Booboo the original!
New member
Yeah but no but yeah but. I think this is my problem with it. Yes, lots of grand themes bubbling away there... in a daft story about a stupidly giant monkey snatched away from fighting with dinosaurs. In the late 1920s.
?!?!!##!
I think movie-lovers are so enamoured with the stunning work that has gone into the film, both technical and artisitc, that it takes a huge step back to see why perhaps it hasn't caught the wider public's imagination.
But, as one of my biggest movie heroes, William Goldman keeps saying, "no-one knows anything". He says all this sort of discussion - after the box office numbers are out - is nothing more than "mythology". Until a film opens, no-one has a clue whether or not anyone wants to see it. Universal obviously believed they had a Titanic hit on their hanRAB with Kong, while Fox / Paramount thought they had a dud with Titanic. Star Wars was thought to be so bad, 20th Century Fox's stock dropped massively prior to its release. I know in the industry here, it was believed that Four Weddings would be a turkey of such unimaginable proportions, Polygram had no idea how to offload it. People were going apoplectic, saying "I've seen the rushes, it's so so awful". Director Mike Newell just kept saying "why did we EVER believe this was going to work?"
All of us millions on the net like me who pass judgement after the event aren't really so bloody clever... as a filmmaker myself, believe me it is about 10,000 times harder to create than to criticise.
FWIW Magwitch, my guess is you won't like Titanic if you see it now for the first time! It's got so much baggage with it now, it's probably impossible to get round it all...
?!?!!##!
I think movie-lovers are so enamoured with the stunning work that has gone into the film, both technical and artisitc, that it takes a huge step back to see why perhaps it hasn't caught the wider public's imagination.
But, as one of my biggest movie heroes, William Goldman keeps saying, "no-one knows anything". He says all this sort of discussion - after the box office numbers are out - is nothing more than "mythology". Until a film opens, no-one has a clue whether or not anyone wants to see it. Universal obviously believed they had a Titanic hit on their hanRAB with Kong, while Fox / Paramount thought they had a dud with Titanic. Star Wars was thought to be so bad, 20th Century Fox's stock dropped massively prior to its release. I know in the industry here, it was believed that Four Weddings would be a turkey of such unimaginable proportions, Polygram had no idea how to offload it. People were going apoplectic, saying "I've seen the rushes, it's so so awful". Director Mike Newell just kept saying "why did we EVER believe this was going to work?"
All of us millions on the net like me who pass judgement after the event aren't really so bloody clever... as a filmmaker myself, believe me it is about 10,000 times harder to create than to criticise.
FWIW Magwitch, my guess is you won't like Titanic if you see it now for the first time! It's got so much baggage with it now, it's probably impossible to get round it all...