Zombie Jon Snow said:
Liam Neeson...wow. ok.
My thought before seeing anything about this movie was either JK Simmons or Bryan Cranston should play Mark Felt......but it looked pretty good. Just not the casting I would have thought. But it could work....I just hope his daughter isn't kidnapped in the middle of it (distracting).
Quote:
LOS ANGELES Hollywood had a horrible summer.
Between the first weekend in May and Labor Day, a sequel-stuffed period that typically accounts for 40 percent of annual ticket sales, box office revenue in North America totaled $3.8 billion, a 15 percent decline from the same span last year. To find a slower summer, you would have to go back 20 years. Business has been so bad that America's three biggest theater chains have lost roughly $4 billion in market value since May.
TCTTS said:
AliasMan02 said:
Everyone should love it, nerd or not, because Tesla rules and Edison was a self-aggrandizing sociopath.
Have yall heard of Where the Hell is Tesla? Completely ridiculous and awesome book.AliasMan02 said:
Everyone should love it, nerd or not, because Tesla rules and Edison was a self-aggrandizing sociopath.
And my favorite part, which is what we've all known:Quote:
The math is pretty overwhelming in saying there was no (positive or negative) correlation in 2017 between Rotten Tomatoes Scores and box office returns.
The data showed virtually no correlation between Rotten Tomatoes Scores and worldwide box office revenue for 2017 so far: 12% PMCC correlation, and a .009 r-square (meaning there is likely no statistical relationship between the two variables).
Even more surprising, the impact of Rotten Tomatoes scores on opening weekend box office seemed even lower: .08 PMCC score (only 8% correlation), and a -0.001 r-square.
That's for all 2017 titles so far. What about the Summer titles, which the executives quoted by The New York Times complained about?
Nada. Here, either, we did not find any meaningful impact of Rotten Tomatoes scores on total gross for summer movies (May through Labor Day): .07 PMCC score (only 7% correlation), with a -.006 r-square, which is actually less correlation than for the entire 2017 slate.
Quote:
when Hollywood executives complain about Rotten Tomatoes scores, they actually complain about their audiences' tastes, because it's almost the same thing.
This will be interesting to me. I don't see how it can be made without just completely ridiculing Tommy Wiseau. I guess they're ok with that, but it seems kind of savage to me.GiveEmHellBill said:
Oh hai, full trailer.
GiveEmHellBill said:
Oh hai, full trailer.
Furlock Bones said:
you guys are joking right. the disaster artist looks ****ing awful.
....are you serious?Furlock Bones said:
you guys are joking right. the disaster artist looks ****ing awful.
Wrong. The Room was awful. This does not look awful. Please learn the difference.Furlock Bones said:
you guys are joking right. the disaster artist looks ****ing awful.
israeliag said:
This feels like the right place to put this article on the correlation between Rotten Tomatoes driving low-box office numbers (as some execs have claimed). Spoiler alert: there are none:
https://medium.com/@ybergquist/cognitive-hollywood-part-1-data-shows-box-office-economics-in-turmoil-411a4b22f858And my favorite part, which is what we've all known:Quote:
The math is pretty overwhelming in saying there was no (positive or negative) correlation in 2017 between Rotten Tomatoes Scores and box office returns.
The data showed virtually no correlation between Rotten Tomatoes Scores and worldwide box office revenue for 2017 so far: 12% PMCC correlation, and a .009 r-square (meaning there is likely no statistical relationship between the two variables).
Even more surprising, the impact of Rotten Tomatoes scores on opening weekend box office seemed even lower: .08 PMCC score (only 8% correlation), and a -0.001 r-square.
That's for all 2017 titles so far. What about the Summer titles, which the executives quoted by The New York Times complained about?
Nada. Here, either, we did not find any meaningful impact of Rotten Tomatoes scores on total gross for summer movies (May through Labor Day): .07 PMCC score (only 7% correlation), with a -.006 r-square, which is actually less correlation than for the entire 2017 slate.Quote:
when Hollywood executives complain about Rotten Tomatoes scores, they actually complain about their audiences' tastes, because it's almost the same thing.