Indiana Jones movie is already getting bad reviews?

Indiana Jones

Now comes the part where Indiana Jones dangles over the snake pit of public opinion.

Actually, a handful of Web reviewers have already struck at the film “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” despite an intense effort by the director Steven Spielberg, the executive producer George Lucas and Paramount Pictures to keep this highly anticipated sequel out of sight until Sunday, May 18.

On that day, this fourth Indiana Jones movie is scheduled to make its debut at the Cannes Film Festival with an afternoon press screening, and another one at night.

At about the same time, the picture, which opens in theaters on the following Thursday, is expected to be screened for the news media and industry insiders at multiple showings in Manhattan and Los Angeles, while other screenings are scheduled around the world.

Mr. Spielberg is unusually fastidious when it comes to protecting his films from advance word that can diminish excitement or muddy a message planted by months of carefully orchestrated publicity and expensive promotions (including, in this case, a February cover article in Vanity Fair, complete with Annie Leibovitz photos of the cast, and leather bullwhips delivered weeks ago to newsrooms).

Mr. Spielberg customarily avoids leaky test screenings. Even Marvin Levy, his publicist of more than 30 years, said he had not yet seen the new movie.

Still, there it was, at 6:42 a.m. on Thursday: a harshly critical review on aintitcoolnews.com, from a poster who identified himself as “ShogunMaster.” Rife with details from the film, the review said, “This is the Indiana Movie that you were dreading.”

By that afternoon two other less critical, but less than sparkling, reviews also appeared on the Web site.

The man who posted as ShogunMaster, reached via the Web site, said he is a theater executive who saw the film at an exhibitors’ screening this week. He spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid reprisal from the studio.

Paramount had shown the film to a handful of theater company executives at its Los Angeles lot and elsewhere.

Movie studios increasingly tend to protect their biggest bets from advance showings. Two years ago, for instance, Sony Pictures screened “The Da Vinci Code” for critics at the Cannes Film Festival only two days before its opening in the United States. But exhibitors’ screenings can open a window for determined reviewers.

Such screenings are required in about two dozen states that have laws against blind-bidding, a practice in which theater owners were once asked to bid on films they had not seen.

As a practical matter, there is little or no actual bidding in the contemporary theater business, which relies instead on negotiations between distributors and theater owners. But distributors continue to hold screenings for theater company executives in the weeks before a film’s release, whether as a courtesy or as a way to avoid conflict with a patchwork of state laws.

Theater executives may have an incentive to play down a movie’s prospects after such a screening, to get better terms. In any case, many fans will most likely flock to “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” if only to make their own judgments about Mr. Spielberg’s decision to revisit the franchise fully 19 years after its last installment. Still, bad notices could keep the more ambivalent moviegoers from attending and thwart a truly huge box office haul.

According to Mr. Levy, who spoke by telephone on Thursday, Mr. Spielberg has kept a watchful eye on virtually every aspect of the film’s marketing campaign. “He gets involved with everything,” Mr. Levy said. “Every TV spot, every line in every ad, every advertising concept.” (Among the marketing tie-ins were Indiana Jones fedoras, available at Blockbuster stores.)

The current campaign has been engineered to create excitement around the opening date, May 22 — some billboards feature the date, in flame-colored letters, and little else — without telling too much about the film. Last year the movie’s producers went so far as to file a lawsuit against a bit player who had publicly discussed the film’s plot, which involves the exploits of an aging archaeological adventurer, still played by Harrison Ford, now 65.

The campaign has been effective so far. Fandango, which sells film tickets online, said this week that it was “seeing brisk advance ticket sales” to “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” identified as the summer’s most anticipated film in a poll Fandango conducted of moviegoers.

But a better gauge of success is likely to be the extent of online sales in the few days after the film screens at Cannes — and after many reviewers have weighed in.

Source

One Response to “Indiana Jones movie is already getting bad reviews?”

  1. me646 Says:

    Its obviously going to suck, Harrison hasnt done much acting in a while and I mean come on a 60 year old playing Indian Jones? Its all a little too pathetic, he should branch out and try new things if he wants to be relevant.

Leave a Reply. May take a few minutes to appear.

Powered by MyPagerank.Net
Amy Winehouse
Angelina Jolie
Anne Hathaway
Ashlee Simpson
Ashley Olsen
Beyonce
Brad Pitt
Britney Spears
Cameron Diaz
Carrie Underwood
Charlize Theron
Chris Brown
Christina Aguilera
Clive Owen
Daniel Craig
David Beckham
Demi Moore
Dita Von Teese
Drew Barrymore
Ellen Page
Eva Longoria
Evan Rachel Wood
Fergie
George Clooney
Gerard Butler
Gisele Bundchen
Gwen Stefani
Halle Berry
Hayden Panettiere
Heath Ledger
Heidi Klum
Heidi Montag
Hugh Jackman
Isla Fisher
Jake Gyllenhaal
James McAvoy
Jamie Lynn Spears
Jennifer Aniston
Jennifer Garner
Jennifer Hudson
Jennifer Lopez
Jessica Alba
Jessica Biel
Jessica Simpson
John Mayer
Johnny Depp
Josh Duhamel
Josh Hartnett
Julia Roberts
Justin Timberlake
Kate Hudson
Katherine Heigl
Katie Holmes
Keira Knightley
Kim Kardashian
Kirsten Dunst
Kristen Stewart
Leonardo DiCaprio
Lindsay Lohan
Madonna
Mary Kate Olsen
Matt Damon
Matthew McConaughey
Megan Fox
Miley Cyrus
Naomi Watts
Nicole Kidman
Nicole Richie
Orlando Bloom
Paris Hilton
Penelope Cruz
Rachel McAdams
Reese Witherspoon
Renee Zellweger
Rihanna
Robert Pattinson
Robert Downey Jr.
Ryan Gosling
Ryan Reynolds
Sarah Michelle Gellar
Scarlett Johannson
Shia Labeouf
Sienna Miller
Spencer Pratt
Tom Cruise
Twilight
Victoria Beckham
Zac Efron
ALL OTHERS...