WHAT MAKES A HIT MOVIE?
Why are some films hits while others barely even register in the moviegoers mind? Is it all down to advertising and promotion, word of mouth or just plain luck? The answer is that there is never a guarantee that a movie will be a hit and there is definitely no formula to concoct a sure-fire winner at the box office. There are however, five key doctrines that the movie studios follow to give their movie the biggest chance of making money.
1. The Established Fan base
What
all movies have to have to be successful is an air of anticipation around
the project and nothing provides this more than an already established fan
base. Whether they are adaptations of books, comics, plays, computer games
or TV shows, to have an audience already in place is a big step towards making
your movie a hit. For example, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone
has recently become the second highest money making movie of all time, why
because most of the audience was already there after the worldwide success
of J K Rowling's novels. The anticipation for the film was electric guaranteeing
a huge box office opening. Warner Bros, the company who produced the movie,
where so confident in its success that they opened the film in twenty-four
countries around the world on the same day. Once you have that guaranteed
audience the studio can start thinking about money spinning sequels and even
a franchise, e.g. the James Bond movies and Star Trek.
The established fan base doesn't always deliver the big returns however.
Just look at the huge box office failures of movies based on computer games.
For every success like last
year's Tomb Raider there is a Super Mario Bros or a Street
Fighter. The movie based on one of the biggest selling computer games
of all time, Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within performed so poorly
that Square Pictures, the production company that produced the film, has gone
out of business. A sequel is no guarantee of success either. Just look at
the box office disasters Batman & Robin and Speed 2: Cruise Control.
2. The Star Attraction
Star
power alone can build up the anticipation for a movie and the film studios
know this. Fans will go and see a movie just because their favourite star
is the main name on the poster. Stars like Tom Cruise, Julia Roberts, George
Clooney, Mel Gibson, Brad Pitt and Tom Hanks can guarantee a large
opening weekend at the box office just because they are in the movie. This
of course comes at a price, as all of these stars can command huge salaries
of well over $20 million, which is a huge slice of the movie's budget, as
well as percentages of the profits from the film. Upcoming movies like Tom
Cruise's Steven Spielberg directed Minority Report and Tom Hanks' Road
to Perdition will both have huge box office appeal just because of those
two big stars.
Even if a big name star is in the ascendancy but still has the power to demand
high wages, a movie's success can be make or break for the Film company producing
it. For example, Arnold Schwarzenegger still demands wages of over $20 million
even though his
last three movies End of Days, The Sixth Day and most recently Collateral
Damage have all bombed at the US box office. The reason he still gets
these large pay packets is his popularity in Asia, South American and Eastern
Europe. This means that his movies nearly always make a profit and he can
use this as a bargaining tool when thrashing out a contract.
3. Aggressive Advertising
The
advertising and merchandising budgets for movies can be almost as much as
the film itself cost to make. From trailers to billboards and posters to action
figures, everything that can be used to build anticipation for a movie is
utilised by the Film Studios. The original Star Wars movie in 1977
was the first to exploit merchandising as a real advertising tool for the
promotion of the movie. Since then it seems like every big budget movie is
more of an event than just a film. Teaser posters and trailers are now appearing
over a year before the actual movie is due for release. Movie companies are
even attaching trailers from highly anticipated projects to their smaller
budget productions in order to bring attendances up on those films. For example,
the Winona Ryder movie Lost Souls had a much larger opening weekend
than it should have in the UK because The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship
of the Rings teaser trailer was attached to the beginning of the film.
In modern times a new promotional medium has come into play, the Internet.
Nearly every single movie released now has to have a website to accompany
the film. Behind the scenes information, trailers, documentaries, posters
and fan forums are now integral parts of the modern movie website. The first
movie to really utilise this new medium was The Blair Witch Project
in 1999. First launched nearly a year before the movie was released,
the website covered the back-story behind the film and convinced the reader
than the events that the movie showed actually happened. Of course this was
just a publicity stunt but the movie went on to become one of the most profitable
movie of all time. The film showed the importance of the Internet in advertising
and has made it an integral part of the promotional merry-go-round for every
possible hit movie.
4. Publicity or Word of Mouth
Whether
it is good or bad, publicity is an extremely important way of increasing anticipation
for a movie. It could be controversial, scandalous and excessive or positive,
reaffirming and over-hyped but as long as it is drawing attention to the movie,
film companies will embrace it. Movies have seen their opening weekend box
office figures far exceed expectations because of media attention. The recently
released Ali G Indahouse gained publicity after Sacha Baron Cohen,
who plays Ali G, swore on the Radio 1 Breakfast Show. Also demonstrations
by Black Community Groups over calls of racism at the film's Premier bought
the movie more into the public eye. The result was a UK opening weekend total
of £3.23 million, a far greater total than anyone expected.
Over the last few years, the power of fan based Internet movie websites has
grown to such a point that they can make or break a film. The Ain't it
Cool News website, ran by the now legendary Harry Knowles in Austin, Texas
came to prominence in 1997 after director James Cameron told the media that
his movie Titanic wouldn't have as successful without the support of
the site. Previous to the website championing the movie, all the publicity
in the media had been extremely negative. Allegations of cast bust-ups, constant
script re-writes and a budget that was spiralling out of control made the
media come to the conclusion that the movie was going to be another expensive
bomb like
Waterworld was the year before. This all changed after Knowles started posting
very positive reviews of the film which led to a complete turn around in the
picture's fortunes. After an average start at the box office, the audience
for the picture grew and it went on to become the highest grossing film in
movie history. The power of websites can also work against a movie, as Warner
Bros' Batman & Robin found out. The film became part of an Internet
hate campaign which Warner themselves blames the film's failure upon, not
that the movie been absolutely awful had anything to do with of course.
5. Awards
A
movie that receives an award can see this lead to substantial increasing in
box office takings, especially for a smaller budget movie. Been a winner of
a Golden Globe, BAFTA or an Oscar can greatly increasing the appeal of a movie
and bring it more to the public's attention. The recently released small budget
BBC film Iris has gained attention for the performances of it's lead
acting duo of Dame Judy Dench and Jim Broadbent who both received Oscar nominations,
with Jim Broadbent taking home the Best Supporting Actor award. 2001 winner
of Best Picture at the Oscars, A Beautiful Mind has now taken over
$150 million dollars at the US box office alone. A movie about a schizophrenic
mathematician isn't the type of movie you'd pitch for box office success,
but due to strong performances from Russell Crow and Jennifer Connelly and
an award friendly story line, people overcoming a disability, the movie has
won a cornucopia of awards thrusting it into the public domain creating a
lot of interest.
Pushing a movie as a possible award winner can also backfire. Every year
in the US between October and the end of December all the major studios release
their possible award contenders. In 2001 we had Ali, A Beautiful Mind,
Iris, Monster's Ball and In the Bedroom. All
of these gained nominations for various awards but for every successful nominee
or winner there are always notable absentees from the lists. The Shipping
News starring Kevin Spacey, Julianne Moore, Dame Judy Dench and Cate Blanchett
was noticeably missing from the Oscar nominations even after producers Miramax
had spent a lot of money pushing it's award worthiness to Academy voters.
All in all you can never guarantee that a movie is going to be a success, but if you follow one or more of these doctrine you will have a greater success than average.
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