Author Topic: MIDNIGHT IN PARIS  (Read 367 times)

Offline Reginald Hudlin

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MIDNIGHT IN PARIS
« on: July 10, 2011, 07:31:22 AM »
Saw Woody Allen's latest film, and enjoyed it.  No one but Woody Allen can make jokes that intellectual and still have a box office hit.  I also love how he tells fantastical stories but doesn't get caught up in the mechanics of it but stays focused on the heart of the idea. 

This success pretty much insures he will make movies until the end of his life.

Which got me to thinking about his career.  He's already made 67 films, more than any modern director in America.  You have to go back to the days of the studio system to match that output.  But Even prolific directors like John Ford, Howard Hawks and Alfred Hitchcock didn't write their films.  Given that he's written and directed that many movies, and at least 20 of them could be called masterpieces, one could argue from a quality/quantity measurement, he's the greatest director of all time.

Offline Reginald Hudlin

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Re: MIDNIGHT IN PARIS
« Reply #1 on: July 10, 2011, 07:41:17 AM »
THE WRAP:

Sony Classics to Theaters: Help Woody's 'Midnight' Break the Record, or Else!

By Steve Pond

Sony Pictures Classics is nearing a real milestone with Woody Allen's "Midnight in Paris," and the company is pulling out all the stops to get there.

According to exhibitors, SPC co-presidents Michael Barker and Tom Bernard (left, with Allen in 2009) have been unusually assertive and aggressive in calling theaters -- threatening to take exhibitors off service if they don't keep "Midnight" on as many screens as possible.

"I never  hear from them," one exhibitor told TheWrap on condition of anonymity. "But I got a call from Michael, and his whole pitch was that this could become Woody's biggest movie ever."

"Midnight in Paris" passed the $35 million mark on Wednesday, and heads into the weekend less than $5 million behind the $40.1 million gross that made 1986's "Hannah and Her Sisters" the biggest grosser in Allen's career of more than 40 years.

"Absolutely," said Barker when TheWrap asked if SPC has been unusually aggressive with exhibitors on the film. "We're always aggressive, but especially with this one, because the word-of-mouth is so good that it's very easy to make a compelling argument to exhibitors that the movie has staying power."

The argument is compelling indeed -- even a certain boy wizard by the name of "Harry Potter" may not be able to forestall what is looking more and more inevitable.


Another decent weekend will more than cut the gap between "Midnight" and "Hannah" in half, quite possibly pushing it past Allen's third-highest-grossing film, "Annie Hall" ($38.3 million), and putting it within striking distance of his number two, "Manhattan" ($39.9 million).

If it continues playing for a few more weeks, even if it drops substantially every week, it's hard to imagine that it won't soon become Allen's top earner, giving Sony Classics significant bragging rights.

"It feels very likely," Barker told TheWrap this week. "The picture has obvious staying power, and is playing equally well in arthouses and in multiplexes that have never played Woody Allen before."

The key to turning the trick is to hang on to as many "Midnight" screens as possible -- and with "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2" already selling out thousands of showings, that film is primed to gobble up enormous amounts of multiplex real estate when it opens on July 15.

The fact that "Midnight" is playing in those multiplexes in addition to Allen's usual arthouses means that it will be fighting for screens with the likes of "Potter," "Transformers" (currently occupying more than 4,000 theaters) and "Zookeeper" and "Horrible Bosses" (which together are debuting in more than 6,000 houses on Friday).

"We seem to have survived 'Transformers' and 'Cars 2,' so we feel confident that we can survive 'Harry Potter' too," said Barker.

"Midnight" hit a high of 1,038 theaters on the weekend of June 17, then lost 87 of those theaters the following weekend and another 93 the week after that.

But this weekend, according to Barker, the film will only lose about 40 screens, keeping it above 800 as it enters a crucial stretch that could eliminate the gap between "Midnight" and "Hannah."

This doesn't mean the film will be his biggest moneymaker, of course. The reported production budget for "Midnight in Paris" is $30 million – which, given the film's substantial marketing campaign, means it's still a long way from turning a profit.

Barker said the $30 million figure seems high but he doesn't know the actual budget ("Woody and his producer are very proprietary with that information"), but that all involved are delighted with the grosses, which have been boosted by an additional $30 million-and-counting in foreign territories.

"To me, it seems like everybody is very happy, and it's going to be profitable," he said.

Assuming Barker and Bernard can persuade exhibitors not to desert the film en masse  next week, the numbers are clearly moving in their favor.

After two consecutive weeks in which the grosses dropped less than 20 percent, the film must make about 13.6 percent of its total after the seventh week. Allen's two top-grossing movies of the last decade, "Vicky Christina Barcelona" and "Match Point," both had comparable figures in their post-week-seven runs: "VCB" did 11 percent of its business during that period on its way to a $23.2 million gross, while "Match Point" made 18.7 percent of its total gross of $23.1 million.

So if the screen count for "Midnight" isn’t totally wiped out by the "Harry Potter" avalanche, and the film's box-office figures decline at an increasing but not precipitous rate, Allen will get his personal best -- certainly by the end of the month, quite possibly by the 20th, and perhaps even as early as the end of next week.

"We're going to get there," Barker predicted.


Offline BLANKS!!!

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Re: MIDNIGHT IN PARIS
« Reply #2 on: July 12, 2011, 04:19:23 PM »
when I first saw the title of this thread my first thought was "Paris has a another porno out on the net?"

Offline Reginald Hudlin

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Re: MIDNIGHT IN PARIS
« Reply #3 on: July 12, 2011, 04:32:00 PM »
when I first saw the title of this thread my first thought was "Paris has a another porno out on the net?"
LOL...Paris with some cock diesel blue black brotha named Midnight?  It's a perfect stripper name.
« Last Edit: July 12, 2011, 04:47:44 PM by Reginald Hudlin »

Offline BLANKS!!!

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Re: MIDNIGHT IN PARIS
« Reply #4 on: July 12, 2011, 04:39:50 PM »
heh, why not? LOL!

Offline stanleyballard

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Re: MIDNIGHT IN PARIS
« Reply #5 on: July 20, 2011, 11:20:06 AM »
Saw this one....well worth the price of admission...have never been a big Woody Allen fan but this was some good work.

Online JLI Jesse

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Re: MIDNIGHT IN PARIS
« Reply #6 on: August 14, 2011, 10:07:17 AM »
Finally saw it and loved it.  I went in not knowing what to expect and walked out with a big smile on my face.

I'm a huge fan, but Woody as been spotty at best lately.  Over the past few years I've enjoyed Match Point, Vicky Cristina Barcelona and You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger but Scoop, Whatever Works and Cassandra's Dream just didn't work for me.

But I usually think a poor Woody Allen movie is, at the very least, interesting and I look forward to next year's The Bop Decameron (especially because Woody will be in front of the camera again).