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High-Tech Word of Mouth Maims Movies in a Flash by Decius at 8:29 am EDT, Aug 19, 2003 |
] "In the old days, there used to be a term, 'buying your ] gross,' " said Rick Sands, chief operating officer at ] Miramax, referring to the millions of dollars studios ] throw at a movie to ensure a big opening weekend. ] ] "You could buy your gross for the weekend and overcome ] bad word of mouth, because it took time to filter out ] into the general audience," he said. "Those days are ] over. Today, there is no fooling the public." |
High-Tech Word of Mouth Maims Movies in a Flash by bucy at 1:37 pm EDT, Aug 19, 2003 |
] "Make a good movie and you win. Make a crappy movie and ] you lose." Finally, another stupid IP industry is getting clued to the fact that they are not entitled to put out shitty product and make money anyway. |
High-Tech Word of Mouth Maims Movies in a Flash by Rattle at 3:51 pm EDT, Aug 19, 2003 |
] "In the old days, there used to be a term, 'buying your ] gross,' " said Rick Sands, chief operating officer at ] Miramax, referring to the millions of dollars studios ] throw at a movie to ensure a big opening weekend. ] ] "You could buy your gross for the weekend and overcome ] bad word of mouth, because it took time to filter out ] into the general audience," he said. "Those days are ] over. Today, there is no fooling the public." ] Added Tom Sherak, a partner at Revolution Studios, which ] produced the doomed picture: "Remember that theory that ] any publicity is good publicity? It's not true anymore. ] Bad publicity and extended bad publicity kills the movie ] that much faster." |
High-Tech Word of Mouth Maims Movies in a Flash by Jeremy at 11:14 pm EDT, Aug 19, 2003 |
"In the old days, there used to be a term, 'buying your gross,'" said Rick Sands, chief operating officer at Miramax, referring to the millions of dollars studios throw at a movie to ensure a big opening weekend. "You could buy your gross for the weekend and overcome bad word of mouth, because it took time to filter out into the general audience," he said. "Those days are over. Today, there is no fooling the public." "Gigli" was in a class by itself, plunging faster than the scariest summer thrill ride a disastrous $3.7-million opening weekend, followed by a record-breaking drop of 81.9%. |
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