Showing posts with label Red State. Show all posts

The Future of Entertainment: A Red State Story

by talkbackty on Sep 3, 2011


This post spawned directly from my review of Red State. A better question is why? Why did one specific movie review lead to this post which is far more broad in scope and scale? I've seen many movies and none of the others inspired me to write about the changing of an industry or consumer demand. So why Red State?

Because Red State should change the world.

I say should and not did only because it seems to be taking a little longer than I, personally, would like it to. This is because the movement is lead by a man who gave the middle finger to entertainment media, and any time you choose to do things in a non-traditional route it's going to take some time.

Here's what Red State did. When it premiered at Sundance Kevin Smith promised an auction for the rights to his movie, which is very traditional. Where Mr. Smith broke the mold is when he allowed only one bid on the movie rights...his own bid...for $20. Then he caused wave upon wave by saying that he didn't need the traditional marketing/distributing companies and was planning on distributing the movie by himself.

He also protested
This is a review for some but new information for others: Companies spend way to much money marketing movies. For a film like Red State, that had a $4 million budget, marketing costs would have probably been in the $10-15 million dollar range. I'm dead serious. A distributing company would have spent more than twice the cost of the movie just to advertise it.

The worst part is that niche-films rarely have the audience to make up for those kinds of cost at the box-office. Then they are deemed a failure when they don't make more than $20 million dollars in a weekend. This happens all the time. (Most recently to Our Idiot Brother starring Paul Rudd).

Mr. Smith realized this and did the only sane thing...he told everyone else they were insane.

Why should he subject his movie, his artwork, to another declared failure when he could do it a different way and be more financially successful?

The crazy thing: He already has his money back. Every single cent that Red State makes on VOD (video on demand), on DVD/Blu Ray or at select theaters is profit. Before Red State was even released to a general audience, it had recouped it's cost.

How did Mr. Smith do this? He kept costs low and took the film around to select theaters where his own fans paid a premium to see the film and his Q&A.

I know, baffling concept. A director went around and showed off his work to people he knew were fans. Instead of paying millions and millions of dollars to get a few extra asses in seats opening weekend, Mr. Smith just said, "No thanks, I don't need to do that."

It worked because Mr. Smith understands something that others don't. Different movies work for different audiences in different places. Putting every movie through the same cookie cutter doesn't work.
Harry Potter 7 premiere

Here's the top ten highest grossing movies of all time. A pretty good barometer of what is "popular" in the United States.

  1. Avatar
  2. Titanic
  3. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2
  4. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
  5. Transformers: Dark of the Moon
  6. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
  7. Toy Story 3
  8. Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides
  9. Alice in Wonderland
  10. The Dark Knight

All pretty predictable. No real surprises. Now here's a list of the top ten rentals from Netflix. Also a pretty good barometer of what is "popular" in the United States.

  1. Crash (2004)
  2. The Blind Side (2009)
  3. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button (2008)
  4. The Bucket List (2008)
  5. The Departed (2006)
  6. The Hurt Locker (2008)
  7. Iron Man (2008)
  8. Sherlock Holmes (2009)
  9. No Country for Old Men (2007)
  10. Gran Torino (2008)

WHAT!?! Not one of the highest grossing movies is on the Netflix list. Are people insane? Don't they realize the superior quality of Transformers: Dark of the Moon?!? It made over a billion dollars!

That's about all the proof I need to know that different movies work for different audiences in different places. Movie theaters are great for watching things explode or seeing the crazy visuals of Avatar, but that doesn't always translate when people are at home.

Red State was never going to be in the Top Ten Box Office numbers, but a distributing company would have marketed it the same way; by throwing copious amounts of money trying to attract more and more people. By choosing a desired "target audience" and overplaying the generalities they believe that audience wants.

Sex to young men. Romance to young women. Goofy antics of middle-aged people to middle-aged people who don't have goofy antics. Intellect to...never mind, no movie gets marketed as an intellectual experience.

I like unrealistic women

I like unrealistic men

I like unrealistic versions of myself
Red State should change the world of entertainment. People should look at what Mr. Smith has done and realize that different movies can be distributed in different fashions. Fans will pay to see movies they want to see, but even more so if it is available in a fashion they are comfortable with.


What's more comfortable than having a movie streamed directly to your computer, Xbox, or PS3 and watching it from your own couch? Not much in my book.

Different movies play to different audiences in different places. Mr. Smith tailored the distribution to best fit the people he thought would enjoy Red State. He listened to the people whom he respects, his own fans.

Another baffling concept. Listening AND responding to the people who are actually interested in your work.
The best Web 2.0-ers. Look at those ears.
That's Web 2.0. Skipping over the unneeded middle men and going directly to the source. Being responsible to the fan by communicating directly with the fans.

Mr. Smith took advantage of all the different mediums now available to us as consumers. Red State can be watched on iTunes, Xbox, PS3 or YouTube. It can be watched by anyone who wants to watch it in the comfort of their own home. And it should change how the world consumes, interacts and views entertainment.

At least I hope it does.




Red State Review

by talkbackty on Sep 2, 2011

"What? What the heck is Red State? It's not playing in any theater and I've never heard of it."

That's because Red State is being distributed differently, which will be the topic of my next post. It is now available through a variety of VOD (video on demand) options including, but not limited to; Sony PlayStation, Amazon.com, iTunes, Blockbuster.com ,YouTube, Microsoft: XBOX: ZUNE ,VUDU (the Walmart platform), Sonic/Cinema Now.

The movie will also be run in theaters around the country. Check the details for a showing near your area. Currently, it also is scheduled to play at the New Beverly in Los Angles weekly.

Don't like reading? Excellent, because we just finished a TalkBack Spoilercast on Red State.


Red State is a film written, directed and edited by Kevin Smith (@thatkevinsmith). If you didn't know that already then maybe you should check out this post regarding the distribution, production, and controversy behind Mr. Smith's latest film.

The movie stars an excellent cast including Michael Parks as Abin Cooper, Melissa Leo as Sarah Cooper and John Goodman as ATF Agent Keenan. The supporting cast is also a talented group and you will probably recognize a few faces from TV or other movies.

Abin Cooper is a pastor modeled after the infamous Fred Phelps of the Westboro Baptist Church. His large, dedicated family fill the pews of his chapel located within his own house. He preaches a hyper-right wing platform about the wickedness of America, and how all sinners should be dealt with through righteous damnation (read kidnapping people and executing them on a cross).

After the abduction of a few local town boys goes poorly, the ATF arrives and all hell breaks loose. 

There's your synopsis.

Let's not bury the lead anymore. Michael Parks is haunting, convincing, terrifying, bone-chilling, and propels the viewer through the movie. He's so damn good that Mr. Smith followed the Academy rules of distributing a movie in order to insure that Parks was at least considered. Mr. Smith also believes some of the other actors have shots at nominations (Leo and Goodman) but I'm convinced Michael Parks is the only one who is truly breathtaking.
coopersdell.com
Don't get me wrong, it is a strong cast; and Goodman, in particular, does a fantastic job as lead ATF agent. Maybe it's just that Parks is so far beyond everyone else he's casting a shadow over the actor's otherwise good performances.

The strength of the cast is why I liked the film so much and why it earns one of my highest compliments: Red State is entirely re-watchable. This isn't a movie you can watch once and say, “I got it.” This is a movie you want to see a second time shortly after it ends because you're left saying, "Damn, did all that just happen?"

It doesn't fit the traditional mold for a horror movie, or any movie-mold for that matter. I missed the hey-day of horror during the seventies and eighties. All I ever got from the "horror" genre was copious amounts of gore and a couple of scenes with topless girls. So forgive my classification, but I don't think this is a horror movie. Does it have gore, you bet, but within the realms of the story. When someone gets shot in the face, their face comes off. Realism is all I got, and that was appreciated.

Perhaps, when Mr. Smith labeled this film a horror movie he was imagining what horror films used to be, not what they have devolved into. There are definite elements of the horror genre but at the end of the day I classify this as a drama.

coopersdell.com
Regardless of how it's labeled on Netflix, it is a short film by any measure. At 88 minutes, the movie is tight and the pacing is well done. I've heard complaints that the speech by Parks' Cooper mid-way through the film is too long, but for me it was simply captivating.

The run time is also the films' Achilles' heel. Mr. Smith was proud of his editing skills during this movie's production. (He edited the film simultaneously throughout the movie, meaning he went to set-directed, and then came home and edited). Granted, that is a feat that is rarely, if ever, accomplished on a film this size. In all honesty, I would have loved to have more background on all the characters, but especially some of the supporting characters whose deaths often felt sudden and their character arc short-changed.

Is it perfection? No. However, Red State is a whole lot of fun, vulgarity and violence with a helping of Michael Parks. I can't overstate this guy enough...he's amazing. The movie is a great watch and probably a great re-watch for most everyone out there.

TalkBack Grade: B+
MPAA Rating: R