According to Outside online, Google maps recently added bike routes.
East coast bicyclist Doug Mink, who works at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, has a website for bicycle enthusiasts that includes favorite bicycle movies, including the 5 films featured above
New York City gears up for their 10th annual Bicycle Film Festival this coming June according to bicyclefilmfestival.com
And, according to www.deadline.com, Paul Reubens, star of Pee-Wee's Big Adventure, signs with CAA so we can anticipate more bicycle scenes from him
Showing posts with label Top Films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Top Films. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
War Films and the Oscars
If you want to win an Oscar, make a war movie!
Of the top 15 sci-fi movies, in all-release domestic box office in 2010 dollars, 3 were nominated for best picture (Star Wars, 1977; E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, 1982 and Avatar, 2009). 0 won.
Of the top 15 war movies, in all-release domestic box office in 2010 dollars, 12 were nominated for best picture (2 predated the Oscars: The Birth of a Nation, 1915 and The Big Parade, 1925). The only picture on the top 15 list that was not nominated for a best picture was The Dirty Dozen, 1967. 5 of the top 15 won Best Picture Oscars: Gone with the Wind, 1939; The Bridge on the River Kwai, 1957; The Best Years of our Lives, 1946; Lawrence of Arabia, 1962 and Mrs. Miniver, 1942.
The Hurt Locker is the lowest domestic box office revenue war movie and one of the lowest production cost war movies ever to be nominated for Best Picture. Best Picture Oscar nominated films costing less than The Hurt Locker include Battleground, 1949; Life is Beautiful, 1998; Casablanca, 1943; Platoon, 1986 and Coming Home, 1978. Despite its low revenue, The Hurt Locker garnered 9 Oscar nominations and took home the Best Picture Oscar.
War Movies with 9 or More Oscar Nominations in order of Highest to Least Domestic Box Office:
1. Gone with the Wind, 1939 directed by Victor Fleming (The American Civil War)
2. Doctor Zhivago, 1965 directed by David Lean (Russian Revolution)
3. Sergeant York, 1941 directed by Howard Hawks (WWI)
4. For Whom the Bell Tolls, 1943 directed by Sam Wood (Spanish Civil War)
5. Saving Private Ryan, 1998 directed by Steven Spielberg (WWII)
6. Lawrence of Arabia, 1962 directed by David Lean (WWI)
7. Mrs. Miniver, 1942 directed by William Wyler (WWII)
8. Since You Went Away, 1944 directed by John Cromwell (WWII)
9. Schindler's List, 1993 directed by Steven Spielberg (WWII)
10. The Deer Hunter, 1978 directed by Michael Cimino (Vietnam)
11. Judgment at Nuremberg, 1961 directed by Stanley Kramer (WWII)
12. The Hurt Locker, 2009 directed by Kathryn Bigelow (2nd Gulf War)
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
Is Originality Dead or Just Sleeping?
Top 10 Highest Cost -Highest Revenue Movies VS Top 10 Lowest Cost - Highest Revenue Movies
From 1960 through 2009, 60% of the lowest cost (production cost less than $10 million) highest revenue (domestic box office greater than $175 million) movies were released in the 1960s and 1970s. The only movie on the Top 10 Lowest Cost - Highest Revenue list released from 2000 through 2009 is My Big Fat Greek Wedding, 2002.
Note: Although Paranormal Activity in 2009 was a big hit on a reported production cost of $15,000 it doesn't make the list with only $108 million in domestic box office
Everything changed in the first decade of the 21st century! From 1960 through 2009, 80% of the highest cost (production cost greater than $150 million) highest revenue (domestic box office greater than $250 million) movies were released from 2000 through 2009. The only films with the highest cost and highest revenue released prior to 2000 were Cleopatra, 1963 and Titanic, 1997. If Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland, with its production cost of $250 million, makes $250 million in domestic box office it will bump Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest off this Top 10 list.
Note: Superman Returns, 2006 would make the list in terms of cost with $337.7 million in 2010 $s, but with domestic box office of only $218 million in 2010 $s it doesn't make the revenue to meet the criteria.
Perhaps of more interest - only two of the 10 lowest cost - highest revenue movies are franchise films whereas seven of the highest cost - highest revenue movies are. Does that mean originality is a thing of the past?
Lowest cost - highest revenue films (20% Franchise Films)
1. The Blair Witch Project, 1999
2. Easy Rider, 1969
3. American Graffiti, 1973
4. Psycho, 1960
5. My Big Fat Greek Wedding, 2002
6. The Rocky Horror Picture Show, 1975
7. Rocky, 1976
8. Tom Jones, 1963
9. Porky's, 1982
10. Airplane!, 1980
Highest cost - highest revenue films (70% Franchise Films)
1. Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, 2007
2. Cleopatra, 1963
3. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, 2003
4. Avatar, 2009
5. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, 2002
6. Titanic, 1997
7. Spider-Man 3, 2007
8. The Dark Knight, 2008
9. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, 2009
10. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, 2006
From 1960 through 2009, 60% of the lowest cost (production cost less than $10 million) highest revenue (domestic box office greater than $175 million) movies were released in the 1960s and 1970s. The only movie on the Top 10 Lowest Cost - Highest Revenue list released from 2000 through 2009 is My Big Fat Greek Wedding, 2002.
Note: Although Paranormal Activity in 2009 was a big hit on a reported production cost of $15,000 it doesn't make the list with only $108 million in domestic box office
Everything changed in the first decade of the 21st century! From 1960 through 2009, 80% of the highest cost (production cost greater than $150 million) highest revenue (domestic box office greater than $250 million) movies were released from 2000 through 2009. The only films with the highest cost and highest revenue released prior to 2000 were Cleopatra, 1963 and Titanic, 1997. If Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland, with its production cost of $250 million, makes $250 million in domestic box office it will bump Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest off this Top 10 list.
Note: Superman Returns, 2006 would make the list in terms of cost with $337.7 million in 2010 $s, but with domestic box office of only $218 million in 2010 $s it doesn't make the revenue to meet the criteria.
Perhaps of more interest - only two of the 10 lowest cost - highest revenue movies are franchise films whereas seven of the highest cost - highest revenue movies are. Does that mean originality is a thing of the past?
Lowest cost - highest revenue films (20% Franchise Films)
1. The Blair Witch Project, 1999
2. Easy Rider, 1969
3. American Graffiti, 1973
4. Psycho, 1960
5. My Big Fat Greek Wedding, 2002
6. The Rocky Horror Picture Show, 1975
7. Rocky, 1976
8. Tom Jones, 1963
9. Porky's, 1982
10. Airplane!, 1980
Highest cost - highest revenue films (70% Franchise Films)
1. Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, 2007
2. Cleopatra, 1963
3. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, 2003
4. Avatar, 2009
5. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, 2002
6. Titanic, 1997
7. Spider-Man 3, 2007
8. The Dark Knight, 2008
9. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, 2009
10. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, 2006
Top 10 Highest Cost - Highest Revenue Movies in 2010 $s
This Top 10 Highest Cost - Highest Revenue Movies graph, restated in equivalent 2010 $s, shows the same ranking (albeit with higher dollars) as the graph below. Whether adjusted to equivalent 2005 or 2010 dollars (on the basis of the change in ticket price), when taking into consideration Avatar's higher 3-D pricing, that film comes in behind Titanic in domestic box office revenue (although above it in cost).
Top 10 Highest cost - Highest Revenue Movies
In George Lucas's Blockbusting book, the graph on page 829 does not include the 2009 released films Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince or Avatar since their box office revenues came in after the book's production wrapped. This graph corrects that.
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Can We Stop Saying Avatar is Bigger than Star Wars?
Nice post by Whitney Matheson in her usatoday Pop Candy blog on the value of adjusting for inflation to get an accurate comparison of film box office.
The fact is, if you not only adjust for average ticket price inflation, but also factor in the percentage of Avatar's box office coming from higher ticket priced 3D screenings, on a worldwide box office basis, Avatar would need another $1.3 billion to beat Titanic's record (approximately the amount of Haiti's total expenditures in 2008 per the CIA's World Factbook) and $700 million more to beat Star Wars: Ep IV A New Hope.
Adjusting for ticket price inflation is no easy task. On older films you have to adjust up from rentals to box office, adjust each re-release separately and, when possible, factor in the impact of higher than average ticket prices (for roadshow or 3D pricing). And when foreign box office is such a big swing factor (which it is in the case of Avatar where it makes up about 70% of Avatar's total worldwide box office to date), there are more variables at play. Using an estimated $7.35 average ticket price in the U.S. for 2010, adjusting for a $9 3D ticket price on 70% of Avatar's domestic box office, adjusting 50% of The Birth of a Nation's domestic box office for an average $1 roadshow ticket price and using U.S. average ticket prices to calculate foreign box office - the graphs above more accurately reflect the phenomenal success of Avatar compared to other cinema giants. It's great but it's not yet even in the Top 10!
The fact is, if you not only adjust for average ticket price inflation, but also factor in the percentage of Avatar's box office coming from higher ticket priced 3D screenings, on a worldwide box office basis, Avatar would need another $1.3 billion to beat Titanic's record (approximately the amount of Haiti's total expenditures in 2008 per the CIA's World Factbook) and $700 million more to beat Star Wars: Ep IV A New Hope.
Adjusting for ticket price inflation is no easy task. On older films you have to adjust up from rentals to box office, adjust each re-release separately and, when possible, factor in the impact of higher than average ticket prices (for roadshow or 3D pricing). And when foreign box office is such a big swing factor (which it is in the case of Avatar where it makes up about 70% of Avatar's total worldwide box office to date), there are more variables at play. Using an estimated $7.35 average ticket price in the U.S. for 2010, adjusting for a $9 3D ticket price on 70% of Avatar's domestic box office, adjusting 50% of The Birth of a Nation's domestic box office for an average $1 roadshow ticket price and using U.S. average ticket prices to calculate foreign box office - the graphs above more accurately reflect the phenomenal success of Avatar compared to other cinema giants. It's great but it's not yet even in the Top 10!
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Nature-Caused Disasters In Life and In the Movies
Mother Nature (or God, if you believe Pat Robertson) can certainly wreak a lot of damage. This morning Haiti got hit with a 6.1 magnitude aftershock (check out USGS) and here in California we're on the verge of flooding.
People react to disasters in many ways as Jon Stewart showed 1/14/2010. But the devil is in the details, as can be seen in this science blog.
So what are the top grossing disaster films where Mother Nature is the villain (not human error as was the case in Titanic, the #1 disaster film of all-time) or aliens from outer space (as was the case in Independence Day, the #2 disaster film) and how do they compare with reality?
People react to disasters in many ways as Jon Stewart showed 1/14/2010. But the devil is in the details, as can be seen in this science blog.
So what are the top grossing disaster films where Mother Nature is the villain (not human error as was the case in Titanic, the #1 disaster film of all-time) or aliens from outer space (as was the case in Independence Day, the #2 disaster film) and how do they compare with reality?
Top Five Nature-Caused Disaster Movies in All-Release Domestic Box Office
Equivalent 2008 $'s/(unadjusted $'s) In Millions of $'s
Top Five Worst Nature Deaths by Cause
- Human Extinction would be the result of a two-mile wide asteroid predicted every 10 million years.
- 830,000 deaths from the most murderous earthquake in Shansi, China 1556. That earthquake was a Magnitude 8.0 versus Haiti's 7.0 quake 1/12/2010 with deaths now estimated as high as 100,000 to 200,000.
- 300,000 to 500,000 deaths from the deadliest windstorm in the 20th century - a cyclone that hit Bangladesh, 1970.
- 227,000 deaths from the deadliest Tsunami in 2004 caused by an underwater earthquake off the coast of Indonesia
- 92,000 deaths from the deadliest volcano in Tambora, Indonesia 1815 primarily from the resulting famine.
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Musicals of the 1930s and 1940s including Gold Diggers of 1933
Monday, January 11, 2010
Foreign Box Office Makes A Big Difference
This updated Garden of Billion Dollar Movies 2000-2009 now includes Avatar. Although not quite on the list of Top 10 Domestic Box Office films for the decade (2000-2009), in terms of worldwide box office, Avatar comes in at #5 (with its foreign box office (as of this accounting) nearly 2 times its domestic take. Contrast this with The Dark Knight which took in more in domestic box office than it did in foreign. The fact that Avatar's 3D screenings are at a higher price than the average ticket prices (as tracked by the MPAA), and the foreign numbers seem to change daily, however, makes for a wider than normal margin of error when comparing these statistics.
Monday, December 14, 2009
Monday, December 7, 2009
Friday, October 30, 2009
Watch A Great Horror Flick And Read The Book!
Martin Scorsese shared with The Daily Beast his 11 scariest horror films of all time, 2 of which are featured in our Blockbusting book (The Exorcist and Psycho). Of the 11 films, 82% were based on previously published short stories or novels. Maybe it's time to climb under the covers this weekend and read a book!
#1 The Haunting, 1963 based on the novel by Shirley Jackson
#2 Isle of the Dead, 1945 original screenplay
#3 The Uninvited, 1944 based on the novel by Dorothy Macardle
#4 The Entity, 1983 based on the novel by Frank De Felitta
#5 Dead of Night, 1946 original screenplay by multiple writers including H.G. Wells
#6 The Changeling, 1980 based on the French Canadian story "L'enfant du diable" by Russell Hunter
#7 The Shining, 1980 based on the novel by Stephen King
#8 The Exorcist, 1973 based on the novel by William Peter Blatty
#9 Night of the Demon, 1958 based on the story "Casting the Runes" by Montague R. James
#10 The Innocents, 1961 based on The Turn of the Screw novel by Henry james
#11 Psycho, 1960 based on the novel by Robert Bloch
#1 The Haunting, 1963 based on the novel by Shirley Jackson
#2 Isle of the Dead, 1945 original screenplay
#3 The Uninvited, 1944 based on the novel by Dorothy Macardle
#4 The Entity, 1983 based on the novel by Frank De Felitta
#5 Dead of Night, 1946 original screenplay by multiple writers including H.G. Wells
#6 The Changeling, 1980 based on the French Canadian story "L'enfant du diable" by Russell Hunter
#7 The Shining, 1980 based on the novel by Stephen King
#8 The Exorcist, 1973 based on the novel by William Peter Blatty
#9 Night of the Demon, 1958 based on the story "Casting the Runes" by Montague R. James
#10 The Innocents, 1961 based on The Turn of the Screw novel by Henry james
#11 Psycho, 1960 based on the novel by Robert Bloch
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
Will "A Christmas Carol" Help or Hurt Disney's Animation Dominance?
14 of the Top 20 Animation Films (adjusted for ticket price inflation) were produced and/or distributed by the Walt Disney Company.
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