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Post a Comment On: Mayerson on Animation

"John Carter and the Gods of Hollywood"

11 Comments -

1 – 11 of 11
Blogger Angela Entzminger said...

This is an excellent evaluation of the behind the scenes action surrounding "John Carter." Our professional practices animation class (basically a business class for animation majors) discussed the issues surrounding this film just last week. It is good to know about the inner workings of the industry as animators so that we can be better prepared. Thank you for sharing.

March 03, 2013 5:33 PM

Blogger S. Stephani Soejono said...

Thank you for the article :D I have been waiting awhile for this

March 04, 2013 9:06 AM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Whatever one thinks of the movie, the book is a bit too "fan-boy" and un-biased for it's own good. That the Disney studio dropped the ball on the marketing isn't entirely uncommon in Hollywood, but decisions like that aren't made in an entire void. There was just nothing for the audience to really care about; no stakes, either from a character or a plot point of view. No one to root for. The book continually glosses over the films serious flaws in this regard, and instead spends it's time trying to convince a world that rejected it that they're wrong. It's just not that simplistic, and their argument is weakened by their fan-boy fanaticism.

March 05, 2013 12:12 AM

Blogger Thad said...

I've yet to read this book, but I have to add that I don't get all the hate over JOHN CARTER as a movie. At its worst, it's a less endearing STAR WARS. No better, no worse. It definitely could not have made SW or WALL-E like numbers, even with the fiercest marketing, but the fashion in which it bombed seemed like deliberate self-sabotage all along.

March 05, 2013 11:28 AM

Anonymous Alberto said...

After finishing the book I'm left with the same question I had before I started it: How on earth did the manage to spend $100 million on such a non-marketing campaign?

March 06, 2013 4:20 AM

Blogger Michael Sporn said...

Unfortunately, after wasting an hour on the movie (I walked out of it), I wouldn't wsste another five minutes on the book. I'm curious to see what Disney does with their next $260 million fiasco, the new Wizard of Oz with star, "John Franco" opening this weekend.

March 06, 2013 2:12 PM

Blogger SCOTT CAPLE said...

Mark,

Just spent (wasted) a hour today reading about the teardown of the 20 Thousand Leagues Ride at Disney world, a similar story of corporate ineptitude at the House of Mouse.
But they ultimately have the power; fandom don't count for much.

What were some other major film failures due to similar circumstances?

March 07, 2013 10:40 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

It makes perfect sense that they tore down the 20 Thousand Leagues ride at Disneyworld. It's very low capacity, takes up a lot of real estate, and is wildly expensive to keep up. I don't agree with it, but do understand it!

No one asked for a john carter movie. Very few people even know or care anything about it. The bigger question is why Disney spent $280 million on a novice director with an apparently massive, unjustified ego with virtually no studio supervision.

March 07, 2013 11:09 PM

Blogger David said...

Anony. at March 07, 2013 11:09 PM:

How could Andrew Stanton be considered a "novice" director?

Director of Finding Nemo , Wall-E, co-director of A Bugs Life . All of them successful films.

March 08, 2013 4:48 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Live action. And he was one of two directors on finding Nemo.

March 08, 2013 9:51 PM

Blogger Shaun Firth said...

John Carter is a very entertaining movie. Should they have spent $250 million on it's production? No. But as far as being unknown to most people, nobody had ever heard of Han Solo or Luke Skywalker. And how many BILLION dollars has that franchise made? A more modest budget and execs who cared about the film and the story might have been very different. It's always like this in Hollywood. The new guys make sure the old guys movie fails to prove their hiring was not a mistake. Of course in a world where a film has to make $80 million in the first three days to be considered a success, this story is more likely to become the norm than an outlier. Oh, and it's a much better movie than John Franco's Wizard of Oz!

February 11, 2014 5:26 PM

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