I am still a fan of a Thanksgiving weekend release. Lots of people might want a diversion from overspending and overeating.
yes that's a good point. Both 25th and 50th movies at Xmas (just keep away from Avatar and Star Wars!)December 2016 seems reasonable. And it'd be kind of amusing, in that the 25th anniversary movie was released in December 1991, too. Christmas presents every anniversary.
OK, maybe I'm the only person who finds that amusing, I don't know.
There's nothing about my avatar which is in any way about you. If you're referring to the custom title underneath my username, that hasn't changed in seven years, so it's not about you, either....
Settle down, take some time to familiarize yourself with the rules and FAQ, learn how things are done here, learn how to use Multi-Quote... things like that.
Oh... and stop baiting other posters.
thanks for the tips! but kinda tough to take from the guy who mocks me with his avatar (?)
And after I'd just said something about not baiting other posters, here you are again, baiting other posters. That'll earn you a warning for trolling. Comments to PM (which means 'Refrain from making any further smart-ass comebacks in open threads when the moderator asks you to do something.')why are all you BR-lovers in the "Hated it" thread? perhaps there is a thread more suited for you? so you don't have try and chase me away from this one?
That's your third consecutive post, after you've been asked several times in the last day to refrain from triple-posting.can any of you friendly helpful people give me a link to the FAQ in question? 10-Q =)
I am still a fan of a Thanksgiving weekend release. Lots of people might want a diversion from overspending and overeating.
I think trying to release a film around the releases of other films is going to end up being a futile practice.
Movie-going is bound to change a lot in the next five years. So much so, that I think studios and theaters are going to have to make some changes.
With both Marvel and DC opening the flood gates and new real Star Wars (and not just the main franchise), there's just going to be too much to compete with.
Plus there's going to be at least two more Avatars. More Terminators and Apes. More Pirates. The Turtles and G.I. Joe. More F&F. Bond is still kicking strong. As is Bourne.
There's also the real possibility that the Jurassic Park, Mad Max, nuGhostbusters, Peter Pan, Warcraft, and the new King Arthur series could all become tent poles.
In any case, 2015-2020 will be an era where there will literally be a major genre release every weekend. People well have an idea of what they're going to go out to the theatre for in any given year way ahead of time. So it'll be a little silly for a studio to try and "pick" a release date hoping it will help ticket sales.
The best they can do is put their best effort forward and hope to generate buzz. Paramount has always been a bit sluggish about promoting Trek. That is going to have to change, it will the deciding factor of how ST13 and beyond performs.
Yes, all well said. And I think that means that they need to pull out all the stops on this one.The best they can do is put their best effort forward and hope to generate buzz. Paramount has always been a bit sluggish about promoting Trek. That is going to have to change, it will the deciding factor of how ST13 and beyond performs.
I think trying to release a film around the releases of other films is going to end up being a futile practice.
Movie-going is bound to change a lot in the next five years. So much so, that I think studios and theaters are going to have to make some changes.
With both Marvel and DC opening the flood gates and new real Star Wars (and not just the main franchise), there's just going to be too much to compete with.
Plus there's going to be at least two more Avatars. More Terminators and Apes. More Pirates. The Turtles and G.I. Joe. More F&F. Bond is still kicking strong. As is Bourne.
There's also the real possibility that the Jurassic Park, Mad Max, nuGhostbusters, Peter Pan, Warcraft, and the new King Arthur series could all become tent poles.
In any case, 2015-2020 will be an era where there will literally be a major genre release every weekend. People well have an idea of what they're going to go out to the theatre for in any given year way ahead of time. So it'll be a little silly for a studio to try and "pick" a release date hoping it will help ticket sales.
The best they can do is put their best effort forward and hope to generate buzz. Paramount has always been a bit sluggish about promoting Trek. That is going to have to change, it will the deciding factor of how ST13 and beyond performs.
I tend to agree. It will be very difficult to schedule a release around other major ones, especially if other release dates also shift. On the other hand, I'm less sure nuTrek III will compete with a lot of these titles... maybe I'm being to narrow minded here, but would a Bourne release on the same weekend as Trek really be a problem?
They need to put the same effort into it that toy companies once did on Saturday Morning cartoon commercials:Yes, all well said. And I think that means that they need to pull out all the stops on this one.The best they can do is put their best effort forward and hope to generate buzz. Paramount has always been a bit sluggish about promoting Trek. That is going to have to change, it will the deciding factor of how ST13 and beyond performs.
I think trying to release a film around the releases of other films is going to end up being a futile practice.
Movie-going is bound to change a lot in the next five years. So much so, that I think studios and theaters are going to have to make some changes.
With both Marvel and DC opening the flood gates and new real Star Wars (and not just the main franchise), there's just going to be too much to compete with.
Plus there's going to be at least two more Avatars. More Terminators and Apes. More Pirates. The Turtles and G.I. Joe. More F&F. Bond is still kicking strong. As is Bourne.
There's also the real possibility that the Jurassic Park, Mad Max, nuGhostbusters, Peter Pan, Warcraft, and the new King Arthur series could all become tent poles.
In any case, 2015-2020 will be an era where there will literally be a major genre release every weekend. People well have an idea of what they're going to go out to the theatre for in any given year way ahead of time. So it'll be a little silly for a studio to try and "pick" a release date hoping it will help ticket sales.
The best they can do is put their best effort forward and hope to generate buzz. Paramount has always been a bit sluggish about promoting Trek. That is going to have to change, it will the deciding factor of how ST13 and beyond performs.
They need to put the same effort into it that toy companies once did on Saturday Morning cartoon commercials:Yes, all well said. And I think that means that they need to pull out all the stops on this one.The best they can do is put their best effort forward and hope to generate buzz. Paramount has always been a bit sluggish about promoting Trek. That is going to have to change, it will the deciding factor of how ST13 and beyond performs.
"YOU WANT THIS! You NEED this! It is THE MOST AWESOME THING IN THE WORLD! And if you don't have it, YOU'RE MISSING OUT ON THE BEST THING EVER!"
Do it that way, and people won't be able to resist.
That looks like a lot of hyperbole. Sources for: Paramount has no vision, little mindshare, Tranformers is biggest, there's a franchise "war"?Frankly, I don't know what to believe. I've been following the twists and turns of ST3 and the only thing I'm sure of is that Paramount has no vision for Star Trek and got very lucky that Bad Robot agreed to produce the reboots.
From a purely business perspective, Paramount has very little mindshare with moviegoers--Transformers is the biggest they've got, and I'm not discounting that--but they're mostly losing the franchise wars.
Frankly, I don't know what to believe. I've been following the twists and turns of ST3 and the only thing I'm sure of is that Paramount has no vision for Star Trek and got very lucky that Bad Robot agreed to produce the reboots.
Frankly, I don't know what to believe. I've been following the twists and turns of ST3 and the only thing I'm sure of is that Paramount has no vision for Star Trek and got very lucky that Bad Robot agreed to produce the reboots.
I don't agree with this post. It is possible that Paramount has a vision you don't agree with, but doubtful that they have no vision at all.
Large movie studios "vision" is to make films that are profitable, culturally engaging (not significant - engaging) and popular enough to build a franchise.
What "vision" did you expect them to have?
I get your point TracerBullet, and the only answer I have is that there are obvious reasons why Disney is a monstrous entertainment juggernaut and Paramount is not.
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