Posted on 03/01/2004 1:39:04 AM PST by kattracks
With a five-day opening weekend gross of well over $100 million, Mel Gibsons The Passion of the Christ is shocking Hollywood in becoming a certified blockbuster. Even as recently as this past week, the experts were predicting a total opening weekend take of $30 millionslightly more than it made on just the first day.
Thus continues the strange odyssey of The Passion.
Easily one of the most bankable stars in Hollywood was planning to write and direct a movie about the most famous and revered figure in history. And the budget would be nothing: $25 million. The average movienot the average blockbuster, mind youhas a <I>marketing</I> budget north of $25 million.
No one bit.
Gibson had to personally finance The Passion, and then he had to contract with relatively obscure arthouse indie Newmarket Films to handle the distribution.
Sure, Gibson was behind the camera and not in front of it. But it was clear that the devout Catholic was pouring his heart and soul into the film, and any contract could have required Gibson to plug on the usual array of TV and print media outlets.
And how could you not get media attention about a movie showing the death of Jesus? Controversy sells tickets, certainly enough to cover a skimpy $25 million budget.
Taking a broader view, The Passion was not just a smart business bet because of the specifics of the filmGibson, the low cost, the inevitable controversybut because religious films make money.
Not that Hollywood has first-hand experience with religious movies. Without the truly deep pockets of the major studios, the only overtly Christian movies to come out in the past few years have been low-budget cheapies with minimal star wattage.
The flicks may not have won critics hearts, but deprived Christian audiences made both The Omega Code and Left Behind: The Movie profitable. The $8 million-budgeted Omega raked in $13 million at theaters (plus a bundle more in video rentals and sales), and though it was a dud at theaters, the $17-million Left Behind sold more than 3 million copies on DVD and VHSa threshold even many hit films dont reach.
Another interesting case study comes from early 2002 with two non-religious movies, though one did explicitly keep it clean. One starred PG-rated pop singer Mandy Moore, the other was the debut of Madonnas protégé, Britney Spears. Most industry analysts predicted Crossroads, boasting a scene where negligee-clad Spears jumps in excitement, would out-gross Moores family-friendly A Walk to Remember. The experts were wrong.
To see that there is an audience for entertainment that wears its Christianity on its sleeve, network television probably provides better examples. Not that there are many, though.
It seems only CBS has been willing to take the risk of airing overtly religious-themed programs.
In a world where roughly 80 percent of new shows dont get renewed to a second season, CBS scored a long-running success with Touched by an Angel and this season has an unlikely hit with Joan of Arcadia.
Touched, which outlasted even most hit shows by staying on for nine years, was CBSs highest-rated drama for much of that time. And Joan, a quirky show that most critics predicted would flop, has thrived despite being dumped into what is normally a deadly timeslot, Fridays at 8pm EST.
Religion is such a fringe element in entertainment that its easy to forget that Hollywood wasnt always afraid to embrace faith.
Consider that two of the greatest Tinseltown classics are big-budget religious epics, one of which was ripped from the Bible. The Ten Commandments raked in a then-staggering $65.5 million back in 1956and nearly a half-century later, it still garners heavenly ratings for ABC every year on Easter Sunday. Making slightly more at the box office was Ben-Hur, which grossed $74 million in 1959.
In todays dollars, ticket sales like that would translate to roughly $400 million apiece. Given the graphic violence making it unsuitable for children (or even for repeat viewing for most adults), The Passion faces an uphill climb to reach such lofty heights.
Already, though, Gibsons gamble has been vindicated. The $25 million budget was covered in the first-day gross of $26.6 million.
Only the experts should be surprised.
©2003 Joel Mowbray
It is incendiary, superficial and immature comments like this that have poisoned the atmosphere around this film.
I don't think Jesus would approve. :) He was a Jew, after all....
People from both sides have used the film to promote agendas which have nothing to do with the film itself.
What passes for art in some Islamic countries is TV series' based on The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. They don't have delicate artistic sensibilities. :) Do you seriously think the US is to blame for 9-11? I'm all for cleaning up the culture, but the blame for 9-11 rests with the perversion known as radical Islam.
The whole world knows now that Christians have the power. What they have not yet seen is what we will do with it.
Powerful stuff liz, your take on what the films about is fascinating. You make Christians sound like pretty nasty, vindictive critters.
Veronica, be nice to liz, wouldnt want to get accused of trying to get her banned would you?
I passed up the Oscar garbage. Who wants to see a bunch of botoxed, siliconed, viagraed, anorexic neurotics? John Basedow's 6-pack abs infomercial is more entertaining than a bunch of warped, half-dressed Hollyweirdos. Only God knows what they lowered themselves to do in order to walk the red carpet.
Yes, because thats not what I'm saying. :)
Hollywood has contributed greatly to the world's perception that America is decadent.
Better?
I find it exceedingly amusing, and ironic to say the least, that some folks here who spit vitriol at Hollywood, are slavishly tracking the box office of The Passion with the fervor of a William Morris agent, and predicting which Oscars The Passion will win like a reporter for Access Hollywood.
Mel Gibson has had a long and illustrious career in the movies. He's as Hollywood as it gets. And that's a good thing. If he didn't have Hollywood wired, he'd be preaching his beliefs in some tiny venue, reaching few.
Is The Lord of The Rings trash? It won 11 Oscars...:)
More than that, Hollyweirdos, the ADL, and the rest of the ragtag cadre of naysayers raging against the film, think they have the right to tell Christians what they should believe. They really think Christians are going to allow this.
Perhaps now would be a good time to start a campaign to put the "Christ" back in "Christmas" and stop all this "Happy Holidays' BULLCR*P!
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