The Perfect Formula For Box Office Success 397
Julez writes "According to icLiverpool, the formula for creating the "perfect" film has been discovered by a UK academic. The research will be used to assess the potential success of possible film sponsorship deals.
Apparently, the perfect feature must have: action 30pc, comedy 17pc, good v evil 13pc, love/sex/romance 12pc, special effects 10pc, plot 10pc and music 8pc
"
shows what i know (Score:5, Funny)
How about 100% porn? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How about 100% porn? (Score:5, Funny)
Not that I would know...
Re:How about 100% porn? (Score:2)
Re:How about 100% porn? (Score:5, Funny)
This is nearly what the RIAA uses for the recipe for a chart topper:
- 50 percent porn
- 20 percent cowbell
- 30 percent ClearChannel
(all ingredients by volume)
Where Lucas got it wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
Episode I and II clearly messed up the forumla.
Re:Where Lucas got it wrong (Score:3, Interesting)
That was the problem with the prequels. Great CGI used excessively and lousy script, acting, direction and everything else. I don't blame the actors for their wooden performances, after all it must be be impossible to deliver a natural performance when nearly the entire film is shot on bluescreen. Perhaps if Lucas bothered to
Good grief! (Score:5, Funny)
Gee, I guess that means the entire Lord of the Rings trilogy is a tremendous flop, doomed to failure; it's got the whole thing backwards!
Re:Good grief! (Score:2)
I wonder what a movie costs in Britian? It can't be that much if they are all going to crappy 8% plot movies.
Bollywood? (Score:4, Interesting)
Between Bollywood getting slightly better and Hollywood shovelling out drivel, it seems that there'd be more money in the Bollywood offerings.
Re:Bollywood? (Score:2, Interesting)
Bollywood babes are the best - better than those idiotic, silicone distorted frankensteins that Americans seem to love. I'm excepting Halle Berry from that.
Re:Good grief! (Score:5, Insightful)
Not really. Remember, this "study" (and I use the term loosely
Re:Good grief! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Good grief! (Score:4, Insightful)
Relax man, I liked Lord of the Rings, I assure you. Put down the pitchfork.
My point was simply that this study was trying to determine why certain movies succeed and why others do not -- not determine what makes a quality movie. What makes a quality movie, after all, is in the eye of the beholder. You cant scientifically calculate what makes a film quality -- but you can determine which elements combine to make commercially successful, widely-loved films. Make sense?
And for the record, I am entitled to my opinion.. and ranking Fast and the Furious as the 114th best movie makes me cringe. That is all. Thank you.
Re:Good grief! (Score:4, Interesting)
Get over it (Score:4, Interesting)
By the way, LoR has plenty of both, as well as plot...bonus.
Re:Good grief! (Score:2, Interesting)
1. You read and are a registered member of Slashdot, therefore your intelligence is likely at least 40 points above the average population.
2. This "successful movie formula" is geared for the masses, i.e., people with an IQ of approximately 100 or so.
3. You'll probably get more from reading the books (substance, plot, and detail from The Lord of the Rings).
4. Recognize that you're at least somewhat "gifted" and have an avenue to discuss your point of view in a
Arrogance and poor understanding of IQ. (Score:5, Insightful)
Really? Is that so? This is nothing but unfounded arrogance and propaganda. You fancy yourself well ahead of the curve (doesn't really matter whether you've been tested or not, so please don't tell me your score) and as such like to believe that all those who share your interests are well ahead of the curve as well. What makes you think that there is a correlation between being able to read and sign up on a website and intelligence? Not to mention the fact that the so-called Intelligence Quotient only measures logical problem solving and mathematical insight, a very tiny fraction of what could reasonably be considered intelligence. Or, as it has been put glibly many times before: It only measures your ability to do well on IQ tests. At a guess I would say that it is probably likely that the Slashdot crew would average above the norm on IQ tests (maybe 120 or so) seeing as a large proportion are programmers and that is a field where logical problem solving is an important skill. But what we are talking about here is appreciation of the arts. I won't argue that this may be a function of intelligence, but it is certainly not a function of the IQ type of intelligence.
2. This "successful movie formula" is geared for the masses, i.e., people with an IQ of approximately 100 or so.
IQ is statistically defined such that the mean is exactly 100.
I know that this post sounds dangerously like a flame, but the spreading of this IQ propaganda really irks me.
Re:Good grief! (Score:5, Funny)
You never read at -1 do you?
Re:Good grief! (Score:3, Interesting)
Ha, ha ha!
At once, it might have been true that slashdot-readers had an average IQ of, say 110-115 (average person taking or having taken academic education would typically lie around 120). But 140, don't make me laugh...
But today, I believe we are about as average as it possibly can be, if not a little below... Just look around, buddy!
2. This "successful movie f
Re:Good grief! (Score:5, Funny)
No, but it is an insult to your reading ability. It says plot 10pc
Re:Good grief! (Score:3, Insightful)
*action 30pc - lots of action here. The movies focus on the fighting even more than the books. In fact, the movies even add fighting scenes that were not present though could be reasonably inferred (the attack by worgs in TT). I'd say Peter Jackson achieved this.
*comedy 17pc - "never toss a dwarf", "second lunch" , etc. I don't remember reading these lines. So, t
Re:Good grief! (Score:3, Insightful)
For LOTR, plot takes a hefty lead. It's a matter of story first and foremost.
Action/Special Effects splits for second as they are both heavily intertwined. It is worthy of note however that the special effects in this case aren't for the sake of, "Hey, lookit me, I'm a special effect!" but rathe
Re:Good grief! (Score:3, Informative)
> don't remember reading these lines.
The first one never appears in quite that form, though it's there in a slightly more extended version. The second one is in the book nearly verbatim on a few occasions.
> And here's a crazy idea - let's make a love
> triangle with Eowyn
You mean like the love triangle in the book? It's not as pronounced in the book, but definitely there....
From a cinematographic point of view .... (Score:4, Insightful)
A lot of nonsense that unless you are a fan of the books will explain very little about what is going on...
Until of course (Score:2, Insightful)
Which happens.. (Score:3, Insightful)
It'll happen again, it always does. I hope they use this formula, because it'll spawn another chrisis just like the one in the early 70's after everybody gets their fill of our generation's "Paint Your Wagon".
Just in the perfect Slashdot Artical. (Score:5, Funny)
38% Windows bash.
22% Linux worship.
16% Katz bash.
13% OS penis messuring.
8% punctuation correction.
2% spelling correction.
1% comedy.
1% math correction.
1% sig.
Re:Just in the perfect Slashdot Artical. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Just in the perfect Slashdot Artical. (Score:2)
Don't forget this is /., where 1 + 1 - 1 = 0.
Re:Just in the perfect Slashdot Artical. (Score:2, Funny)
Well, if this is true it explains the decline in quality in recent years. I haven't seen Katz bashed in ages.
Re:Just in the perfect Slashdot Artical. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just in the perfect Slashdot Artical. (Score:2, Funny)
1) First posts
2) goatse.cx and tub girl
3) in soviet russia jokes
4) imagining a beowolf cluster of those
5) beautiful ascii art made by some retards
6) oh yeah and Taco, Hemos and CowboyNeal trolls
7) the infamous "it is official XYZ is dying"
Just in the perfect Slashdot Artical. (Score:2)
22% Linux worship.
16% Katz bash.
13% OS penis messuring.
8% punctuation correction.
2% spelling correction.
1% comedy.
1% math correction.
1% sig.
Slashdot - Now made from 100% recycled materials.
Re:Just in the perfect Slashdot Artical. (Score:4, Funny)
--trb
Re:Just in the perfect Slashdot Artical. (Score:4, Funny)
dude your killing me....
next thing you will tell me is that my math is wrong.
Classic.
Hmmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
Perhaps not perfect (Score:5, Insightful)
I feel that if this is taken too seriously, it will kill creativity and churn out only repetitive titles, rather than the current 1%-5% originality that exists in major motion pictures today
Re:Perhaps not perfect (Score:2)
oh, and don't get me started on the music industry...
--
Was it the sheep climbing onto the altar, or the cattle lowing to be slain,
or the Son of God hanging dead and bloodied on a cross that told me this was a world condemned, but loved and bought with blood.
Re:Perhaps not perfect (Score:3, Insightful)
I think from the perspective of the execs funding movies, the "safest" film is the perfect film...
Hmmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
-psy
Re:Hmmmm (Score:3, Funny)
Oh! (Score:5, Funny)
Next time, we give the kangaroo a gun, add Satan, and make sure there's a steamy sex scene.
Re:Oh! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh! (Score:4, Funny)
I would look forward to any film with that sub-title. The only improvement would be "Attack of the Leather-clad Satanic Vampire Co-ed Nymphomaniac Ninjas".
Missing element (Score:5, Insightful)
Blatent Product Placement
Oh, by perfect film, does he mean in the perspective of the film-goer vs. the film financiers? oops
Anyone else feel that the Matrix Reloaded Heineken commercial just makes the Matrix franchise appear "cheap"?
Re:Missing element (Score:2)
Re:Missing element (Score:5, Funny)
What, you mean in a way that the videogames, comic books, cartoons, action figures and Carrie-Ann Moss dipped in latex do not?
Re:Missing element (Score:2)
It depends, do you think you'll see the comic books, action figures, videogames and cartoons in the actual movie? :p
In previous experience with Heineken sponsored films, odds are pretty good you will see Heineken in the film.....and as far as Moss in latex, whats the problem there?
Re:Missing element (Score:2)
It is already cheap if you can refer to it as a franchise and the second movie hasn't been released yet.
I am only hoping that they made a good movie in spite of all of the complete selling out that I have seen already. The movie doesn't need hyping, or over-the-top marketing. It *should* stand on its own, like the first movie did. But I realize that the movie industry will not be satisfied unti
I want... (Score:2)
Span This Study Over Time (Score:2, Interesting)
Eureka!!! (Score:4, Funny)
Viewers of the IFGA/PFF results were astounded and enthralled until someone realized that popcorn hadn't been figured into the PFF. The project was scrapped.
Chris
Re:Eureka!!! (Score:2)
I didn't know Bad Acting was part of the Perfect Film Formula as well... *hides*
Re:Eureka!!! (Score:2)
July 13 2003, the IFGA/PFF becomes self aware.....
pc? (Score:4, Interesting)
No, seriously, that's a real question. Is this some local usage in some part of the world?
Easy (Score:5, Funny)
Are they assuming too much? (Score:2, Interesting)
Additionally, what about camera work? I almost got motion sickness from movies like "Behind Enemy Lines" and "The Blair Witch Project".
I think that they are putting the cart before the horse in a lot of ways here by just analyzing the statistical makeup of the movie.
They're forgetting to take into account that most of those huge movies have the acting required to
This is a direct rip off of the Flintstones (Score:3, Informative)
um, hype? (Score:2, Insightful)
Only testing blockbusters (Score:2, Insightful)
This can't be good for... (Score:4, Insightful)
Imagine that.
-Rusty
Re:This can't be good for... (Score:3, Insightful)
By comparison, Titanic, the #1 grossing film of all time, made £118m in the UK. Taking a look at t
Nothing new (Score:4, Interesting)
This is like (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyway this seems to be the formula for a movie that will please everyone, much like the joke. I think that the relatively small amount of plot reflect the intelligence of our society. 10pc of society want plot 30pc want action. That's the way this has to be interpreted. So if you make a movie with this formula it wont be a smash super hit like Star Wars or Matrix or LotR. But it wont suck. People who see it will say "that was an ok movie".
Here it is (Score:5, Funny)
He gasps: "My friend is dead! What can I do?" The operator says: "Calm down, I can help. First, let's make sure he's dead." There is a silence, then a gunshot is heard. Back on the phone, the guy says: "OK, now what?"
http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/science/10/03/joke
Funniest joke... (Score:5, Funny)
Search Google for "funniest joke", first item [laughlab.co.uk] that comes up is the joke in question.
JP
Profit != Quality (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope filmmakers don't fall into any sort of rut when it comes to filmmaking despite findings like this, because the movies I most remember and enjoy are ones like Momento, because they are so different and force me to think about the world and how I percieve it. Moreover, what people like changes. Certainly most of the 80's movies I liked, I would scoff at nowadays.
Suffice to say, I won't be seeing 2Fast 2Furious or whatever.
Academic idiocy at its "best" (Score:5, Interesting)
The "perfect film" is obviously highly subjective. From a sentimental standpoint, perhaps it is something like Casablanca. From a producer's standpoint, it may well be "Deep Throat" or "Behind the Green Door" with their respective cost to profit(!) ratios. Artistically, it could be whatever floats your boat. I'm partial to Empire Strikes Back or Unforgiven as my favorite films.
Statistical analysis of elements contained in films is only useful to the extent that the elements are cohesive, well-executed, etc. This all reminds me of the assinine film from the eighties about the robot that wrote a love song based on analysis of popular music, resulting in a meaningless spouting of bubblegum phrases.
Besides, the research only looked at top-grossing films. How much money a film earns is not necessarily a proxy for how "good" it is. It is frequently the result of pimping and media hype. It is quite possible that some of the films which were top grossing lost money (even under sensible non-film industry accounting methods) and were terrible.
The reference article is total fluff coverage and is highly instructive from a media analysis standpoint. You get no analysis of the underlying research. It in fact smells like a press release copped from some idiot researcher which was dumped almost unchanged into a "news" story. The percentage of shit that appears in newspapers that is derived in this exact manner is frightening -- it gains the imprimature of "news" instead of PR and there is no value-added journalism component. Journalists of the world, hang your heads.
Whew. Had to get out my morning rant. I feel much better now. Get me some coffee.
GF.
Wow (Score:3, Funny)
Three cheers for this study! (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously. Jesus... What more can I say? This is just
Re:No. (Score:2)
Horror Movies (Score:2)
The Perfect Formula For Slashdot Stories (Score:3, Funny)
Ebert: aim at teenage boys (Score:2)
Waterworld got it wrong: (Score:5, Funny)
comedy 0pc
good v evil 1pc
love/sex/romance 1pc
special effects 1pc
plot 0pc
music 0pc
water 96pc
Re:Waterworld got it wrong: (Score:2)
I posted already in this thread, someone else MOD PARENT UP +FUNNY!
World's Most Popular Music and Painting (Score:2)
They surved style, tempo, length, voice and content for the song, for example.
They also made the "least popular" works using similar techniques.
You can find the results of thier work at:
http://www.diacenter.org/km/index.html [diacenter.org]
and
http://www.diacenter.org/km/musiccd.html [diacenter.org]
- Serge Wroclawski
Formulaic Art (Score:2)
When you come to it, very little is actually 'new'. I think that's why our fashion leaders keep the masses focu
An ML Perspective (Score:3, Interesting)
We can use learning and classification techniques to have a proper go at something like this. Rather than work out the supposed 'best' film, we can look at proposals and decide whether they're going to be a success.
See, in the vast array of films that have been produced, and their box-office takings (the metric I assume we'd use for measuring success) we have an annotated training set to train a learning algorithm with. We then run candidate films past that algorithm, and see what it decides. Might work.
The interesting thing, as with many of these classification problems, is the 'feature vector' representation we use to describe a film. I suppose we'd need things like release date, budget, some kind of 'star-quality' rating (average Kevin Bacon distance?
Henry
This has been done for music and art (Score:2)
They've also found the "most unwanted painting" and "the most unwanted music."
Here's their site [diacenter.org]. You can even order the CD [diacenter.org] of America's most wanted and unwanted song -- no piece of music before or since has ever made me laugh out loud so hard.
You can see the paintings on the site. The most wanted music is a 3-minute smooth-jazz love ballad. The most unwanted music is over 22 minutes long, with constant changes in k
the Perfect Novel (Score:2, Interesting)
-Joe
Regional (Score:2)
Research on painting (Score:2, Interesting)
Pathetic (Score:3, Insightful)
Wars ------ 2
Killed ---- 5
Wounds ---- 3
Legs ------ 2
Arms ------ 1
Wives ----- 2
Children -- 6
-------------
Total ---- 21
Toy Story 2? (Score:3, Funny)
Funny, I don't recall a whole lot of love/sex/romance unless you count the Potatoheads getting it on in the Lincoln Log cabin early in the movie...
Repetivity 100% (Score:2)
Ahhhhh! If only it did not work! I am sorry but I really have to blame people for this. This is what the music industry does already. Albums are produced rather than written. AND IT WORKS! People are very stupid and they buy them. It's the same damn song folks. Over and over again.
And people wonder why I seem to egotistical. I would rather not b
The obligatory Simpsons quote (Score:5, Funny)
Myers: No, no, no! He was supposed to have attitude.
Silverman: Um... wh-what do you mean, exactly?
Myers: Oh, you know, attitude, attitude! Uh... sunglasses!
Lady: Could we put him in more of a "hip-hop" context?
Krusty: Forget context, he's gotta be a surfer. Give me a nice shmear of surfer.
Lady: I feel we should Rasta-fy him by... 10 percent or so.
[the resulting dog is rather... proactive]
[all stare at it w/o any expression]
Myers: Hmm... I think he needs a little more attitude. [Silverman blackens in Poochie's sunglasses]
All Three: [variously] Oh, yeah, bingo. Yeah, that's it! There it is, right there! I love it!
-- Another cartoon character created in less than 15 minutes,
"The Itchy & Scratchy & Poochie Show"
Silly way of crunching numbers (Score:2)
Music overlays much of a movie. Plot ties a movie together. How can you have "10% plot?"
Bad drugs, I think, is what inspired this study.
*snicker* (Score:3, Funny)
Reminds me of my plan to sculpt a movie designed to get exactly zero points on the capalert [capalert.com] scale: 15 minutes of wanton violence/crime, followed by 15 minutes of Impudence and Hate, 15 minutes of Sex and Homosexuality, etc...
Re:*snicker* (Score:3, Informative)
My favorite choice quote from the "review":
There is no listing of Chapter and Verse references for this movie. There is not enough room.
Bwahaha!
This is wrong on so many levels (Score:4, Insightful)
As in art: low risk can mean low gain, too (Score:3, Interesting)
The earlier thing was intended to provoke people to ask why the idea of "ideal" art was so wrong... This one's just an advertiser's formula for avoiding risk.
Sorry, though -- low risk means lower gain, too. Out of Africa doesn't match up with the formula all that well, but in the mid 80s it had a huge marketing impact. That movie set fashions going -- none of the big designers were planning on a sort of "Safari" line at the time, but the movie touched it off. Banana Republic owed a ton of its business to that one movie for maybe five years. And I don't think advertisers could have figured that out using this formula; they'd have had to see the movie and get the idea it was going to look a certain way and appeal to a certain type of person.
Been Tried for Real (Score:4, Interesting)
Um, Novelty? (Score:3, Insightful)
The Matrix was cool because no one had ever done something like that before. Star Wars (the fourth, er first one) was cool because no one had ever done something like that. And not just science fiction, look at Pulp Fiction and Airplane.
Shannon's Information theorum states that information can be measured on its surprise. We only need to transmit the parts of a signal that we aren't expecting. This is why a black frame compresses down to nothing, while a colorfull photograph is much larger (assuming the same size image.)
The application here is that people are drawn to movies for the novelty. Outside of teenagers (who seem to think everything is new) people aren't going to go to a movie to see the same thing, over and over. I'm dissapointed if a movie is exactly what I expect. On the other hand, a really good movie I will I pay to see twice, just to catch the stuff I missed.
Novelty, is of course, highly subjective, and changes with time. Right now sex isn't all that novel. We have seen it all. Photo-realistic computer graphics are not all that novel, we have seen it all. Ultra-gory war flicks, everyone dies at the end horror flicks, fairy tales, and post-apocalptic hero stories: been there, done that.
Thank you. Have a good day.
Re:How about.... (Score:2, Insightful)
What? And make people think?
That's crazy talk. Next you'll be expecting them to start reading books again. And that could lead to thinking, and no one wants that...
Re:Music? (Score:2)
Well, the scientist is a huge Stanley Kubrick fan and used 2001 for his research exclusively. And since he also has a monkey fetish, the first part delivered for him on the action and sex accounts as well.
Re:age difference ... speaking of CZJ (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's the actual formula for a good movie:
Great visuals (set designers, hair dressers, costuming)
Great visuals (Special effects to a level of realistic integration)
Great talent (not just actor clout, but role accuracy)
Great music (john williams, danny elfman, or james newton howard, or fosse) Background Music made Jaws scare
Re:Whahhh? (Score:5, Insightful)
I completely disagree. Different films/works can work for different reasons. Some can work entirely without plot, and instead rely simply on character development and/or other methods.
The Thin Red Line is one such example. No plot, very little character development -- just characters "reflecting" for more than two hours. It works, in its own way, regardless. Jaws is an even better example. The plot is simply "Shark terrorizes beach community" -- the power of the film comes from an intense atmosphere and mood - not plot.
To use another mainstream example, the film GhostBusters was at its best when it was unconcerned with plot - when it just followed these characters through their daily lives as they, of all things, trapped ghosts. The film did not get its energy from the unnecessary and predictable "save the world" plot tacked on.
The best Bret Easton Ellis books work similarly. "Less Than Zero" and "American Psycho" have minimal to not plot, yet are very good, fascinating books.