Posted on 03/11/2012 1:32:54 PM PDT by jimbo123
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John Carter, a big-budget science fiction epic from Walt Disney Studios that opened Friday and flopped over the weekend. Disney spent lavishly (some say foolishly) on the movie in large part to keep one of its most important creative talents happy: Andrew Stanton, the Pixar-based director of Finding Nemo and Wall-E.
John Carter, which cost an estimated $350 million to make and market, and was directed by Mr. Stanton, took in about $30.6 million at the North American box office, according to Rentrak, which compiles box-office data. That result is so poor, even when factoring in about $71 million in overseas ticket sales, that analysts estimate that Disney will be forced to take a quarterly write-down of $100 million to $165 million.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
I just saw it this afternoon, the NYT is wrong as usual, they are treating it like it starred Sarah Palin.
it was good, it was nearly faithful to the original script from almost a century ago and where they did some changes it felt right, the special effects are original and the costumes should win awards.
Here is my take, liberals hate it and thus the bad reviews.
And it screams to become a trilogy, Disney did good on this, its Obamas fault for making it too expensive to leave home to go see this.
I again enjoyed it, not quite as good as Indiana Jones or Star Wars but its not a flop, they just want us to think it is.
Got knock down a 12 pack to get in that mode..
PBR, my FRiend!
Since they apparently went out of their way to make this movie just for a handful of us oldsters I’ll probably even go to the theater to see this one (which I don’t often do these days).
I saw that movie on Sci-Fi, and I remember just how angry it made me...
I’ve been dying to see this, especially after seeing the 10 minute “scene” on YouTube. It’s from the opening of the story, and while there are some minor story differences, it looks pretty cool, and I can’t wait to see it.
But it will have a lot to live up to. I learned to read on the John Carter of Mars books by ERB, and to this day (I’m 50 now) I’ve still got a HUGE crush on Thuvia!
Mark
If I remember correctly, ERB died in the 1950s. "A Princess of Mars" was written about the time of WWI! So it's been darned near 100 years since the story was written!
As I mentioned before, I learned to read with those books, and hadn't read them since about the 5th grade, though I did go back and re-read the Pelucidar series back in high school. I'm now listening to the audio book at work.
Mark
Well, in the books, she wore some jewelery and very little, if anything else.
Mark
And the viewers' reviews are better than 70%. The 50% rating is from critics.
Mark
Why don’t they just change the title real fast “ John Carter of Mars” or whatever...
While the review slamed it..people that i know saw it thought it was great..
so wait on word of mouth before calling it a bomb
I agree “Act of Valor” showed our guys kicking butt and taking names. But then a day later, who remembers it? But you do remember a very similar movie, “Top Gun,” and not just because of Tom Cruise, but because there was a STORY there-—indeed, several good story lines about redemption (”Maverick’s,” “Iceman’s,” and so on). There is a big debate in Hollywood between the “image” directors and the “story” directors as to who makes the best movies. Obviously, the great movies (”Lord of the Rings,” “Rocky,” has all). But I think story is being far too much subordinated in the recent CGI “Transformers” junk.
I can see why embedded socialists don’t like John Carter, he is a Civil War vet, he is straight, he is an independent thinker and a man of honor and action.
He is a warrior, he kills, he does not bow down to any false god image.
Oh yeah I can even imagine Obama himself calling up his MSM buddies and telling them that this film “John Carter” has to be given the treatment, its a movie that might give the sheeple wrong ideas, convince the people its not good for them.
Disney isn’t always right but they do have a long history of being patriotic.
Saw the movie and thoroughly enjoyed it — as did the 5 folks who I attended with (various ages). I think it will do quiet well in box office, overseas & then BluRay & DVD sales.
I agree. Too many here just are negative on movies in general ... if you have seen it & down it, well, that is okay but to NOT see it & badmouth it? terrible.
I thought there was a story there.. a significant one. Don’t want to give too much info to ruin it for those who will see it. There were several threads throughout the movie(We are talking Act of Valor here .. not John Carter).
Good movie. Kitsch did a better job than I expected. Took lots of liberties with the Mars books but the characters were appropriate. The last fight scene bothered me because of what the Tharks were capable of doing - that reminded of Jar Jar Jinks taking out all the robots. Otherwise I would watch long before any of the last four Star Wars movies.
Thanks jimbo123. The preview looked impressive, and the existing series of books would make a splendid franchise; as the late P.J. Farmer said, a writer capable of producing the most widely recognized fictional character — Tarzan — should not be lightly dismissed.
Unfortunately, most of the elements from the Edgar Rice Burroughs series were already incorporated in earlier movies. Experts say that the movie is true to the books, except Martian women did not really wear anything in the books. I loved the soundtrack, but the score sounded like a cross between Indiana Jones and Star Wars. I have to say though that I thought that the overall movie experience was good. I thought the CGI sets and costumes, including Dejah Thoris stunning wedding dress, gave the feel of the old serial movies of the 30s and 40s. I was pleasantly surprised that they allowed John Carter to be an Ex Confederate Captain without making any political statement in the movie at all. In fact, the reddish bronze skin hue of the Martians was the same description that Phillip K Dick had of the Martians in the short story The Crystal Crypt. I would like to see more movies based on the earlier works of Phillip K Dick and Edgar Rice Burroughs. Lynn Collins was a dead ringer for a young Catherine Zeta Jones
Seeing Lynn Collins in that wedding dress was worth $15.50 alone.
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