Communicora
Premium Member
The first clip from Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny has been released.
It looks fun. I think this will be one I see in the theater.
The first clip from Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny has been released.
Okay, Henry Selick then from Coraline.Noooooo please not Tim Burton
It looks fun. I think this will be one I see in the theater.
It will be exciting and have some good tomb raiding. The general plot is fine. I don't know if it is worth seeing in the theater for all the things Disney will throw in. It is worth a view on Disney+ and a bluray purchase. I just worry about being disappointed in the theater and how they will butcher the character.I think so too for us. My kids just re-watched all of the movies and are excited for it as well. It doesn't have to be a masterpiece, but I'm just hoping for some fun escapism.
It’s the one iconic character of his he enjoys playingYou know there is something wrong when Ford is not grumpy.
Hard to gauge, but if reviews track WOM and it opens within its projections, very hard to see this not losing money given its reported $295M budget.question is: how hard does this film flop? are we talking like, TLM or Ant-Man 3 type flop where it loses money, or just a Thor 4 level flop where it just does poorly/not as well as they'd hope?
I'm thinking the Thor 4 level flop. It will do fine by name recognition alone. It just isn't going to make as much as the others.question is: how hard does this film flop? are we talking like, TLM or Ant-Man 3 type flop where it loses money, or just a Thor 4 level flop where it just does poorly/not as well as they'd hope?
Thor 4 eventually broke even in the theatrical run. Are movies that break even a "flop"?
Problem is people are using "flop" to mean different things.
Thor 4 was a disappointment in that its reviews were only fair-to good and it didn't make a big profit margin. Compared to other MCU movies, it's bad. Compared to all movies widely-released, it's good.
With post-theatrical windows, Thor 4 will certainly be 'profitable.'
The term 'flop' has an objective definition and it should be used with the proper descriptor. Critical flop (poor reviews), Financial flop (loses money), etc.
The thing is flop used to be reserved for films that actually met that criteria. But it's been oversaturated to fit narratives even when it makes no sense and doesn't apply (like Thor 4).
There is a narrative at play when the question you brought to the thread is "how hard does this film flop?" and then use an example like Thor 4 which ultimately made a profit, but categorize it as a 'flop' (I didn't even like Thor 4 but the facts are it made money)Call it a flop or don't, but the film was both a critical and financial disappointment. I'm not getting bogged down in the semantics of defining colloquial slang like the word "flop."
as for the narrative being advanced... to all the Disney fans: there is no "narrative" or anti-Disney conspiracy going on here. I called Thor 4 a flop because, in relative terms, the film did poorly from both a critical and financial stand point.
There is a narrative at play when the question you brought to the thread is "how hard does this film flop?" and then use an example like Thor 4 which ultimately made a profit, but categorize it as a 'flop' (I didn't even like Thor 4 but the facts are it made money)
I don't see what you hope to gain out of a question like that other than to continue the negative narrative.
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