Trailer: Pirates of the Caribbean 5: Dead Men Tell No Tales
Posted on March 6, 2017 at 8:00 am
Looks like we get a bit of Jack Sparrow’s backstory — and some gorgeous special effects in this last of the Pirates movies — or so they say!
Posted on March 6, 2017 at 8:00 am
Looks like we get a bit of Jack Sparrow’s backstory — and some gorgeous special effects in this last of the Pirates movies — or so they say!
Posted on March 5, 2017 at 3:19 pm
Filmonomics says they have a system for predicting what is going to win the Oscar — two years from now!
The likelihoods of a movie being Certified Fresh, financially successful and being nominated for Academy Awards, is knowable at the point of development.
It is based on their multi-point analysis of the script, even before the movie goes into production.
To be sure, correlation is not causation; there are many factors that go into making a movie successful at the box office and during awards season. Still, the implications for filmmakers here are obvious: If high Slated Script Scores are tied to both high financial returns and high probability of critical and award success, then making sure your script is as good as possible is the key to attracting top talent, smart money, and experienced distributors, all of which are essential to increase the likelihood of stronger outcomes and more accurate projections (as we painstakingly researched and wrote about in this prior post). That sounds like common sense, but one has only to look at a theater marquee to see how frequently this advice is ignored. And now that tools exists that can predict your project’s outcome, ignoring it is inexcusable. If a submitted screenplay fails to make the grade under this scoring system, then at least those involved have a benchmark from which to make adjustments and return with something more appealing.
It should be self-evident that you can make a bad movie with a good script but you cannot make a good movie with a bad script. And yet, given the economics of global distribution, the studios keep making the script a lower priority.
Posted on March 5, 2017 at 8:00 am
Explore Skull Island, from this week’s King Kong movie, in this VR video!
Posted on March 4, 2017 at 3:09 pm
Now this is cool. Legendary comic Phyllis Diller’s legendary joke file of more than 52,000 index cards is now at the Library of Congress, and they have invited all of us to help digitize the files. It’s like Wikipedia; anyone can participate, for just one joke or for hundreds or thousands. Just take a look at one of the jokes and type it up (some of them are just a few words). There are a few simple rules about formatting to indicate underlines, strikeouts, etc. Or, you can be a “reviewer” and just confirm or correct some of the draft transcriptions. Even if you don’t want to participate, it is a lot of fun to scroll through the files online, a real artifact of an era, and of course very funny.
Posted on March 4, 2017 at 8:00 am
New Life is a love story starring Erin Bethea and Jonathan Patrick Moore. They play characters who meet as children, fall in love in college, and have ups and downs as they face the greatest happiness and the greatest sadness they could ever imagine.
We are honored to present an exclusive behind the scenes clip from New Life.
Here’s the trailer:
I have a copy of this PG-rated love story to give away!
Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with Life in the subject line and tell me what you are looking forward to this spring. Don’t forget your address! (U.S. addresses only). I’ll pick a winner at random on March 9, 2017. Good luck!
Reminder: My policy on conflicts