Friday, September 20, 2024
Home Blog Page 968

Biggest Box Office Bomb of the Year “Welcome to Marwen” Will Lose $40 Mil Plus– from Director of “Forrest Gump,” “Back to the Future,” “Cast Away”

0

Robert Zemeckis is not used to box office failure. His resume includes some of the biggest and best movies ever made: all three “Back to the Future” installments, “Forrest Gump,” “Cast Away,” and “Who Framed Roger Rabbit” are among his achievements.

But his new “Welcome to Marwen,” based on an odd documentary, is one of the biggest bombs of 2018– if not the biggest. The whole weekend produced just $2.4 million. Universal dumped it, and the audience responded by staying away. The budget is $40 million, but you know that number is probably closer to $50 million. And all of it will be lost.

Steve Carell and Leslie Mann star in this strange narrative take on “Welcome to Marwencol” a documentary about the true story of Mark Hogancamp, a man living with PTSD. After a physical assault, Hogancamp memory was erased so he created a fictional village to ease his pain.

Unfortunately, the whole thing just didn’t come off with Zemeckis’s uusual aplomb. Critics hated it. There was no way of describing it to the public. So “Marwen” repeats the failure of last year’s “Downsizing”– something interesting that appeals to a small group and can’t be explained.

For Zemeckis that’s three disappointments in a row, after “The Walk” (which had a $1.5 mil opening and was a bigger disaster) and “Allied,” a Brad Pitt movie everyone slept through. Zemeckis will be back, no doubt. So will Carell, who’s always good. This was just a bad concept going in.

Box Office: “Aquaman” Disappoints in US with Just $72 Mil Opening, After Worldwide Smash

0

“Aquaman” is not Superman, Batman, or Wonder Woman.

The DC Universe water works brought in just $72 million for the weekend (including Thursday previews). That puts it well below the top five of DC Extended Universe films, below reviled movies like “Batman v. Superman” and “Man of Steel.”

This is not good news for more “Aquaman” movies or even more DCEU films. The Warner Bros. franchise continues to have deep problems compared to the huge success of Marvel Films.

“Aquaman” doesn’t get to set any records. It falls at around number 106 on the all time list of domestic opening weekends. You can’t really trumpet that in ads or PR.

As I wrote yesterday, Warner Bros. handled this movie brilliantly. They went to China, without reviews, and just hype. They made all their money back internationally right away, knowing the tepid reviews in the US would lead to trouble here. So they’re safe no matter what happens.

Maybe now Warners can put more effort into Clint Eastwood’s “The Mule,” which already has $28 million with little fanfare. It also has growing word of mouth. Eastwood and Dianne Wiest should be nominated for Oscars. Clint should be celebrated for his subtle, fun work. His character is not a racist– even though someone’s been planting those items. “The Mule” is a substantial piece of work!

Box Office: “Aquaman” is All Wet in US Opening, With Lower Friday Returns than the Rest of the DC Universe Comic Book Movies

0

Let’s be the first to congratulate Warner Bros. for smart thinking. They released “Aquaman” in China and other countries well before its US debut and scored over $332 million at the box office. I mean, that was genius.

Now reality bites in the US where “Aquaman” is not only all wet but may be in danger of drowning. Friday night returns here were $32 million, which included $13.7 million from Thursday previews and earlier showings on Amazon Prime. That puts “Aquaman” below the top 5 openings for DC Universe releases.

It’s funny, too, because I almost wrote when they announced that December 15th Amazon Prime preview that WB knew they were in trouble. And now that turns out to be correct. But they’ve got that foreign release money, so they’re safe from real trouble. But “Aquaman” will do less well than “Man of Steel” and a lot less than “Wonder Woman.” Poor DC. Things were so much better when comic books cost just 12 cents.

More bad news “Mary Poppins Returns” did $6.7 mil on Friday night. Disney dropped its five day projection to $30 million from $35 million. They’re up to $15.5 million this morning. It’s not a jolly holiday for Mary, I am sorry to say.

The new Jennifer Lopez vehicle, “Second Act,” did $2.5 million last night. Will it make $7 mil for the weekend? That’s what JLO and ARod spend on snacks.

 

 

“The Color Purple” Author Alice Walker Doubles Down on Being Anti-Semitic, Anti-Israel, Etc: Her Career is Over

0

Alice Walker, author of “The Color Purple,” will not be eating lunch in this town or any town again.

On her website Walker has doubled down on being anti-Semitic and anti-Israel. She once again endorses anti-Semitic writer and Holocaust denier David Ickes. She also reaffirms her her support for BDS (Big, Dumb Shits) the group that protests Israel.

There’s no word yet on how her Hollywood pals Steven Spielberg, Quincy Jones, Oprah Winfrey feel about all this. Walker hasn’t had a best selling book in decades, so aside from her “Color Purple” publisher, no one else will care.

Walker writes: “I was asked, in writing, by the NYTs BY THE BOOK “What is on your nightstand?” I replied with the titles of the pile of books that were currently on mine; all of them in some state of read, to read, or unread. David Icke’s book, And the Truth Shall Set You Free was among them. I find Icke’s work to be very important to humanity’s conversation, especially at this time. I do not believe he is anti-Semitic or anti-Jewish.”

She adds: “I don’t know about Icke, but I am also a supporter of BDS (Boycotts, Divestment, Sanctions, now heavily under attack) as a just and justified means of ending Israeli occupation of Palestine, and ending the slaughter of Palestinians, especially children, which Israeli soldiers do with alarming frequency.” She doesn’t know what she’s talking about, of course.

Alice, let’s be frank. Only the first 75 pages of “The Color Purple” were any good. You’ve made a 30 year career out of those pages. And now they’re going up in flames. Alice, Maya Angelou is rolling in her grave.

UPDATE: One Direction’s Zayn Malik Sees New Solo Album Falls Off iTunes Chart After 10 Days, Total Sales Disaster with 2,000 Sold

0

MONDAY AFTERNOON 12/24: Icarus fell right off the top 200 iTunes chart today. Gone.

EARLIER: It’s been a bad week for Zayn Malik, and I can only wonder what he’s thinking.

The One Direction star’s second album was released one week ago. Today it’s at number 171 on the iTunes chart. With 27 tracks, and two years of work, “Icarus Falls” is basically dead on arrival.

No one bought it, not one One Direction fan, not one Zayn fan. Total sales are fewer than 2,000, with a second total of 5,500 that includes streaming of individual tracks. A physical CD may have been released today– who knows?

Of course, six of the tracks had already been released as singles. Three more were pushed out haphazardly with the album’s release. They ALL died.

Zayn fans keep reposting something called an iTunes World Wide Chart, claiming “Icarus Falls” is number 1. I don’t know where they’re getting this from. There is no such chart. “Icarus Falls” is a bust in every country.

The album had no marketing or pre-sale, no build up. Zayn did nothing to promote it. His label, RCA, undoubtedly heard no singles, and just let Zayn put it out without fighting him. And now it’s dead.

What a week! What a shame.

Pop Music: A Year After Columbia Records Named New Chief, They’ve Had No Hits at All, With the Exception of Bruce Springsteen on Broadway

0

The first of the year will mark the anniversary of Ron Perry taking over as president of Sony’s Columbia Records. In that time, the company has had no hits, nothing. This week they boast just John Legend’s Christmas album and “Springsteen on Broadway.”

Perry was a music publisher, coming from Downtown Music. His predecessor , Rob Stringer, who moved up to run Sony Music. promised that Perry would be bringing all his acts, etc. Stringer said at the time, in a press release: “Ron is an immensely dynamic and forward thinking executive who excels at bringing the best out of artistic vision. After his enormous success in recent years, we are thrilled to have Ron join Sony Music and lead the great team and unparalleled roster at the legendary Columbia Records label.”

The only noise made all year was the signing of an unknown rapper for $4 million named Dominic Fike. I was enthusiastic and thought they might release a single. But nothing’s come out.

Sony Music suffered through 2018. They couldn’t even make a hit of Barbra Streisand’s “Walls” album. Tony Bennett and Diana Krall’s duets were a modest hit. Otherwise, Sony Music’s umbrella companies like RCA and Epic produced a couple of hits, like Khalid and Camilla Cabello. But overall, Columbia, once the gem of the ocean, sank to the bottom of the sea.

Universal Music dominates the top 50 albums presented by hitsdailydouble.com. Every once in a while you see Atlantic Records, part of Warner Music. That’s mostly thanks to Atlantic’s Pete Ganbarg, who made “Hamilton” and “The Greatest Showman” soundtracks into hits. He also gave renewed life to Kelly Clarkson.

But what will Columbia do? Certainly someone in Japan has noticed no hits on the charts or radio. Springsteen, Streisand, Bennett are legacy names but not selling albums. Beyonce is still sort of with Columbia. But her EP with Jay Z, “The Carters,” didn’t make the top 50 of the year or launch a hit single. Both Beyonce and Adele are what Columbia has to look forward to, but neither one seems to be coughing up new product soon.

Mary Poppins Day 2: Disney Faces A Bleak Christmas as Reboot Falls by $700K, Pointing to Lower than Expected Weekend

0

For all the nostalgia enthusiasts, “Mary Poppins Returns” looked like a winner. I certainly thought so when I saw it last week.

But day 2 for Mary wasn’t so good. The Rob Marshall directed musical fell by $700,000 from its opening to just $4,053,000. That’s a 16% drop.

If the musical continues in this direction, even a $35 million five day opening will be hard to reach.

Come on, kids, get out there, and see this wonderful extravaganza. What’s holding you back?

Disney does have a problem when it comes to releasing non-Marvel, Pixar, LucasFilm movies– in other words, Disney films. They already have a turkey in theaters, “The Nutcracker and the Four Realms,” which has made just $53 million  ($152 million worldwide).

But “Mary Poppins Returns” is a far cry from those realms. It’s delightful. The main leads– Emily Blunt, Ben Whishaw, and Emily Mortimer– are terrific. And you get to see Dick van Dyke tap dance on a desk! He’s 92!

Let’s hope things pick up tonight!

 

“Grey’s Anatomy” Creator Shonda Rhimes Doesn’t Like the Press Saying She was Lured to Netflix: “I do not follow trails of candy. I am the Candy”

0

“Grey’s Anatomy” creator Shonda Rhimes, the Queen of ShondaLand, has taken umbrage with a story on a website called The Wrap. She’s written on Twitter: Why do reporters always say writers were “lured”? Like we’re children following a trail of candy. I created a $2B+ revenue stream for a major Corp with my imagination. I do not follow trails of candy. I am the candy.”

Right on, Shonda. The Wrap writer wrote in his article: “After luring [Shonda] Rhimes away from ABC Studios last year, Netflix begin 2018 by signing fellow uber-producer [Ryan] Murphy to an eye-popping $300 million deal, getting him to leave his own longtime home at 20th Century Fox. Netflix next enticed “Black-ish” creator Kenya Barris, after he cut short his deal with ABC Studios.”

Shonda’s Tweet ranks as the Best of 2018. She’s totally right. Netflix is going for the gold– and the gold, the candy, are these content providers who turned themselves into one person studios. I feel bad that Steve Bochco is in heaven now. He did the same thing. Tyler Perry has done it, too. Norman Lear in his prime was the example of it all. He was a candy factory!

Flashback: How Mariah Carey Was Ripped off by Jennifer Lopez and Others When the “Glitter” Project Was Being Put Together

0

Flashback: Even though Mariah Carey herself had to pay off a number of plagiarism lawsuits during her days at Sony, she was also ripped off at one point. Here’s a story I published on April 4, 2002, a year after Mariah had a nervous breakdown over the failed movie and soundtrack to “Glitter.”

 

 

from April 4, 2002: Mariah ‘Ripped Off’ Twice on Same Record

The situation is worse than I thought. In the below story, which we published yesterday, rap impresario Irv Gotti conceded for the first time that Mariah Carey had her work on Glitter lifted for Jennifer Lopez‘s J.LO album.

It turns out however that before it was released Glitter was pilfered from not once but twice by Lopez.

Not only was a song sample Carey intended to use taken from Glitter, but a concept as well.

All of this has to do with Lopez’s hit song, “I’m Real,” which in fact is two different songs. Confused? Welcome to pop music in 2002.

On Lopez’s album J.LO, “I’m Real” appears as an upbeat dance number. There’s no rapping or male vocal accompaniment. The record does sample the old disco song, “Firecracker.” The songwriting credits for that version of “I’m Real,” list Martin Denny (who wrote “Firecracker”) as well as Lopez and three producers. J.LO was released on July 24, 2001.

The remixed “I’m Real,” which was released a few weeks later, is quite different. It’s a slow give and take duet between Lopez and rapper Ja Rule. Denny’s name is gone from the credits, replaced by Ja Rule (real name Jeffrey B. Atkins). This version became Lopez’s hit single. Two songs, one title.

For Glitter, Mariah Carey had found the “Firecracker” sample and recorded it on her soundtrack as “Loverboy.” For another Glitter track called “If We,” she and Ja Rule recorded a slow give and take vocal. On J.LO, the upbeat “I’m Real” ripped off Carey’s planned — and subsequently scuttled version — of “Loverboy.” The remixed version of “I’m Real” — which Irv Gotti referred to in his XXL interview — copied the style and substance of “If We.” Creatively, Carey — who’d worked hard on Glitter for a year in secret — could say she was plundered twice. Wouldn’t that be enough to drive anyone crazy?

Thanks to the Internet, Carey’s fans can make the “If We”/”I’m Real” scandal a party game simply by logging on to cdnow.com which features audio clips of all three songs — “If We” plus the two “I’m Real” versions. It’s fun, free entertainment!

Mariah Vindicated: Her Song Was ‘Swiped’

Mariah Carey may finally have been vindicated. It seems that there was more than a little truth in her accusations last summer that someone was out to get her.

In the new issue of a rap magazine called XXL, record executive Irv Gotti admits that Tommy Mottola, Carey’s ex-husband and the head of Sony Music, instructed him to make a record for Jennifer Lopez that sounded exactly like one Gotti’s company had made with Carey for her movie, Glitter — even though Glitter was not finished and Lopez would beat Carey to the punch and undermine a project she was recording for Sony.

In XXL, Gotti is asked by writer Keith Murphy: “Is it true that Tommy Mottola asked Murder Inc. [Gotti’s production company] to do the remix of [Jennifer Lopez’s] “I’m Real” after hearing a song Ja Rule did with Mariah Carey on the Glitter soundtrack?”

Gotti replies: “Ja wrote a song with him and Mariah singing back and forth on the title track. I get a call from Tommy Mottola, who I have a great relationship with, and he’s like, ‘I need you to do me a favor. I want you to do this remix for Jennifer Lopez. I want you to put Ja on the record.’ Immediately I knew what he was doing because we just finished the Mariah record.”

The Mariah record Gotti refers to is “Loverboy,” from the movie Glitter. Carey had picked out a sample from Yellow Magic Orchestra‘s recording of “Firecracker” to be the basis of the song. She and Ja Rule worked on it, and the song was included on daily viewings from the filming of Glitter.

But Glitter was a Sony Pictures release, which is a sister company of Sony Music. Mottola, according to sources who worked on the movie, was surreptitiously viewing footage of Glitter while his ex-wife was shooting it.

“Mariah was so paranoid about the music getting out that we had another singer sing the temporary versions,” says a Glitter insider.

“When Jennifer Lopez’s record came out, and had the exact same song, we knew she had a right to be paranoid. We couldn’t believe it.”

Indeed, Gotti’s statement to XXL suggests that once Mottola heard Carey’s song — and knew Glitter was months away from completion — he stole the idea and gave it to Lopez for the remix of her song, “I’m Real.”

The hit version of “I’m Real” with Ja Rule was released after Lopez’s album was already out. It’s substantially different from the original version.

Murphy, the reporter who interviewed Gotti, said yesterday that the rap music executive told him that Mottola wanted Ja Rule to make a record “in the same style” for Lopez that he’d already made for Carey. “It was exactly the same style — with Mariah and Ja talking back and forth, just the way he does with Jennifer on I’m Real.”

But here’s a key revelation: the music publisher of “Firecracker” — the sample that Ja Rule used first with Carey and then with Lopez — told me yesterday: “Mariah Carey called us to license a sample from “Firecracker” first. Then, within a month, Jennifer Lopez also called for it.”

The publisher of “Firecracker” also pointed out that the composition, by Martin Denny, had never been sampled before Mariah Carey called about it.

Sony Music spokesperson Patricia Kiehl said yesterday: “One song has nothing to do with the other. This is absolutely untrue.”

When the possible theft of “Firecracker” was brought up in Talk magazine last fall, Mottola and Lopez’s producers immediately invoked that idea that it was a coincidence that the sample was used twice, though — a different defense altogether.

Ironically, the “Firecracker” case found Carey getting a taste of her own medicine when she — and not Lopez — had been Mottola’s darling. During Carey’s 11 years at Sony Music, she, Sony, and Mottola were sued at least three times for plagiarism. Each case was settled out of court for roughly $1 million, with Carey making no admission of guilt. In one instance, Randy Hoffman — Mottola’s business partner and Carey’s then manager — wore a hidden tape recorder to a meeting with a witness hoping to get him to change his testimony.

Just as other songwriters had once been affected by having their songs swiped, the impact on Carey of losing the “Firecracker” sample for Glitter was deep. The singer was forced to quickly change the sample on “Loverboy” from “Firecracker” to Cameo‘s old hit, “Candy.”

“We had to work fast,” says a Glitter source, “because we had to find music that would fit what was already filmed.” Nevertheless, the damage was done. When “Loverboy” was released it was savaged by music industry trade paper Billboard in an unusually harsh review.

Carey — exhausted from working on the project and then knocked out by the scathing reaction — snapped and became the subject of public derision.

Insiders speculate the Mottola-Lopez theft may have had a silver lining. Carey was able to use it to free herself and Glitter from Sony, even though she still owed them an album on her contract. One source told me: “Mariah and her lawyer, Don Passman, went to Tommy and told him that if they didn’t let her go, she’d let the higher-ups at Sony know what he’d done to her-and to a Sony project.”

The speculation is that Mottola had to make Glitter look as bad as possible to Sony’s Japanese honchos, who loved Carey and wanted to keep her as an artist. Ironically, Glitter still sold like crazy in Japan.

Carey wound up taking Glitter to EMI/Virgin as the first record on an $80 million deal. When the album tanked, EMI panicked and paid her a total of $49 million to cancel her contract. Carey is now fielding offers from Universal Music Group, J Records, and Warner Music Group for new contract.

Box Office: “Mary Poppins Returns” with Disappointing Opening Night– $4.7 Million– and a Nasty New York Times Review

0

Mary Poppins has returned– and it’s not the magic we all imagined.

“Mary Poppins Returns” scored only $4.7 million on its opening day yesterday. Projections for the five day weekend are $35 million, which is very low. Twice that should have been the result.

Disney has a problem on its hands because it planned sequels and has invested a lot in retooling its most prized film. Rob Marshall did an excellent job, and Emily Blunt is wonderful, frankly. The animation is terrific. Surprise appearances from Meryl Streep, Dick van Dyke, and Angela Lansbury just add to the thrill of it all. Lin Manuel Miranda is quite terrific, too.

But Rotten Tomatoes has “Mary Poppins Returns” at a low 78. The New York Times’s Manohla Dargis didn’t help, eviscerating the new movie in her review. The headline was a killer–

Yikes.

Remember the movie “Saving Mr. Banks”? Somehow I think P.L. Travers, who wrote “Mary Poppins,” has jinxed this movie. Or maybe it’s just bad karma. Disney held a “private” opening of the movie in New York this week, didn’t invite press, and staged the whole thing at a not very glamorous theater. It was a sign of bad things to come.