Date: Fri 18-Sep-1998
Date: Fri 18-Sep-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: DONNAM
Quick Words:
Playing-Alexander-Avengers
Full Text:
NOW PLAYING: Summer's Film Festival: Near-Hits & Big Misses
By Trey Paul Alexander III
With Labor Day last weekend came the final gasp of summer: the last weekend
before students truly had a "back to school" mind set; the last weekend for
all-out neighborhood cookouts and gatherings around the volleyball net; and
the closing weekend of what Hollywood deems its "summer season," the most
profitable time of year for Tinseltown studios. Now that Labor Day has come
and gone, let's look back on the summer of '98, a record-breaking four months
that saw attendance at the nation's theaters rise ten percent over last
summer.
Now wait a minute, you may be saying, summer is only three months! Not this
year. Paramount, eager to get its asteroid/comet disaster pic out before
Disney's Armageddon , jumped the gun and released Deep Impact on May 8, thus
signalling the start of the summer and the opening barrage of a slate of over
50 films to come.
Serious Fun In The Summer Sun
The summer months are usually given over to mindless, mega-budgeted films
designed to appeal to the masses. This year, however, the success of The
Truman Show , coupled with the current box office triumph of Saving Private
Ryan , proved that high quality can survive and thrive between May and August.
Of course, having big names like Jim Carrey ( The Truman Show ), and Tom Hanks
and Steven Spielberg ( Saving Private Ryan ) attached to them didn't hurt.
Either way, two Oscar-worthy films arrived before we hit the dog days of
August.
Hype Matters?
Mindless, mega-budgeted films, however, did not go away. They just didn't make
as much noise. Godzilla vowed to prove that size does matter, but ended up
only the fifth highest grossing film of the summer. Armageddon nabbed the top
spot, but failed to live up to the numbers of past winners Men in Black and
Independence Day .
Despite under-achieving, neither film was by any means a flop, but factored in
with the success of more modest fare, maybe we'll see less sound and fury
signifying nothing. (Who am I kidding?)
Not Too Big, Not Too Small
With no one film dominating the market, plenty of movies were able to grab a
piece of the pie. Dr Dolittle , Lethal Weapon 4 and Mulan each grossed over
$100 million, while The Mask of Zorro , Six Days, Seven Nights , The Horse
Whisperer , Hope Floats and The Parent Trap all proved to be profitable. The
most notable aspect of these films is their diversity and the range of
audiences they were targeting. No moviegoer should have felt left out this
summer.
The Little Film That Could
Probably the biggest surprise this summer was There's Something About Mary ,
which has grossed over $130 million so far and after eight weeks was the most
popular film over Labor Day weekend. This gross-out comedy from the creators
of Dumb and Dumber has captured fantastic word-of-mouth and is still
generating buzz months after its initial release.
TV or Not TV
Since Star Trek made it big on the big screen back in 1979, the tube has been
the source for Hollywood's next wannabe franchise. The Addams Family became
two successful movies. Mission: Impossible soared in 1996. This year saw "The
X-Files" strive for cinematic stardom with its entry, Fight the Future . It
did well ($83 million), but wasn't an unabashed hit. However, it was
gangbusters compared to the lackluster, near-intolerable mess that was The
Avengers . Who could have imagined that a film with Sean Connery, Uma Thurman
and Ralph Fiennes could be that bad? Fans would do well to stick with the
reruns with Diana Rigg and Patrick Macnee.
