2004
Poor for Movies by: Ryan
Parsons Here is a case in point- 2004
was a strange, if not bad, year for movies.
Now, I'm not talking about the quality of
films, they were probably right on par.
But, Hollywood has been growing scared.
Scared to create films that fall away from
standard conventions and afraid to try films
that may tilt a couple heads or raise a
few brows. If it wasn't for a few HUGE films
in 2004, including some that distributors
were afraid of, everybody may have felt
that Hollywood was losing us. However, it
seems that Hollywood is willing to turn
a cheek and come stronger than it ever has
this century [never mind Lord of the Rings]
with the bringing in of 2005.
2004 Poor for Movies
I can understand how it may be hard to
fathom that Hollywood did not have one of
its best years during 2004. Sure, the film
companies were still able to pull in film
revenues with a little over nine billion,
but ticket sales were actually DOWN by a
startling two percent. Now, I know this
doesn't sound like much, but it is! For
the year of 2004, distributors were planning
on conquering the box offices with films
such as Troy, Alexander, The Whole Ten Yards,
The Village and Van Helsing. However, all
of these films flopped [Van Helsing is doing
great with DVD though]. No matter how impressive
the battles or sequences, audiences left
the theatres feeling unsatisfied. So what
was wrong with the films? And who saved
2004?
Four of the biggest hitters of 2004 came
out of either CG animation or children's
tales. Shrek 2 began with a bang and was
able to gross somewhere just under $450
million in ticket sales. Then we had Pixar's
The Incredibles, which proved that animated
films with adult-style action and subject
matter can still be successful [~$275 million
gross]. Last of the animations was Spider-Man
2 [the fights were almost entirely animated].
I can call this an animation as the fight
scenes were well animated and the film seemed
to run like a perfect animated comic [~$370
million gross]. Harry Potter and the Prisoner
of Azkaban, based of the 'childrens' book
[I beg to differ], couldn't lose with a
darker atmosphere set up by Alfonso Cuaron
[pulled in $250 million]. Obviously, the
four listed films were expected to do well
in the theatres and all three performed
gracefully. But what about the films that
nobody wanted or were afraid to touch?
The two films that were handled like boiling
water were Mel Gibson's Passion of the Christ
and Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11. Even
though these films caused a lot of tension
amidst their distributors [Einstein was
pissed!], the two films managed to pull
just under a combined $500 million in ticket
sales. So that would make five big blockbusters
for the year; not nearly enough. While Passion
and Fahrenheit were more than plesent surprises,
what about the other films?
The best thing to come out of 2004 is the
amount of surprise hits that were able to
maintain some theatre presence longer than
just opening weekend. The only thing that
hurt most the surprise hits for 2004 was
the invisible barrier that would not allow
a lot of films to break the $100 million
mark. Here are some of the films that were
able to break that mark [with a brief thought
on how they were]:
- Shark Tale- I would hope this out of
a high cast CGI animation
- I, Robot- I still don't know if I liked
this film or not. Seemed a little rushed.
- National Treasure- One of the best surprise
films all year.
- The Village- Only got passed $100 million
thanks to hype.
Luckily, Hollywood did not have to rely
on only these films. Even though the industry
hoped to have at least double the number
of films to get passed the $100 million
mark, there were some other sleeper films
that helped maintain high 2004 numbers.
Some of these films include Mean Girls [a
teenie bopper that anybody could like],
Man on Fire, and The Notebook, Friday Night
Lights and Napoleon Dynamite.
What's Wrong with Movies in 2004?
Eternal Sunshine takes you on a journey
through love and the mind. The best example
to give for what happened to movies in 2004
is the upcoming Academy Awards. Take a close
look at the nominated films, what we have
are dramas and bio-pics. People are losing
interest; our top rated films are the ones
that few people saw. We don't have a Lord
of the Rings this year, or any other film
that people want to sit down and root for.
Want further proof? Why do you think Chris
Rock is stepping in as host in order to
atract a younger crowd?
Also, where the hell is Eternal Sunshine
for the Spotless Mind? I know it has a few
nominations, but it deserves a few more.
The film, starring Jim Carrey, only grossed
$34 million in ticket sales [domestically]
and was probably one of the most unique
and plain out cool films of the year. Forget
the biographies and the straight forward
dramas, Spotless offers up an extremely
unique outlook on love and the new ways
to handle it. And, mind you, it falls entirely
away from the simple conventions overly
used in films during 2004.
In conclusion-- Hollywood needs to get
people back in the theatres and buying tickets
for films that deserve hyped attention.
The best way to do this is by creating blockbusters
that can actually remain in theatres longer
than an opening weekend or two. Viewers
are tired of films that just go through
the motions and are now seeking something
extremely polished or unique. Films of 2004
had lost the ability of 'word of mouth',
but I expect that 2005 should regain all
of this-- as Hollywood now seems ready to
take some chances.
About The Author
Ryan Parsons is the owner of the
Movie Entertainment Site CanMag.Com.
All articles can be reposted by permission
with a link back to CanMag.Com.
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