Monday Morning Quarterback Part II
By BOP Staff
August 18, 2009
Sean Collier: I'm with Reagan. They're strong actors and nice compliments to a well-rounded cast, but neither has their own drawing power. If I had to pick one to have the better career, in traditional terms, I'd have to go with Bana; I wouldn't only say that McAdams doesn't want it, I'd go so far as to say I'm waiting for her to just call it quits outright.Should have been called The BadsKim Hollis: The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard opened to $5.4 million in 1,838 venues. How should Paramount Vantage feel about this result?
Josh Spiegel: Not so good, I'd wager. Granted, opening on under 2,000 venues isn't the biggest release, but with the amount of advertising (or at least, advertising on networks and TV shows I watch often) and online and other marketing, I think Paramount Vantage is wishing the movie opened to something closer to $10 million. This is a case where, it seems, people just weren't interested in Jeremy Piven as a sleazeball; I guess that's more a TV role for him.
Scott Lumley: This honestly has to be considered a disappointing result by everyone involved. Piven did just about everything he could personally do to sell this as well, including appearances on Raw and on Big Brother, which I heartily applaud. There was a reasonable amount of advertising for this film, but the trailers that I saw were generally frenetic crap and did a terrible job of presenting this film. It's definitely disappointing as this did look genuinely funny once I took a closer look.
Eric Hughes: Paramount should feel like they got what they paid for. Aggressive marketing campaigns - that Big Brother appearance for instance - are only half the battle. You have to actually be promoting something that either A) is good or B) sells itself. The Goods didn't do either.
Reagen Sulewski: They were stuck in a difficult situation here, since the movie was largely being sold on its raunch, but weren't able to show that stuff on TV to get people into it. I actually thought the theatrical trailer (and more so, the red band) was completely hilarious, but the TV spots were beyond dire. This is a film that should have been able to build off The Hangover's success, but they completely and utterly botched the campaign.
David Mumpower: I enjoyed the symbolic, symbiotic link between the premise of the film, desperate salesmen, and the incautious marketing attempts to make it a success. Street corner whores have more pride than was displayed by The Goods' would-be marketers. This is the proverbial lipstick-on-a-pig scenario.*Swoon*Kim Hollis: Ponyo, the latest movie from Hayao Miyazaki, opened to $3.6 million. Should Disney be happy with this result?
Josh Spiegel: I'm sure there is one person at Disney (John Lasseter) who wishes this movie did ten times that amount, if only because more people would get to see a Hiyao Miyazaki film for once. However, considering how different Miyazaki's films look compared to Disney, DreamWorks, or even Pixar movies, I feel like this number is pretty good, especially considering the film opened on fewer than 1,000 venues.
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