首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Hollywood "Globalized" When director Adam McKay pitched a sequel (续集) to his 2004 hit movie Anchorman, he thought it would b
Hollywood "Globalized" When director Adam McKay pitched a sequel (续集) to his 2004 hit movie Anchorman, he thought it would b
admin
2012-08-05
77
问题
Hollywood "Globalized"
When director Adam McKay pitched a sequel (续集) to his 2004 hit movie Anchorman, he thought it would be a no-brainer for Hollywood.
The $ 20 million comedy grossed more than $ 90 million at the box office. But only $ 5 million of that came from ticket sales abroad. Paramount Pictures refused the sequel this spring, fearing the comedy’s uniquely American brand of humor wouldn’t play abroad.
"At the end of the day, the economics of the business have changed—there is so much more pressure to play globally, and we couldn’t fight that," says Mr. McKay.
International Box Office
The rising power of international audiences is a sea change for Hollywood. Decades ago, a movie’s foreign box office barely registered with studio executives. Now, foreign ticket sales represent nearly 68% of the roughly $ 32 billion global film market, up from roughly 58% a decade ago, according to Screen Digest Cinema Intelligence Service.
The result is that one of the most American of products is now being retooled to suit foreign tastes. Studios have begun to cast foreign actors in American-themed blockbusters (大片) like G.I. Joe. Scripts are being rewritten to lure global audiences. And studios are cutting back on standard Hollywood fare like romantic comedies because foreign movie-goers often don’t find American jokes all that funny. Several Hollywood studios have gone as far as financing, producing and marketing original movies for markets like South Korea and Brazil.
"We need to make movies that have the ability to break out internationally," says Rob Moore, vice chairman of Paramount Pictures. "That’s the only way to make the economic puzzle of film production work today."
The rise of the international box office has as much to do with a shifting global economy as with the evolution of the movie business. For years, Hollywood’s bottom line was propped up by double-digit growth in DVD sales. Dwindling (缩减) in-theater audiences in North America also have contributed to the shift.
Another factor: Regions from Asia to Eastern Europe went on a credit-fueled building boom, erecting shopping malls—often with multiplexes attached.
Local Films
IMAX Corp. has opened 66 big-screen theaters abroad in the last three years, including 25 in Asia to increase the company’s brand awareness in Asia.
Satisfying foreign audiences has been tricky for Hollywood. Years ago, audiences in South Korea would faithfully go to the multiplex to watch movies that were written, produced, and cast out of Hollywood. Now, increasingly sophisticated local films are giving Hollywood a run for its money.
In South Korea, ticket sales to local movies accounted for about 10% or 20% of box-office revenue in the 1990s. Hollywood movies grabbed the lion’s share. Now, local fare makes up nearly 50% of South Korean ticket sales, according to Screen Digest.
In 2008, veteran film executive Sanford Panitch was shocked when a Twentieth Century Fox film he worked on called "Jumper" was nearly eclipsed (衰落) in South Korea by a local crime thriller called The Chaser.
Just a few months later, Mr. Panitch was plucked to head up the studio’s new Fox International Productions division. Fox, noticing that local films were eating up more of the foreign box office, had become worried about its ability to reach up-and-coming markets with its Hollywood fare. Fox set up the new division so it could start developing, producing, and distributing local-language movies for those countries.
Mr. Panitch says he sometimes uses Fox’s vast array of film production resources like relationships with special-effects companies to dress up foreign films. But he says it’s more important to draw on local producers and their expertise to make films that appeal to that particular audience. "It’s not about bringing Hollywood tactics to the foreign markets," says Mr. Panitch. "It’s about participating in a local culture enough to create a product that those audiences will actually want to watch."
De-Americanize
Donna Langley, co-chair of General Electric Co. ’s Universal Pictures unit, was recently working on the script for an upcoming big-budget movie based on the Hasbro board game Battleship. The plotline is classic Hollywood: Evil aliens land on earth and live underwater. One of the first people at Universal to read the script was David Kosse, the studio’s London-based president. One worry surfaced immediately: The aliens only threatened the US—a premise deemed "too American."
Universal asked the writers to redo the script. In the new version, the aliens threaten the entire world. "The movie takes place off the coast of Hawaii, but the question we asked was, ’How do we make this a global proposition’?" said Ms. Langley. Universal now tries to have senior executives vet scripts early to look for ways to make them more international.
Last summer, Paramount was worried that its 2009 summer release, G. I. Joe, which cost $175 million, might flop overseas. "People questioned whether it would travel outside the US because the original formulation is a strong US military theme,"says Mr. Moore, the Paramount executive. The solution: Stuff the cast with international stars. In the end, G.I. Joe grossed slightly more abroad than at home, taking in $ 152 million of its world-wide $ 302 million in ticket sales overseas.
But Hollywood has concluded that some movies just can’t make it abroad. "A lot of comedies and a lot of comedians don’t travel, "says Mr. Moore. Paramount and others have begun to give them the ax. Fox Searchlight was recently developing "Baggage Claim," which chronicles a young flight attendant’s search for Mr. Right and stars an ensemble of African-American actors. But that film ended up in "turnaround," the Hollywood term for when a studio abandons the rights to a project and allows others to acquire it. It was heavily targeted to an African-American audience, a factor that often means the film won’t play well abroad.
Since Anchorman 2 was killed. Mr. McKay, the director, has been trying to broaden the foreign appeal of his next project, The Other Guys, a $ 100 million comedy. Sony Pictures will bring it out in August.
A key plot point of the film involves Mr. Wahlberg and Yankee shortstop Derek Jeter. Sony’s executives initially worried that Mr. Jeter- and the joke that involves him—would seem too American. They found a solution: The studio asked Mr. McKay to spend his summer re-shooting those scenes with international sports stars, and it went after soccer stars David Beckham of England and Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal.
Sony wanted to release a separate version of the film abroad starring Messrs. Beckham or Ronaldo— rather than Mr. Jeter. Neither soccer player was available in the end. But the studio plans to use the strategy in the future. "I gotta tell you, I loved the idea and still think it’s really smart," says Mr. McKay.
"It’s a whole new way of looking at movies," he adds. "Rather than trying to veer your audience toward the film, just tweak your film to the audience. Next, I’d like to start tweaking movies by region, one version for the Midwest, another for the East Coast, and the South."
According to Mr. McKay, a whole new way of looking at movies is not to try to veer your audience toward the film but to______.
选项
答案
tweak your film to the audience
解析
同义转述题。由定位句可知,McKay导演认为,这是看待电影的全新方式,不是试图让观众适应电影,而是让电影适应观众。题干是对原文内容的同义转述,根据原文得出答案为tweak your film to the audience。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/e2b7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Hewantedthekitchenclean.B、HewantedtoseeCathyandGeorge.C、Hedon’twanttogomovies.D、Hemustleavein30minutes.
Thenumberofparentsteachingtheiroffspringathomewillincreaseifthecurrentpublicschoolsystemcontinuestobeviewed
A、Dopresent-daychildrenlearnlessthantheirforefathersinthegoodolddays?B、WhydoJapanesebusinessmensendtheirchild
A、Fromadrugdealer.B、Withoutthedoctor’sprescription.C、Legallyfromthedoctor.D、Fromthewoman.C女士问男士是怎样得到止痛药的,是否有医生的处方
Climatescientistsneedtoswallowtheirmistrustsandsharetheirdataandworkingmethodswiththeircritics.Soconcludesan
A、Lowerthestudent’sgrade.B、Reconsiderthestudent’spositionlater.C、Allowthestudenttomissclass.D、Suggestthestudent
Talktoanyparentofastudentwhotookanadventurousgapyear(ayearbetweenschoolanduniversitywhensomestudentsearnmo
1.目前社会上有不少依赖父母生活的“啃老族”(“NEET”即NotCurrentlyEngagedinEducation,EmploymentorTraining)2.产生这种现象的原因3.我们大学生应该怎么做
Havingbeenawandererforyears,Ihavedecidedtobecomearespectablecitizenand________inanicelittlecottageintheco
A、Hisinborntalent.B、Alotofhisachievementsoutsideschool.C、Hishardworkonly.D、Themostimportantlessonsfromhismot
随机试题
把词分为基本词和一般词所依据的是
简述第三方支付的特点。
肺炎喘嗽风寒闭肺型首选是肺炎喘嗽内陷厥阴型首选是
男,60岁,半年前因精神因素起病,表现失眠,好忘事,说话哆嗦,重复近4个月,愁眉苦脸,要自杀,少言少语,对不起子女,翻箱倒柜,认错家人,既往高血压无卒中史。曾诊断“抑郁症”,“原发性高血压”,经治疗,一度病情好转,表现豁然开朗,对往事感到莫明其妙,2天后病
投资者之所以买入看涨期权,是因为他预期这种金融资产的价格在近期内将会()。
下列财政收入中,属于一般性财政收入的有()。
某公司购入一批价值20万元的专用材料,因规格不符无法投入使用,拟以15万元变价处理,并已找到购买单位。此时,技术部门完成一项新产品开发,并准备支出50万元购入设备当年投产。经化验,上述专用材料完全符合新产品使用,故不再对外处理,可使企业避免损失5万元,并且
注意事项1.本题本由给定资料与作答要求两部分构成。考试时限为150分钟。其中,阅读给定资料参考时限为40分钟,作答参考时限为110分钟。满分为100分。2.监考人员宣布考试开始时,你才可以开始答题。3.请在题本、答题卡指定位置填写自己的姓名,填涂准考
"Hi,there.How’sitgoing?""Oh,fine.Fine.Howaboutthisweather,huh?""Well,Iguesswecanalwaysusetherain."
硬中断服务程序结束返回断点时,程序末尾要安排一条指令IRET,它的作用是( )。
最新回复
(
0
)