if I wish to watch it again, I can (until I have to return it to the vid store).
My Star Wars Strategy: (Score:2)
"Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me."
Yes, I will probably get flamed for saying this, but Episode 1 was a piss poor movie. Without the effects it would have been nothing except a cheap setup to explain Episode 2.
So, George Lucas has lost my trust. Movies are getting more and more expensive (2 people = $8 tickets x 2, popcorn = $4, 2 drinks = $7, candy = $4 = 16 + 4 + 7 + 4 = $31 just for the movie experience).
SO what I did this time around was to download a copy of the movie in VideoCD format off IRC. I watched it last night.
Many will say, "How can you spoil such a great movie by watching it off a burned CD?"
And they have a point - but I will not be fooled again. I have chosen to review the movie first, then if I deem it worthy, I will go see it. While one might think this would spoil the movie, it really doesn't. Divx/VideoCD is poor enough in quality that there is still plenty to catch the second time around, not to mention the much better audio in the theater.
So, will I go see it in the theater? Proably yes. It was much better than the first. But shame on George Lucas for hyping the first one so much and cashing in on it because it was the first new Star Wars movie in a long time.
Re:My Star Wars Strategy: (Score:2, Insightful)
Simple solution: don't buy the popcorn, drinks or candy, and you've saved yourself $15. Have dinner before you head out to the theater, and not only will you not be hungry for popcorn, but you could have eaten something healthier to boot.
Movie theatre popcorn (Score:2)
Disclaimer: my wife and I spent $120 on dinner before going to see AotC, so popcorn would have been a little excessive. But the Copper River King Salmon was excellent.
Re:My Star Wars Strategy: (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes, I'll agree going to the movies is getting more expensive. But it pales miserably in comparison to attending pro sports events. According to this article on Motley Fool [fool.com], it costs about $150 for a family of four to attend a baseball game (and baseball is the cheapest of the four major sports to attend). If I wanted to take my dad and 2 brothers to a Redskins game (admittly the priciest of all NFL teams), it would cost me $442.54 [teammarketing.com]. For my money, I'd get four average tickets, 4 small drinks, 2 small beers, 4 hotdogs, 2 programs, parking, and 2 hats. Compared to the price of a sports event, watching a flick is a bargin. No weather to worry about, you don't have to go to a major city to see one, and you can pick anytime you want to go pretty much. And, if you want to save a couple bucks, there are always the matinees. Is going to the movies getting more expensive? Definitely. But for 3 hours of entertainment, much easier on my wallet than to catch a game.
Re:My Star Wars Strategy: (Score:2)
4th & 5th episodes dull as can be (Score:2)
Re:4th & 5th episodes dull as can be (Score:3, Insightful)
Spoilers ahead, folks:
Now, I don't know about you, but I identify with Anakin: his mother dies in his arms and he massacres men, women and children in the Tusken Raider settlement for revenge. The boy is conflicted and in massive pain. Add that to Obi-wan dismissing Anakin's dreams of his mother ("Dreams pass in time") and you have a very upset, very powerful individual. I suspect, once all is said and done, we will actually understand why Anakin would turn...we might even be sympathetic.
I'm just reminded what Green Goblin tells Spidey.. (Score:5, Insightful)
The new SW movies are evidence of that. Far too many of the "fans" are just out there to tear down SW with any nitpick they can come up with and build up a new "hero". Sure there are many problems with the new SW films. But there are many problems with the old ones as well (whiney Luke, bad dialog, etc).
I think people are too quick to tear down SW. It is a movie, not a religion. And it is a film for everyone, not just geeks. I think the general public likes the new SW films more than the hardcore geeks like to admit. I showed the Phantom Menace to my mother-in-law on Friday and she loved it. So much that our whole family saw AOTC on Sunday. The exit polls show people rating AOTC as a A-. I bet the minus comes from SW "fans".
In fact, the hardcore SW fans are hurting SW more than anything. By dressing up and standing in line and such they are threatening to reduce SW to simple geekdom (see Star Trek). Normal people generally avoid geekdom, and I bet alot of people are turned off on SW just because of the so-called-fans.
My final rant is that if Lucas was in it SOLELY for the money he would have made 10 SW films by now and 7 of them would be cheap crappy films (see Star Trek). Also he would have shown them on as many screens as possible instead of limiting them to the ones with digital sound.
Sure he likes a profit as much as anyone, but he is also SW's biggest and best fan.
Meanwhile, I'm waiting to see how much the Slashdot crowd turns on Spider-Man 2 and the Matrix Reloaded.
Brian Ellenberger
Re:I'm just reminded what Green Goblin tells Spide (Score:3, Insightful)
Bad dialogue? I think the dialogue from the "holy trilogy" is filled with gems. "Never tell me the odds", "I love you, I know", "sorry about the mess", and so forth.
But yes, that kid sure is a whiner.
Support the MPAA (Score:2)
Although it did almost put me head-first into the toilet a few times....
Sneaky... (Score:2)
I have noticed 2 types of people on /. (Score:2)
E1 and E2 are not good movies if all you are doing is judging them on their merrits as stand alone films, but as small parts of a HUGE saga, they are perfect.
when all is said and done, watch all 6 movies in one sitting, then judge the entire Saga as you would a single spiderman film..then tell me which is better.
At Seattle Cinerama, not digitally projected... (Score:2, Informative)
Cheers!
Box office is a poor metric. (Score:2)
Oops! There's still a problem: There are more people and more theaters than there used to be! So simply by virtue of that fact, a movie might be seen by more people today than 50 years ago, even if the old movie is, by all other accounts, "better". Another alternative -- to count the number of people who saw movies versus the number of people who experienced other forms of entertainment -- is infeasible because counting that many people is impossible to do accurately.
Probably counting the number of tickets sold, versus the total population (taken from gubmint estimates) is probably the best metric.
Re:Is this inflation-adjusted? (Score:2)
Home viewership skews such calculations (Score:2)
With the advent of television on a wide scale in the late 1940's and the advent of home video playback in the late 1970's, that tends to really skew the issue of movie viewership drastically.
Remember, up until around 1950 the movie theater was the primary form of visual entertainment; that of course meant huge numbers of tickets sold for movies like Gone with the Wind and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Today, television and home video playback tends to create a huge audience for movies outside of movie theaters, so we have to contend with the issue of people seeing the movie well after its theatrical first run on DVD/VHS, pay-per-view channels and premium cable channels.
Re:Home viewership skews such calculations (Score:2)
Re:Why $$$? (Score:3, Insightful)
Distaste is not a reason for trolling.
Re:Why $$$? (Score:3, Insightful)
Star Wars is arguably to most succesful human escapist work ever created, empowering generations to live in a world they could hardly imagine.
That its success is rated in dollars is purely a side effect of todays money biased society.
Who cares about the money and who cares if the film doesn't impart human feelings. If you enjoy it, that's all that matters. A movie isn't _supposed_ to _do_ anything, it's the viewer that interprets things, not the film forcing anything on you.
Rys
Re:inflation (Score:2)
The inflation-adjusted top movies of all time list for viewing pleasure...
http://boxofficemojo.com/alltime/adjusted/ [boxofficemojo.com]
Re:inflation (Score:2)
Mr. Spey
Re:inflation (Score:2)
Re:inflation (Score:2)
Re:How is Spider-Man better than Star Wars? (Score:2, Funny)
The romance was supposed to be one of the key parts of the story, yet the scenes were jarringly bad. The whole scene towards the end where Natalie Portman was sprawling stunned on the sand then suddenly got up was right out of (no offense intended): "Dummies Guide to Winning Penalties and Freekicks Using the Acting Skills of South American and Italian Footballers"
Re:How is Spider-Man better than Star Wars? (Score:2)
Keep in mind the first time that phrase was ever uttered was in a spider-man comic. And how is it worse then any of the idiotic cliches in SW? "He's not taking the hint?". Or just plain idiocy "I'm beside myself!"
Re:WTF is Taco smoking? (Score:2, Insightful)
So you think they should limit the movie's audience to only those who read the comic? Sounds like a good business strategy.
I mean, LOTR was pretty redundant, if you look at it that way. And something tells me I already know what's gonna happen in the next two in the series as well...
Re:Two cents worth, please (Score:2)
Why is there no villain? Because "Palpatine is hatching a plan". Well, big whoop. That's essential to the overall arc of the saga but weakens the storyline of this one because there is no payoff in this movie. It's all positioning and conniving that ultimately fits into its place in the big puzzle but, as a standalone effort, makes this movie seems directionless.
Why does Anakin fall in love with and marry Padme? Because (as you say so coherently above) it's "VERY VERY importent to the entire saga....how else is Luke and Leia supose to be born?" Again, the love story is a plot point that makes the saga makes sense, but as a one off event, makes no sense whatsoever. Fine, Anakin still has a schoolboy crush on Padme, I'll buy that. But why the hell does she fall in love with him? Seriously, give me one good reason any mature, self respecting woman would be attracted to this dolt. He's a whiny, brooding child whose favorite phrase is "It's not fair." There is absolutely no chemistry between these two characters. I watched a bit of Empire Strikes Back this weekend- and THERE is some chemistry. Han and Leia are a joy to watch... none of that is evident in Anakin and Padme's relationship. It happens because it has to. The end. Again, it makes for a good saga but a lousy movie.
I think Episode III is going to kick ass simply because there is absolutely no way it can't. Every single detail of the plot has been set up, so no wasting time on trying to make it make sense. We know where it's going, so the suprise is not going to be what happens, but how it happens. If there is a shred of writing talent on Lucas's team, they can't screw it up.
Whether this is a multi-movie plot or not, a good writer could have made every individual episode stand alone as its own separate drama, and not leave its fanboys having to defend it (as you do) by saying "well of course it's no good by itself... it only makes sense as part of a multi-movie plot." Ok, yeah, whatever.
Re:Attack Of The Clones.. (Score:2)
Re:I completly Agree (Score:4, Interesting)
I seriously considered that possibility. Then I downloaded the script of Star Wars (aka "the first movie") and read it through. My reading confirmed my impression that it is far superior to AOTC. A few differences:
the tone of a very unrealistic movie in which the heroes would perform superhuman feats. And sure enough, the characters go through a lot of stuff that would surely have killed or maimed them, like jumping out of an aircraft in flight. In Star Wars, I think the closest thing is Luke and Leia swinging across the shaft. That was risky but believable.
I could write a lot more, but I think the movies are deeply different. Certainly there are some aspects that remain the same, and to that extent your remark about rose-colored glasses could be true. But on the whole, AOTC is a very inferior movie.