Top Ten TV series??? — 180 Proof
What do you think of the anime Death Note? — Xanatos
Frankly, I like L's cleverness and seductive voice most of all. — Xanatos
It's statistical reasoning, which makes films so bad. — ssu
The studios no longer make movies primarily to attract and please moviegoers;
they make movies in such a way as to get as much as possible from prearranged
and anticipated deals. Every picture (allowing for a few exceptions) is cast and planned
in terms of those deals. Though the studio is happy when it has a box-office hit, it isn’t
terribly concerned about the people who buy tickets and come out grumbling. They
don’t grumble very loudly anyway, because even the lumpiest pictures are generally an
improvement over television; at least, they’re always bigger. TV accustoms people to not
expecting much, and because of the new prearranged deals they’re not getting very
much. There is a quid pro quo for a big advance sale to television theaters: the project
must be from a fat, dumb bestseller about an international jewel heist or a skyjacking
that involves a planeload of the rich and famous, or be a thinly disguised showbusiness
biography of someone who came to an appallingly wretched end, or have an easily
paraphrasable theme, preferably something that can be done justice to in a sentence
and brings to mind the hits of the past. How else could you entice buyers? Certainly
not with something unfamiliar, original. They feel safe with big-star packages, with
chase thrillers, with known ingredients. For a big overseas sale, you must have “international” stars performers who are known—such as Sophia Loren, Richard Burton,
Candice Bergen, Roger Moore, Eastwood, Burt Reynolds, Alain Delon, Charles Bronson, Steve McQueen. And you should probably avoid complexities: Much of the new
overseas audience is subliterate. For a big advance sale to worldwide television, a movie
should also be innocuous: it shouldn’t raise any hackles, either by strong language or by
a controversial theme.
Earlier it was the idea that the studios have the "blockbusters" and then you can dare to have something interesting on a "smaller" budget.For sure. But this was often at play, Pauline Kael made a similar argument over 40 years ago in 'Why Are Movies So bad? Or, The Numbers'. She was politically incorrect and brazen. Obviously written before TV got good. — Tom Storm
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