Moolah for La La

I am a sucker for musicals. I’m also a sucker for beautiful people in sundresses. Needless to say, I was a tad excited to see Damien Chazelle’s La La Land. The frontrunner for Best Picture delivered the goods. With a cast that looks like old Hollywood (Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone) it really couldn’t miss. The budget for the film was around $30 million dollars (and most of that seems to have been used for the first 10 minutes of the film). I started wondering how a movie like this gets made. Who gave this super talented director and writer $30 million to make an original musical? Chazelle’s first major studio film (Whiplash, 2014) was produced for $3.3 million and made $49 million. A lot of that is due to its Oscar run. Whiplash was a great movie in a great field (Birdman, Boyhood, Grand Budapest Hotel, and Selma, to name a few). La La Land is killing it at the box office (already at $130 million) so I thought I’d look back at similar first-time writer/directors who got their early work noticed by the Academy and how their follow-up films did critically, but mostly financially.

Benh Zeiten – This will be the shortest entry. Benh hasn’t had a release since his 2012 release Beasts of the Southern Wild. We could blame him for Annie but that doesn’t seem fair.

John Singleton – The youngest director ever nominated burst on the scene with Boyz in the Hood. While the film didn’t get nominated for the biggest award of the evening, Singleton was nominated for both his writing and directing at the age of 24. Boyz had a set budget of $6.5 million and raked in $57.5 million the domestic box office. Pretty good first try, right? Well, that was followed up with Poetic Justice ($14 mil, made $28 mil) the forgotten, but not bad, Higher Learning (made $38 mil) and finally found success with Shaft. He made a boat load of money with his next film, 2 Fast 2 Furious, and was last seen directing Taylor “jortsin’ werewolf” Lautner do parkour or something.

Jim Sheridan – Made his writing and directing debut with 1989’s critically acclaimed My Left Foot. The movie that launched the awards career of everyone’s favorite method actor, Daniel Day-Lewis. My Left Foot was the little indie movie that could, even in the 80’s. It was made for around 600,000 pounds and pulled in 14.7 million at the box office. So, what does Jim Sheridan do after making a financially successful, critic-loved film? He makes some movie called The Field. I will not lie. I have never seen The Field. Most of the over 7 billion people on the planet have not seen The Field. I figured I’d read the plot to see what we were all missing. I’ll give you a teaser of the plot and then you decide if you’d like to find a VHS copy. Here’s the first sentence: “Bull McCabe, an Irish farmer, dumps a dead donkey in a lake.” Nothing has made me want to watch anything more. The Field was budgeted at $5 million and made $1.4 million.

James L. Brooks – It’s not like Brooks was a complete unknown by the time he wrote and directed Terms of Endearment. The movie did well in awards season and made $108 million on a budget of only $8 million. He followed that up with the fairly big budgeted (for the time) Broadcast News which also got a Best Picture nomination and still made $67 million on $15 million. Brooks took a decade off from the writing/directing combo but came back on the scene in a big way with 1997’s As Good As It Gets which kept the perfect game streak alive with the film getting nominated for yet another Best Picture Oscar and sweeping the lead acting Oscars. Something that hadn’t been done since Silence of the Lambs. James L. Brooks didn’t do so hot with his next release. The movie, one I particularly enjoyed mind you, was Spanglish (Adam Sandler, Paz Vega). The film lost about $30 million. That’s not nearly as bad as his last effort. The immediately forgotten How Do You Know (Owen Wilson, Reese Witherspoon) reunites Brooks with Jack Nicholson but cost a staggering $128 million dollars to make. Its revenue was only $48 million. I’ll let you do the math. I’m not sure where that money went. Owen Wilson plays a Major League pitcher in the film, so maybe that’s where.

The last two directors aren’t even in the same discussion as the rest of the group. Warren Beatty wrote and directed Heaven Can Wait ($15 mil, made $80) and followed it up with the acclaimed, but financially underwhelmed Reds. He later wrote and directed Bullworth (lost money) and Rules Don’t Apply (lost money) in which he plays the super talented, super crazy Howard Hughes. Super talented and super crazy brings us to our last and earliest name.

Orson Welles – This is almost worse than Beatty. Orson Welles came to Hollywood after years in theater and radio and got a contract that nobody else could get. RKO had to have him and they would give him anything. The rest of Hollywood wasn’t a fan and Wells never came close to catching the magic he had in Citizen Kane.

Considering only people who have written and directed their first two films, I’m not sure that anybody will be as good as Damien Chazelle. If you haven’t seen La La Land or Whiplash (ESPECIALLY Whiplash) do yourself a favor and see them pronto. And if you’re sleepy, or hate donkeys, watch The Field.

And Then There Were Ten: 2008, The Box Office Hero

And Then There Were Ten – in which our intrepid hero goes back and expands the Academy Award Best Picture nominations to ten nominations, and goes about filling those hypothetical slots. This time – it’s 2008

Chapter 1: The Box Office Hero the Academy Deserves, Not the One It Needs Right Now (The Dark Knight

https://i0.wp.com/www.audienceseverywhere.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/The_Dark_Knight_WPs___Batman___by_GavDude.png?resize=840%2C525

This candidate is my entire reason for coming up with this series. And many believe that this candidate missing out is the reason for the expansion. If you want to drive ratings for the broadcast ceremony, you want to select a movie that people have seen – and seen again – to the tune of over a billion in global box office. That would be nice. It also helps when a well-known movie is good.

Continue reading “And Then There Were Ten: 2008, The Box Office Hero”

8-Bit Halfwit: 10-Yard Fight

8-Bit Halfwit is a series where Brent Blackwell, a longtime but not particularly skillful gamer, revisits NES games in order of their release. To see more in this series, click here.

Photo: GameFAQs

Details

Release Date: October 18, 1985
Genre: American Football
GameFAQs rating: 2.39/5
GameFAQs difficulty level: Easy
GameFAQs length: 4.2 hours
Background: 10-Yard Fight, an opening day release for Nintendo in the US, had been around in arcade form for a couple of years. Wikipedia calls it “the first slightly realistic American football video game ever developed and released”.

Continue reading “8-Bit Halfwit: 10-Yard Fight”

Talkie Talk Ep. 0 – Oscar Predictions

Talkie Talk
Talkie Talk
Talkie Talk Ep. 0 - Oscar Predictions
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Welcome to the first episode of The Media By Us pan-media podcast, Talkie Talk.

In this episode (split into two parts), we have TJ, Brent, Chris and David discuss what they’ve been watching before going into predicting the Academy Award Nominations.

Talkie Talk Episode 0 – Part 1 of 2

(Intro, What We’ve Been Watching/Playing, Oscars: Brief Discussions – Tech categories)

Talkie Talk Episode 0 – Part 2 of 2

(Continued Oscars: Deep Dives – Writing, Acting, Directing, Best Picture, Outro)

And Then There Were Ten – Expanding the Best Picture Nominees in 2008

Introduction: Why We Care

Courtesy: Wikipedia.org Free Commons
The Academy Awards. Where white people are finally recognized.

The Academy Awards holds a special place for many people – for some, it is a celebration of cinema, competition and glamour, with warm, family-time memories spent watching tuxedos and sparkling dresses exchange gold statues. For others, it is a backslapping, near-masturbatory, never-ending, annual slog about movies that you do not care about. And for a select portion of the population – it is an afterthought.

For years now, a cottage industry (which is an understatement – more like a mansion industry) has cropped up around prognosticating who gets what on the big night. For the awards nerds out there, the cinema equivalent of the Super Bowl is Oscar Nomination Day. The saying goes, it is an honor to be nominated – and there is truth to that. There are those among us who know when Nomination Day is coming up, and make plans to tune in the live webcast of the announcements early in the morning.

Why care? Continue reading “And Then There Were Ten – Expanding the Best Picture Nominees in 2008”