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Showing posts with label cinema. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cinema. Show all posts

Tuesday 15 December 2020

Michael Shamberg Speaks On How The Cinema Business Can Rebound From the COVID-19 Effect

 American movie producer and former Time-Life correspondent Michael Shamberg shared his views on the effects of COVID-19 on the theatrical business.

The producer was involved in different projects like Erin Brockovich, A Fish Called Wanda, Garden State, Gattaca, Pulp Fiction, and The Big Chill. He is connected with many production companies, Jersey Films, with Stacey Sher and Danny DeVito, and in 2015 Shamberg collaborated with Double Feature Movies with Stacey Sher.

He co-founded a video collective called Raindance Corporation that used to publish a magazine newspaper named Radical Software.

A week ago, when Warner Bros. announced that the studio would release some of its big-budget projects in 2021 on HBO Max and in theatres on the same day, the industry was shocked by the decision. Almost the whole of Hollywood sensed that the announcement could change the movie-going culture forever. Disney, one of the industry leaders who have captured 40% of the United States box office, said that theatres are the “legacy medium.” If theatres could not again stand up on their feet, then the tradition of cinema as an art form will die, and the announcement would result as the final nail of the coffin. The studio added that it would end the movie’s essence watching for the Gen Zers and 140 million millennials as they would be growing up watching films on their laptops, big-screens, cell phones, and big-screen TVs.



Shamberg said that he was one of the producers of Contagion directed by Steven Soderbergh. It stars Kate Winslet, Jennifer Ehle, Marion Cotillard, Matt Damon, Laurence Fishburne, Jude Law, and Sanaa Lathan. The movie’s plot revolves around the spread of a contagious virus transmitted by respiratory droplets. The film received huge popularity due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It collected a gross of $136.5 million against a budget of $60 million. Contagion received amazing responses from critics for the performance and its narrative.

It holds an approval rating of 85% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 272 reviews with an average rating of 7.09.

The producer said that the power of storytelling brought the movie back from 2011 no matter where we see it.

Until the vaccines reach everywhere globally, it would not be safe to go back to the cinema halls, and the theatres in the United States can only survive by the dramatic downsizing. Before the pandemic hit, around 1,000 theatres were collecting 65-70% of the opening weekends gross of a blockbuster. During the lockdown, the theatre industry has undergone bankruptcy. It would not be able to reopen the full capacity without any mega release like Fast and Furious or Spider-Man.

The streaming platforms, including Amazon Prime, Netflix, HBO Max, Hulu, and Apple, are the new theatre chains attracting the audiences toward them. Big stars like Leonardo DiCaprio, Anne Hathaway, Charlize Theron, and Ryan Reynolds are also working with them. Oscar-winning directors like Steven Soderbergh are making a movie in collaboration with the streaming platforms.

A monthly subscription to these streaming networks is like the cost of one movie ticket. And the studios like Legacy Studios are also moving closer towards the streamers as they are more profitable for them to do the business.

Imagine, where does this leave the cinema? The viewers who used to love watching movies in theatres have to move on. The big screen has a different cinematic experience that one never can get on small screens at home.

Shamberg said the industry needs movie critics now more than ever. So they can make people understand the importance of big screens and cinemas. The National Society of Film Critics must come forward and coordinate nationwide to start the campaign “what is cinema.”


Source:-    Cinema Business Can Rebound From the COVID-19 Effect

Thursday 3 September 2020

Top Films That Are Based in New York City

 

Top Films That Are Based in New York City



New York City has a cinematic identity that has never failed to mesmerise. Being the financial capital of the world, there is another side to the city that boasts of art and cinema. There are a number of stories that have evolved from NYC. And some of the films below are to watch out for, to get the essence of the place and its greatness which has inspired some of these films.



Breakfast At Tiffany’s (1961)

The Audrey Hepburn starrer classic, Breakfast At Tiffany’s is an adaptation of a Truman Capote novella of the same name. The book and thus the film is as much about the character, Holly Golightly as it is about New York City. The sense of NYC infuses a staggeringly depressing yet charismatic story about a high-class fashionable girl (Audrey Hepburn) and a writer (George Peppard).

The film remains to be one of the most iconic films of Audrey Hepburn’s career which was supposedly not written for her, but Marilyn Monroe.

Taxi Driver (1976)

The film that will always leap through your mind when a yellow cab pulls is Taxi Driver. Martin Scorsese’s most of the early films were set in New York, and with Taxi Driver, he presents New York City as the star. The film is shot with warmth and nostalgia and Robert De Niro inches his perfection to the brim, justifying that character that Scorsese wrote for Travis.

Manhattan (1979)

Every New York inspired film has to have a Woody Allen movie, and the most famous one is Manhattan. This romantic comedy-drama film tells the story of a television writer and his dating affairs. The film is about finding love and happiness in a city where nothing seems impossible.

Manhattan won three Academy Awards for Best Supporting Actress, Best Writing and Best Screenplay.

The Apartment (1960)

Although very little of New York is seen in this Billy Wilder classic, yet the complex power dynamics of the city can be felt in every frame. Most of the film takes place inside an Upper West Side apartment that explores the plight of a man (Jack Lemmon) at an insurance firm, who loans his place out to his bosses for their romantic affairs, assuming this would help him get a job promotion. Things start to change when he falls for an elevator operator (Shirley MacLaine).

Birdman (2014)

Birdman is a classic example of films that have been inspired by New York City, especially the Broadway that is considered as the supporting character. The story is about an ageing actor who was best known for playing Birdman, the superhero in the 1990s. He tries desperately hard to gain respect by starring in a Broadway play.

The film won the Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay and Best Cinematography out of a total of nine nominations.

West Side Story (1961)

Being the land of Broadway and bright lights, New York City as a setting lends itself perfectly to the musicals.based on 1957 musical, West Side Story, the film is also a reboot of William Shakespeare’s romantic classic, Romeo and Juliet. 

The film is set in the Upper West Side, and the story is about the rivalry between two teenage gangs who come from different ethnicities. New York City has inspired filmmakers for generations. Any list of best New York-based films will have movies that would range from the early 20th century till today.


Source:-  Films  Based in New York City

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