Writing for Variety, Peter Bart declares the movie star an endangered species about 10 years after the rest of us figured that out:
Summer blockbusters make studios happy, but they make stars nervous. That’s because a lizard is the real star of “Godzilla,” not an actor. And in franchises like “Captain America,” “Spider-Man” or “X-Men,” the superhero is the brand, while the casts seem interchangeable. The several tentpoles that emerged from “Pirates of the Caribbean” enhanced Johnny Depp‘s salary, but the Depp brand didn’t enhance “Transcendence” or “The Lone Ranger.”The art of managing a star’s career has become challenging in Hollywood’s New Economy. In years past, major projects could be pre-sold worldwide on star names, but distributors know they can’t be monetized to the same degree any more. Warners may pour $200 million or so into “Batman v Superman,” but its potential success won’t depend on Ben Affleck’s chemistry with Henry Cavill.
It is not a chicken or the egg scenario. The business of making movies didn’t shove the movie star out. The business of making movies was forced to change after movie stars stopped being movie stars. When names no longer puts enough profitable butts in seats, concept became king — which was the Big Formula in the nineties. Eventually, though, concepts stopped working as well, and then the franchise was born.
Except for a few like Denzel Washington and Sandra Bullock, movie stars assholed themselves into extinction with their loutish, divisive behavior. Hollywood was also too eager to go young and metrosexual, so we were Orlando Bloom’d to death. Hollywood assumed young people wanted to see themselves on the screen, but…
Movie stars are not us. They are larger than life. We want to be them, we aspire to be them, but we are not them.
How To Train Your Dragon 2‘s lower-than-expected $50M domestic box office in its opening weekend left many DreamWorks Animation shareholders feeling burned. The company’s stock price fell 11% in early trading as several analysts lowered their box office estimates for the film – which they’d hoped would help DWA recover after it took writedowns on three of its four previous releases. Cowen & Co’s Doug Creutz called Dragon 2‘s performance “somewhat 2-thless” – he figured it would come in closer to $60M — and lowered his ultimate worldwide box office estimate by 20% to $650M. If Dragon doesn’t “significantly grow box office,” then it’s “fair to ask if there are any implications about the strength of DWA’s brand.”
“Mr. Peabody and Sherman” alone cost DWA a $57 million loss. I have no idea what the other two cost but I think we all know what this means: the announcement of a new “Shrek” trilogy any day now. “Shrek” really is the only DWA brand that people trust. Outside of that, DWA means not-as-good-as-Pixar.
Go for it, Hollywood!
Why Am I Not Excited About Two New Spielberg Films?
Things sure have changed. There was a time when the thought of two new Steven Spielberg films would have me counting down the days. No longer. When you look at Spielberg’s output as a director over the past 10 or so years, it kinda kills the enthusiasm.
As far as I’m concerned, except for “Lincoln,” Spielberg hasn’t made a decent film since “War of the Worlds” in 2005 — and both of those were just good, not great. Other than that, you can keep “Munich,” “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the OhMyGawd This Movie Sucks,” “The Adventures of Tintin,” and “War Horse.”
First up is the Untitled Cold War Spy Thriller, which has been scheduled for October 16, 2015. That’s the same date Universal has scheduled the Guillermo del Toro-directed horror film, Crimson Peak. Tom Hanks will star in Spielberg’s spy thriller, which was written by the Coen brothers, based on an original script by Matt Charman. …
Then, on July 1, 2016, Spielberg’s adaptation of the Roald Dahl novel The BFG will be released. …
The BFG was written by Melissa Mathison. Spielberg and Frank Marshall will produce, and Kathleen Kennedy, John Madden and Michael Siegel will executive produce. In the film, a young girl, the Queen of England and a benevolent giant known as the BFG, set out on an adventure to capture the evil, man-eating giants who have been invading the human world.
‘Ray Donovan’ Season Two Trailer
Showtime’s series about Hollywood’s most capable fixer, Ray Donovan, returns for a second season July 12. The first season was terrific; much better than expected. All the actors are first rate, but as the title character, Liev Schreiber is outstanding as always, and as his degenerate father, Jon Voight won his 4th Golden Globe award.
The show is “Entourage” meets “The Sopranos,” and it works.
What an era of television we are living through.
Quick Hits
‘Money Pit’ Mansion Listed for $12.5 Million
How Twitter Killed the Official Movie Site
‘Jersey Boys’ Review: Clint Eastwood’s Jukebox Musical Is Nice, Entertaining, Just Not All That Good
Michael Crichton’s ‘The Great Train Robbery’ Set for Blu-ray Release
14 Movies You Thought Were Good but Actually Were Quite Bad