And here I thought that the Summer Glau robot was Sarah Connor somehow.I always thought TERMINATOR: THE SARAH CONNOR CHRONICLES was mis-sold. Season after season, all the marketing hyped the "Summer Glau as sexy fembot" angle, but that's not really what the show was about. And the cyborg chick wasn't even the main character. (Oddly, Sarah Connor was largely invisible in the print ads for "The Sarah Connor Chronicles.")
I suspect this hurt the show in two ways: People tuning for a show about a sexy fembot we're bound to be disappointed, while people who might have liked what the show really was might not have been turned off by the ads.
In general, it's never a good idea to try to market a movie or a TV show (or a book) as something other than what is. You see this in movie trailers occasionally and it usually means that the studio has lost faith in the product and thinks the only way to make their money back is by "tricking" people into seeing the movie. But this seldom if ever works.
Don't sell a moody character drama as an action movie or feel-good comedy. Don't try to hide the fact that it's a musical, or a western, or whatever. Don't hype it as a star vehicle when the Big Name Star only has a small supporting role. Etc.
I remember hearing somewhere that they were concerned that some moviegoers wouldn't know what "revoked" meant.
Not sure if that's true.
And here I thought that the Summer Glau robot was Sarah Connor somehow.
Kor
I understood it was because they felt people would associate the phrase 'licence revoked' with driving licences rather than the killing variety, and therefore somewhat diminish the film's jeopardy.
Oh, please. It was a film killed by Andrew Stanton being an egomaniac live-action rookie with complete directorial and editing freedom who felt entitled to multiple and costly reshoots because that's how Pixar works in a completely different medium, and who demanded to personally edit the early previews, coupled with a fanatical and preposterous belief that general audiences both knew who John Carter was and were dying to finally see him onscreen. He had no idea what the hell he was doing, and blaming the execs for failing to nurture the corpse of a project is absurd.John Carter had several things going against it. First, it was an orphaned project within Disney; the people who had greenlit it were gone, and the execs who inherited the project had no skin in the game if it failed. Second, it fell afoul of office politics and, essentially, a Disney/Pixar proxy fight; there were people in Disney who wanted to see Andrew Stanton (and, by extension, Pixar) taken down a peg or two, and sinking John Carter served the purpose. And third, the Hollywood press was actively rooting for the film to fail, arising somewhat from points one and two. It was a film killed by politics.
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