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Sucker Punch (Film 2011) Grading/Discussion

Grade The Film!


  • Total voters
    45
  • Poll closed .
lol - Diary of a Wimpy Kid took in more cash than this movie this weekend. Whoops! I think Zach Snyder may be done...
Box office intake doesn't equate to which was the better movie. It was a fun movie, and well worth the price of admission.

Edit: also, I wish people would stop comparing this to video games. From what I've heard of this movie, most video games have more characterization and story.
:rolleyes:
 
I never said anything about box office returns equating to quality. I just think it's funny that this movie had so little interest in it that Wimpy Kid beat it.

I'm guessing there are some second thoughts about having Snyder on Superman now that a movie that cost $82 million to make only brought in $19 million on its opening weekend.
 
Movies with built in fan bases like Superman and Wimpy Kid have and advantage at the outset.
 
I would like to see the movie do well because I felt Snyder delivered a good one. However I'm not too concerned about the box office, I saw the movie, I enjoyed it, it's not like the movie can all of a sudden be unmade.
 
I just came back from seeing it. The theater was a third full which hurt the atmosphere a bit but people were feeling it. I loved it. I had some minor problems with the acting, and pacing but otherwise it pretty much is as advertised. I was psyched going in and satisfied coming out so I'm pretty happy. I can't wait to see what Snyder does with "Superman" visually. He's certainly comfortably in his element in "Sucker Punch". I also loved all the life messages from Babydoll's sensei (Scott Glenn). I really want to see a director's cut of this film.
 
It will be some time before I see this...but I have a feeling it will do better on DVD...based on everything I have read so far. It is the end of March and it does take more to get people out to the theater these days. ;)
 
Well it is a sequel. All the kids who saw the first one will no doubt want to see the second. If that's not the definition of a built in fanbase I don't know what is.
 
Well, it's a bit like saying the Beethoven movies have a built in fan base. I won't argue Superman at all, but Wimpy Kids' fan base is pretty wimpy.
 
Well, it's a bit like saying the Beethoven movies have a built in fan base. I won't argue Superman at all, but Wimpy Kids' fan base is pretty wimpy.

Beethoven (as far as I know) wasn't the movie version of the current best selling kids book series.
 
Well, it's a bit like saying the Beethoven movies have a built in fan base. I won't argue Superman at all, but Wimpy Kids' fan base is pretty wimpy.

Beethoven (as far as I know) wasn't the movie version of the current best selling kids book series.

No, but previous successful films in a series constitute a basis for a franchise just as well.

Supposedly this weekend's performance was about what the studio expected, internally, for Sucker Punch - so even if there were such a simplistic equation as "we'll drop the director on our just-about-to-launch movie because his current flick underperformed," the effect of Sucker Punch on Warners' evaluation of Snyder had already been discounted.
 
Supposedly this weekend's performance was about what the studio expected, internally, for Sucker Punch

Sounds like spin - why would they green-lit a movie and then pump so much money into marketing (right upto release) if they were expecting such a terrible return? What really going to kill this is not the savage critics reviews but that the WOM from audiences is so dire.

Having said that, I doubt it makes any difference to the Superman situation.
 
Supposedly this weekend's performance was about what the studio expected, internally, for Sucker Punch

Sounds like spin...why would they green-lit a movie and then pump so much money into marketing (right upto release) if they were expecting such a terrible return?

No, this is what folks were supposedly saying behind the scenes. As for the rest, there's a difference between what they may have expected when they budgeted and greenlighted the film and what they were expecting by the time it was finished, screened and about to be released. A film like this that you make an effort to market may well fail, but if you don't spend the money to market it you're virtually guaranteeing that it will tank. The situation has to be pretty dire before an exec will take the responsibility of saying "I'm spiking our big budget movie."
 
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