Author Topic: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything  (Read 2962 times)

vansmack

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30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« on: May 24, 2007, 06:21:00 pm »
On the 30th anniversary of its release, we look back at why George Lucas' space opera changed everything
 By Jim Emerson
 Special to MSN Movies
 
 Thirty years ago, on May 25, 1977, "Star Wars" changed everything. Every once in a while, that's what happens. Something comes along and it makes you realize -- either at the time, or sometime thereafter -- that things after that thing were not the same as things before that thing. Like, for instance, the wheel. Or the Enlightenment. Or The Beatles. Or TiVo.
 
 For 22 years, between the release of the original "Star Wars" film ("Episode IV: A New Hope") and the release of the first prequel ("Episode 1: The Phantom Menace"), the "Star Wars" phenomenon had an impact on American popular culture like nothing else before, or since. A heroic celluloid myth based (according to auteur George Lucas) on Joseph Campbell's studies of cross-cultural archetypes, it was released early in the Carter administration when, as it happened, we really could have used something like that. But it was also a prescient, anti-imperialistic fable in an anti-imperialistic age, with scruffy insurgent freedom fighters (insurgents?) taking on a corrupt authoritarian Empire -- headed by the morally weak, sociopathic Emperor Palpatine and his even more powerful, right-hand iron fist, the dark Lord Darth Cheney -- er, Vader.
 
 More...
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sweetcell

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #1 on: May 24, 2007, 07:18:00 pm »
there was an interesting side-box article in the Economist about how blockbusters of yore differed from today's mega-hits: ticket sales for star wars peaked 11 weeks after it opened.  at first the studio released the movie in a few select theaters, and let the buzz grow.  nowadays, blockbusters have one weekend, maybe two, to make their money before ticket sales drop off precipitously.
 
 EDIT: found the story:
 
 Endless summer
 Apr 26th 2007 | LOS ANGELES
 From The Economist print edition
 
 How the business of making blockbusters has changed
 
 FOR connoisseurs of derivative film-making, the next few months will be a joy. Between early May and mid-August Hollywood will unveil sequels to â??Spider-Manâ?, â??Shrekâ?, â??Harry Potterâ?, â??Rush Hourâ?, â??The Bourne Identityâ?, â??Pirates of the Caribbeanâ?, â??Fantastic Fourâ?, â??Ocean's Elevenâ?, â??Die Hardâ? and â??Bruce Almightyâ?. Admittedly, not all of this summer's big-budget films are based on other films. â??The Simpsonsâ? and â??Transformersâ? are based on television programmes.
 
 It is safe to predict that none of these films will be artistically adventurous. Reviewers will dislike them, as they have disliked crowd-pleasing films since 1914, when a critic bemoaned â??the terrible sense of rush and hurry and flying aboutâ? in contemporary cinema. But none of this concerns the people who produce such films. They know that blockbusters draw punters to cinemas and DVD racks more reliably than any other kind of film.
 
 Since 1975, when â??Jawsâ? chewed up the competition, Hollywood has increasingly relied on summer and Christmas blockbusters to tide it through leaner months. The summer season, which used to begin in June, has crept forward to early May. Production and marketing budgets have mushroomed. â??Spider-Man 3â? is said to have cost more than $300m, or half as much again as â??Titanicâ?, the price of which terrified Fox executives in 1997. If few are so alarmed these days, it is because the economics of blockbusters have changed.
 
 To see how, compare the performance of two films, both released in late May. â??Indiana Jones and the Last Crusadeâ?, which appeared in 1989, and â??X-Men: the Last Standâ?, released last year, appealed to the same broad audience of children, teenagers and indulgent parents. Each was the third instalment of a three-part series. They were both successful, earning almost exactly the same in real terms during their first two months in American cinemas.
 
 But their lives at the box office were dramatically different (see chart). â??Last Crusadeâ? had a healthy opening weekend and a slow decline. â??X-Menâ?, by contrast, came and went in a flash. It earned $123m in just four days, more than in the remaining four months of its run.
   <img src="http://www.economist.com/images/20070428/CWB280.gif" alt=" - " />
 Both films are typical of their time. The first modern blockbusters, such as â??Jawsâ? and â??Star Warsâ?, were released on a few screens and grew slowly (ticket sales for â??Star Warsâ? peaked in the 11th week). Over the years the hillock of box-office revenues became a downward slope, then a cliff face. Given this year's crowded schedule, the drop-offs will be vertiginous.
 
 One reason is growing capacity. The number of cinema screens in America rose from 29,700 in 1996 to 39,700 last year. Because the supply of seats is greater than the potential weekend audience for almost any film, marketing campaigns aim to lure customers en masse before the next big film appears. These days blockbusters form an orderly queue, rarely competing on the same weekend.
 
 Another reason is the growing importance of the small screen. American cinema-goers account for no more than a quarter of a film's total revenues. Foreign audiences supply another quarter, with the remaining half coming from television, product licensing andâ??the biggest single contributor by farâ??sales of DVDs. Last year a silver disc appeared, on average, just four months and eight days after the same film opened in cinemas, according to the National Association of Theatre Ownersâ??five weeks sooner than in 2002.
 
 Oddly, this has made the opening weekend's box-office sales more important. As Jim Gianopulos, the co-chairman of Fox, puts it, the theatrical release of a film now represents the launch of a product that will be consumed in a variety of forms. The first few days' tally is not just a reliable predictor of later DVD and television sales; it is, in effect, an advertisement for them. Lest anybody fail to notice, studios place advertisements in newspapers and trade magazines pointing out how well their films are doing.
 
 The clearest sign that big-budget sequels are dependable is that the studios risk their own money on them. Hedge funds are encouraged to invest in most films, but not big franchises such as â??Harry Potterâ? or â??Pirates of the Caribbeanâ?. And blockbusters have other advantages. Cinemas are so desperate for them that they can often be persuaded to show less promising fare as well. Trailers that run before big movies reach huge audiences. A hit also gives studios licence to swagger.
 
 A few clouds have begun to drift over the summer skies, however. One problem is that DVD sales, which boosted profits for a decade, are slowing. Between 1997 and 2002 sales of DVDs in America grew by 50% or more each year, according to the Digital Entertainment Group. But they were flat in America last year and revenues fell in Britain and Germany. New formats such as Blu-ray, HD-DVD and online downloads have not enticed many buyers.
 
 Another headache is that the studios' partners are driving harder bargains. Having worked out that DVDs are profitable, stars are demandingâ??although not always gettingâ??a larger share of â??back-endâ? sales. Cinemas, which used to be paid using complex formulae that entitled them to a greater share of box-office receipts the longer a film stayed open (an arrangement that suited the studios just fine, given the short lives of many films), are now more likely to receive a fixed share of the total sum. Consolidation in recent years has made them tougher.
 
 The biggest problem, though, is the growing sums being wagered each weekend. Blockbusters have always been global products, but the threat of piracy and the rapid spread of opinion on the internet, which can quickly inform cinema-goers around the world if a film is a turkey, means they are now likely to be released almost simultaneously everywhere. â??Spider-Man 3â?, for example, will open in China, France, Germany and Japan on May 1st, then migrate to America and Britain three days later. Stars, who can be in only one place at once, cannot provide much publicity, and marketing campaigns have to get it right first time. The potential for catastrophic error has never been greater. If this summer's big gambles fail, expect a lot of hand-wringing and a retreatâ??though probably only a temporary oneâ??from the blockbuster model.
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renton007

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #2 on: May 25, 2007, 07:57:00 am »
I thought this thread was going to be about Annie Hall.

Frank Gallagher

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #3 on: May 25, 2007, 08:13:00 am »
It didn't change shit for me...still haven't seen it, or ET for that matter.

nkotb

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #4 on: May 25, 2007, 09:31:00 am »
If my wifi at home was working, I would've been the one to start this thread   :(  
 
 Anyone geared up for a stamp shopping spree today?

beetsnotbeats

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #5 on: May 25, 2007, 09:41:00 am »
It was the last movie I saw before moving from the West coast to the East. It's kinda weird for me that my last cultural connection to home is that movie, especially since it was my dad's satellite project that brought us here.

Darth Ed

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #6 on: May 25, 2007, 10:16:00 am »
May the Force be with you!

Bags

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #7 on: May 25, 2007, 10:36:00 am »
I remember seeing this SO well.  I had just turned 10, my sister was 6.  My Dad took us.  We were at the mall before the movies, and in a department store a sales woman was talking to us and my Dad said we were going to see Star Wars.  The sales woman told me how exciting that was, wasn't I excited?  And I retorted, kind of pouting and stomping my feet a little, "I don't want to go, I don't like war movies.  It's a Dad movie."
 
 Of course I adored it, saw it several times (which I think was less usual back then), and was at the midnight show on the opening Wednesday night for Return of the Jedi.

Brian_Wallace

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #8 on: May 25, 2007, 11:13:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by Roadbike Mankie:
  It didn't change shit for me...still haven't seen it, or ET for that matter.
Ah, but how many times have you seen "Whitnail and I," "Get Carter," "Quadrophenia" or "Alfie?"
 
 Brian

thirsty moore

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #9 on: May 25, 2007, 11:15:00 am »
Withnail: What are you going to do with those?
 
 Danny: The joint I am about to roll requires a craftsman and can utilise up to twelve skins. It is called a Camberwell carrot.
 
 Marwood: It's impossible to use twelve papers on one joint.
 
 Danny: It is impossible to roll a Camberwell carrot with anything less.
 
 Withnail: Who says it's a Camberwell carrot?
 
 Danny: I do. I invented it in Camberwell and it looks like a carrot.
 
 Danny: This will tend to make you very high.
 
Quote
Originally posted by Brian_Walalce:
 Ah, but how many times have you seen "Whitnail and I," "Get Carter," "Quadrophenia" or "Alfie?"
 
 Brian

Frank Gallagher

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #10 on: May 25, 2007, 11:45:00 am »
Quote
Originally posted by Brian_Walalce:
   
Quote
Originally posted by Roadbike Mankie:
  It didn't change shit for me...still haven't seen it, or ET for that matter.
Ah, but how many times have you seen "Whitnail and I," "Get Carter," "Quadrophenia" or "Alfie?"
 
 Brian [/b]
Quadrophenia 1.5 times. Once when it came out then I saw about 1/2 of it one night on a cable channel when I was half drunk.
 
 The others.....never. Not a big movie fan so it wasn't a doodle movie bashing thing. And when I do watch movies it tends to be the independent low budget stuff. Blockbuster type movies don't really appeal to me.

thirsty moore

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #11 on: May 25, 2007, 11:55:00 am »
To each their own.  Withnail and I is a cult classic.  Highly recommended.  Not sure if it qualifies as low budget though.
 
 
Quote
Originally posted by Roadbike Mankie:
  The others.....never. Not a big movie fan so it wasn't a doodle movie bashing thing. And when I do watch movies it tends to be the independent low budget stuff. Blockbuster type movies don't really appeal to me.

sweetcell

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #12 on: May 25, 2007, 12:34:00 pm »
*THREADJACK*
 
 wow, i'm impressed - two people here who know  withnail and i???  don't think i've ever come across an american who's ever heard of it (i'm assuming you're both american, could be wrong).  cool.
 
 i've only ever seen it once, with friends in amsterdam.  a friend of mine, an eton drop-out, was horrified to learn that i had never seen it - so he did a number on me (actually, a number and two letters) and made me watch it.  they got great entertainment out of watching me watch the movie... i was beyond confused.  a very memorable experience, but i really should watch it again.
 
 and shocker - of all the lines econo could quote from the movie, he had to pick one about skinning up    :)
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Frank Gallagher

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #13 on: May 25, 2007, 12:56:00 pm »
I'll look out for Withnal and I. Another good movie that not many  have heard about is "Into the west"....you might find it in the kids section, but it's a great movie and very well acted. Don't be put off by it being classified as a kids movie.

vansmack

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Re: 30 years ago, one movie changed everything
« Reply #14 on: May 25, 2007, 01:06:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by nkotb:
  If my wifi at home was working, I would've been the one to start this thread    :(  
 
I should have waited until today, but I knew that if I did, you guys would be three hours ahead of me and I just couldn't stomach that, so I posted it yesterday after everyone got off work on the East Coast.  
 
 I'm debating spending Sunday watching 1100 miles of autoracing or all 6 movies back-to-back.
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