Jibril said:Yep. Judging by what Solo mentioned previously. Indeed, praising Hans Zimmer, is similar to praising an entire village of Composers.
Jibril said:Hans Zimmer did:
Lion King
Prince of Egypt
Gladiator
The Dark Knight
All on my playlist.
Hans Zimmer is great. Together with Harry Gregson Williams, Steve Jablonsky ( he's stepping up, Cameron even used his My name is Lincoln in the trailer).
It is absolutely true that some of Zimmer's work isn't that good. But lord have mercy, most of his stuff is heart penetrating. Hans Zimmer reigns supreme.
WrikaWrek said:Alan Silvestri would've done something epic for Avatar.
The IMAX Sydney has no seats available until Monday either.mckmas8808 said:WHOA!
Yes!WrikaWrek said:Alan Silvestri would've done something epic for Avatar.
Sharp said:So basically... I don't think Titanic is happening. Then again, I thought if there was one person who wouldn't like Avatar it was my sister, but apparently she really enjoyed it, so maybe we really can throw all precedent out the window.
It's definitely possible, but I don't think it's probable. It seems a lot more likely to me than $600 million domestic, though.mckmas8808 said:Do you think it can hit $1.5 Billion worldwide?
because it's fun.Solo said:I love Howard Shore, but he would have been all wrong for Avatar. My support would have been behind James Newton Howard, but I dont even see why we're debating who should write a score that is already out :lol
Jibril said:Can you imagine Ennio Morricone... on Avatar 2?!
Whoops!Sharp said:Here's the problem (and it is a problem): supposing Titanic is around $350 million after the weekend (which it should be, give or take a few million and given a $60 million weekend, which is about what I would expect), the weekdays are going to drop dramatically.
This is true, which is why I (and others) have said this coming weekend is less important than the weekend after for Avatar's long-term trajectory.The days after Christmas act like mini-holidays, historically, while after January 1st, they start going back to normal weekdays. The weekends, too, usually suffer, since Sundays don't act like holiday Sundays (which act more like Saturdays thanks to increased evening traffic). You should also keep in mind that Christmas Day is THE biggest moviegoing day of the year. This year the box office is exceptionally lucky that both Christmas and New Year's Day (another big moviegoing day) both fall on a Friday, which hasn't happened since '98 (who'da thought), so some of the effects should be muffled this weekend, but that just means that they will be spread to the weekend after instead.
Avatar is selling out evening showings and the more limited IMAX runs during the week right now. There's not a lot to preclude the same from happening during the week after the holidays. That said, that's why I looked at full week totals and projected off that: the week days will likely drop steeper than the weekends.Now, after next week I think Avatar might very well have 25%ish drops for awhile, at least on weekends, considering how good its word of mouth is and the limited 3D venues (and all the other factors I mentioned before). But that first drop--especially when it comes to the weekdays--matters a LOT. To make that somewhat more concrete, in the scenario you outlined, assuming around 25% weekly drops WITHOUT factoring in the big weekday drops would give Avatar around $14 million weekdays Monday through Thursday next week (the week after New Year's Eve weekend), and $11 million weekdays the week after that--which is pretty much impossible when you consider that the holiday traffic is mostly gone, with people either at work or school for most of the day. In fact, not only would you be looking at 28 or more consecutive days over ten million, you wouldn't even get below five million dollars a day until the seventh week. There just aren't enough people in theaters for the kind of run you're imagining here.
See: Titanic. If people are still coming to the movie, it won't shed theaters.Another issue--and this is a deeper one--is the limited number of screens, 3D or otherwise. While Avatar's IMAX numbers are pretty much safe from other incursions for a long time, which will help soften the drop, as the year progresses even the biggest blockbusters start losing screens to other movies. *snip*
See above.Seven or eight weeks from now, when in your model Avatar is supposed to be passing Titanic, it won't have nearly as many screens, especially not 3D ones.
Again, you're looking at multipliers, and disregarding trends. If Avatar is still doing well, it won't shed theaters. And my simplified model assumes steady drops - when I think in actuality we're likely to see a drop in the first week of January when we lose the holidays, and a more steady performance from there. But that's my expectation based on how it's performing now. I can't go back and find other data to tie it to, because there isn't any.Now, let's move on to your other scenario. As you said, 40% drops are normal, or at least not overwhelmingly startling, for a (well-received) blockbuster after its first few weeks. But for the reasons I outlined above (and more) Avatar's first few weeks are sort of a special case, so it might be more instructive to ignore the first $290 million or so and think of Avatar as opening this weekend to around a $60 million haul and playing like a normal blockbuster. We can make it a fairly leggy one, since it's Avatar, which by today's standards means (sadly) a 3.5 multiplier or above. Now let's see what various scenarios would mean and how they would play out:
I think you are over-analyzing, and again looking to the wrong markers for Avatar's performance. I strongly suspect Avatar will come close to or exceed Titanic, but the first week of January will be the tell. I'll crunch the multipliers when it starts slowing down.*snip*
Just for the record, I do.Sharp said:It's definitely possible, but I don't think it's probable.
Michael Giacchino would be a better choice!Jibril said:Can you imagine Ennio Morricone... on Avatar 2?!
*scratches beard*Lebron said:Michael Giacchino would be a better choice!
*folds arms*
Scullibundo said:Have we just started spouting off the names of composers we know? :lol
I'm in love with Morricone, but he would be about as fitting for AVATAR as Hermann.
Solo said:You're pretty safe with anything released in about the past 5 years. Anything released within then with his name on it would actually be something he did.
Yes! His Incredibles is one of the best soundtracks ever.Lebron said:Michael Giacchino would be a better choice!
*folds arms*
chubigans said:Yes! His Incredibles is one of the best soundtracks ever.
I guess it depends, I think there's a few movies with boobs, and they got a PG rating!:lolGhaleonEB said:Oh, they're there in more than a few scenes. I'm actually not sure how Cameron didn't get a MPAA tag for nudity, unless alien bewbz don't count.
Makes you wonder if the D cut will be R or not!Combine said:Heh, gotta love those free-flowing clothes of hers.
Also, the lighting was just right so that you wouldn't notice them unless you were really really trying to look. Pervs. :lol
:lol :lol Why don't you go see a movies because you want to, and not listen to gaf! I agree, it didn't have a lot of emotion, but that's just because Cameron did have enough money to truly do what he wanted, it's a shame you hated it! o'well! Also the acting was a little melodramatic, but Zoe did beautifully! I was impressed by Jake's legs too, but if that was the most impressive thing to you....... :/AlteredBeast said:The crowds? The anticipation? Couldn't be the acting, for there was none to speak of. Couldn't be the story, unless you haven't seen several modern and classic films. Couldn't be the film score because it was pretty blah for a film of this magnitude. Special effects? gotcha. Years of build up?
I can think of nothing else. I am just severely let down again by Popcorn-GAF. I just can't hardly trust GAF Reviews anymore. Everything is one extreme or the other. Either someone is reviewing Animal Collective and calling it the best "music" ever or someone is hyping up (seriously, not in a jesting manner) Britney Spears' latest release. Either all the people on GAF with ironic moustaches and thick rimmed glasses (non-corrective lenses) are hyping up the latest indie flick or they are hyping up this dreck. The one thing that impressed me more than anything in this whole movie was actually the way they made Sam Worthington's legs look all debilitated and thin. Thank you, modern computer graphics.
and that moaning/dancing sequence and na'vi sex sequence was easily as disturbing and embarassing to be watching as the Matrix Reloaded (Revolutions?) cave rave scene. Yep, that bad.
http://oscar-watch.ew.com/2009/12/30/what-if-there-were-5-best-picture-nominees/
What if there were 5 Best Picture nominees?
by Dave Karger
When the Academy announced back in June that its including 10 Best Picture nominees this year, one of the things I thought about was whether, once the nominees were announced, it would be obvious which five films would have been nominated in a typical year and which five were the extra nominees. Well, now that Ive worked up my Oscar-nomination predictions (which will appear in this weeks issue of EW as well as on this blog tomorrow morning), Im thinking the answer to that question is a resounding yes. If there were only five Best Picture slots, wouldnt they go to Avatar, The Hurt Locker, Inglourious Basterds, Precious, and Up in the Air? Those five seem way ahead of the competition at the moment, while there are probably nine or so films (District 9, An Education, Invictus, Its Complicated, The Messenger, Nine, A Serious Man, Star Trek, and Up) that are jockeying for the other five slots but would have had a hard time bumping out any of my top five.
What do you think? Am I overestimating or underestimating any of these contenders? Which five films would you predict if the Academy were using last years rules? And isnt it a bit ironic, given that the super-size race was meant to include more audience-friendly films in the mix, that Avatar would easily be nominated even with half the slots?
It will be over $1b by the end of this weekend.Dead said:^^ holy shit
Its going to be near 900 million after this weekend
WrikaWrek said:Funny. His best stuff is from the last 5 years.
Solo said:$726M WW in just 12 days :lol :lol
GhaleonEB said:Mojo updated with yesterday's Monday take overseas, which was $37m. Total WW Monday box office was $56.5m.
World-wide total now stands at $726m.
Up to #39 on the all-time chart, ahead of Transformers. Next stop: 2012.
bud said:is that a record?
Lebron said:Michael Giacchino would be a better choice!
*folds arms*
Guardian Bob said:While we talking soundtrack, anyone else love how they repeated the 'I see you' theme throughout the movie? I noticed it a lot more second time through.
neoism said:Also :lol at Solo's 10,000 post!
GhaleonEB said:Mojo updated with yesterday's Monday take overseas, which was $37m. Total WW Monday box office was $56.5m.
World-wide total now stands at $726m.
Up to #39 on the all-time chart, ahead of Transformers. Next stop: 2012.
Oh god this. I hate how so many movies these days seem to no longer care about something like that in a score. Its pretty much the most important part in maintaining the identity of the movie.Solo said:Yup, and Ive mentioned this a few times. Say what you will about the score's quality/originality, but at least Horner had a motif running throughout the film, something which seems to be lost in recent years.
:lol :lol :lol :lolDarkMehm said:$18,3m for Tuesday.
Scullibundo said:Yeah I don't think Howard Shore could have hit the action beats well.
That said - and I know it sounds utterly cliche these days to suggest it, especially since so many blockbusters have his scores with similar sounding cues, but John Williams would have been perfect for AVATAR. He still knows how to create an original theme that is distinct and completely memorable (despite his last score for KotS - which is a sequel). Munich still has one of my favourite scores of the decade. It would only be fair that Cameron lent his tech to Spielberg, that Spielberg should loan his Williams to Cameron - only if he promises not to damage him of course.
gdt5016 said:Though Avatar is really missing that big huge theme that blockbusters typically have.
tino said:In term of making great score out of bad movies, Jerry Goldsmith IMO is the best. Now that my man is retired.
Solo said:Thats really my only problem with the score - there is the I See You motif running throughout the movie which is great, but there isnt a rousing, memorable main theme.
krypt0nian said:Late morning showing on a Wednesday and it was packed. This movie is something special.