So are the units we use to measure everything else, does that make my ruler suddenly become useless?
What about when those areas are also poorYou can measure the quality of the image and sound objectively, but those are not connected to how a person might evaluate the overall quality of a film because a film might have worst sound and video quality, but other qualities like writing and acting might affect the overall experience and reception of a film.
How is taking the tastes of the present day moviegoer and creating an average based on that not perfectly objective when it comes to measuring quality? I haven't created anything, I'm merely using trends to examine audience tastes.You're using the "average audience" as a barometer, which in itself has already made your criteria non-objective. You're defining the audience taste, then making an argument about how films can be "objectively" measured according to the taste of the audience you've created. That's not objectivity.
That's untrue. If a not particularly skilled child submits a stick horse to a life drawing competition which is judged by a group that doesn't know who drew it will always lose to a drawing of a horse done by an accomplished life drawing artist who specializes in animals. It's objective fact that one picture will more accurately recreate a horse on a sheet of paper than the other.Objectivity is a set of definable facts, like pixel numbers and etc. Taste and preferences can never be objective.
The same measure can be applied to movies within the same genre and especially to movies within the same franchise.
Those opportunities were always there and, in point of fact, many of these things were covered in novels long before the PT was ever penned. The PT created nothing new, it only fixed in place a version of events that did happen rather than allowing for an open space where any number of things could have happened. It objectively narrowed the space people had to work with by nailing down these details.We got a lot of development about how the Jedi and the Republic functioned, we got a lot of new designs of ships and etc. We got to experience what life was like in the core worlds. That's a vast expansion of breathing room for the OT.
Yes, there are some dated looking effects in the OT as well which Lucas was right to go back and correct with his special edition. It's going to be far easier to CGI over a practical effect than it will be to update a CGI shot that was designed for a specific resolution. This is why it took so long for certain Star Trek series to get a BluRay release.See the video by CGI artists commenting on the CGI. Every special effects will feel dated as time went on. I can make the same argument about the movement of some puppets in the OT being too jerky and stop-motion like.
It also strayed away from its Roddenberry's vision as the creative team on TNG had forced him out before the end of TNG's first season. You could go so far as to say that everything past season one of TNG isn't canon because it wasn't created with Roddenberry's input. I wouldn't go that far, but I could easily argue that everything DS9 and onward is just high budget fan fiction for exactly that reason.That's what the creators did with Star Trek. The atmosphere and "feel" of Star Trek evolve with time, and that brought in new generation of fans to the franchise.
I'm asking why such shows were greenlit in the first place, before audiences could even watch the first reality show it had to be pitched, planned, funded, shot, edited, and then finally aired. Are you telling me that cost and effort weren't factors in the first reality shows being produced?Because people enjoy different kinds of entertainment and they are under no obligation to share your preferences?
I don't care if films solely cater to me, I just want them to cater to somebody rather than pander to everybody. There's a massive distinction there that you're missing.Films are meant to entertain the masses, especially blockbusters. You are under the illusion that studios should cater to your sense of entitlement instead of trying to cater on what the masses actually want to watch.
Why shouldn't they? It's not that unreasonable to expect every team working on every film to want to create something timeless, it's the studios that force these teams to make something for the masses.They might not be a film "classic", but most people don't go into movies expecting a "classic".
Nope, I saw the original VHS cut where Han shot first.Did you watch the special edition?
We've already established that Chinese audiences prefer CGI spectacle over any other criteria when it comes to blockbusters so that isn't surprising in the least. I don't want to rehash the Chinese audiences have shit taste debate again debate though so I'll leave it at that.Disney tried the same tactic with Chinese audience, and many Chinese casual film goers said the movies look too dated for them to enjoy.
How can you measure the popularity of a movie that's out of theaters? Where are your facts showing that Star Wars wasn't popular between 1980 and 1997 when the special edition was released?Read what I say. The popularity of the films is connected to the zeitgeist of the era. Your personal enjoyment of the OT is your personal taste and experience. What "revived" the popularity of Star Wars as a franchise in the 90s and early 2000s was the prequels being released in cinema, combined with the airing of the OT on tv stations and release on DVDs.
I should care that Chinese audiences have poor taste because...?Without the same set of cultural zeitgeist, a franchise can fail to take off in certain parts of the world. The Star Wars franchise had trouble breaking into China because the cultural zeitgeist for responding well to the OT movies simply wasn't there in the 2010s.
The bombing of Solo was more due to a lack of studio confidence that lead to a lack of advertising compared to other movies they'd released. A notoriously troubled shooting history and news about the lead failing to capture a Harrison Ford-like tone combined with a general dislike of TLJ among some audience members also probably contributed.Casual fans are important because they made up the majority of the viewers. The bombing of Solo suggest there are Star Wars movies that won't interest the casual audience.
There are plenty of finales that didn't draw more than the first movie in a franchise.Endgame succeeded because it managed to turn a large portion of casual fans into loyal fanbase that have to see Endgame on opening day. And Endgame was marked as an end of an era, and these kind of movies usually prompt even the non-fans to be curious about it and watch it in the cinema.
For example, The Return of the King made a lot more money than the first two LOTR movies. There were many people who decided to check out ROTK even though they have never seen the first two movies or read the books. Once a movie is properly hyped up, even the non-fans will check it out.
Back to the Future III only did $244.5 million at the box office compared to the first movies $389.1 million.
The Neverending Stories series went from $100 million to $17 million to $9 million at the box office over its 3 film run.
I can find plenty more examples to counteract your presumption that finales always sell.
Would the casual audience have responded to any Godzilla movie though? It's the same for Dredd it was a great movie that took a while to find an audience. Just because something isn't an immediate success doesn't mean that it can't go on to find an audience.Yes. I think as superfans we can be too entitled in what we want in a movie. Take the recent Godzilla movie. It looks like it is going to make a loss at the box office. While many Godzilla superfans felt the film gave them what they wanted, the casual audience seems bored or indifferent to the movie.
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I'm arguing that I wish it hadn't or that we could return to the days of vision trumping marketability. I'm well aware that we're not going away from a model designed to make all of the money instead of merely some of the money so we can fund future projects.