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FeverDog420
08-13-2003, 04:30 PM
http://graphics.theonion.com/pics_3931/confused_american.jpg

From The Onion:

Unsettled by U.S. military action abroad and economic struggles at home, Americans say they are desperate for the stability of an unchanging number-one movie at the box office.

"Although several summer blockbusters had successful opening weekends, only Finding Nemo has held the top slot for more than a week or two," said Andrew Kohler, chairman of the Citizens for Consistent Cinema (CCC). "This has caused unease and confusion for millions of Americans."

"With a new top movie every week, the average American can neither keep up nor move on," Kohler continued. "In times of national and international turmoil, we need a summer smash to calm our nerves. Unfortunately, few of the summer's major releases have had box-office staying-power."

The Matrix Reloaded and Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle, two highly anticipated sequels, both opened at number one, only to fall from the top slot the very next week. Kohler said this typifies the uncertainty at the box office this summer.

"After suffering a long spring of one-weekend hits, the nation was waiting for a single movie to emerge from the pack and take the lead," Kohler said. "That movie never came. Not Hulk or T3, and certainly not The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen."

According to Kohler, no movie has topped the chart for more than four weeks since September, but in the last six months, even three-week reigns have been infrequent. The high rate of turnover at the box office has resulted in what Kohler terms "pop-culture vertigo."

"Not one of these movies has had any major impact on the national consciousness," Kohler said. "Yes, many people saw Bad Boys II. But who saw it twice? Who is quoting lines from it? Who is planning a Halloween costume based on one of its characters?"

In contrast, Kohler points to previous summers, when movies like Batman, Independence Day, and Star Wars: Episode I united us as a people.

"When Jurassic Park came out, everyone at work was talking about it, all the talk shows were doing skits about it, and the tie-in products were everywhere," Kohler said. "It wasn't a good movie, but it was a huge movie. We knew who we were and what we had to do: We had to see Jurassic Park."

Omaha elementary-school teacher Janice Daly fondly recalled the comfort reliable box-office charts gave her in 1998.

"Clinton was embroiled in scandals, the terrorists had attacked American military sites, and we were bombing suspected al Qaeda camps in Sudan," Daly said. "But every weekend, I could open up the paper and see Titanic sitting right there at number one. We had something we could all believe in as Americans. In my time of need, that movie never let me down."

Few moviegoers have found such solace on the big screen this year.

"I was excited when Anger Management was number one for two weeks," said Richard Jackson, a master carpenter unemployed since February. "Then, along came Identity and knocked it off. The very next week, X2: X-Men United opened and knocked out Identity. Doesn't Hollywood know that the people of this country need some stability in our lives?"

Oliver Reynolds, an 18-year-old Pizza Hut deliveryman, was particularly stricken by the summer's jumble of one-week wonders.

"I was counting the days until The Matrix Reloaded's opening night," Reynolds said. "After my folks split up, I needed something steady to rely on. After more than a year of hype, I thought it'd rule theaters for months. I thought my friends and I would go, like, 10 times."

"We all know how that ended," he added.

Some experts say the trend may have lasting effects.

"If no film manages to dramatically outdraw its competition before the end of summer, our national identity will be called into question," said Dr. Alison Weisgall, sociologist and author of Hollywood Heartbreak: A Nation Abandoned By Its Entertainment Industry. "If the world's dominant superpower can't produce a reliable, record-breaking hit at the box office, then what is it? And, by extension, who are we?"

But Weisgall said she sees no steady box-office front-runner in sight.

"With the next Harry Potter movie not slated until next summer, 2003 is shaping up to be the most chaotic box-office year of the new millennium," Weisgall said. "Unless America finds the anchor it so desperately needs in S.W.A.T. or Freddy Vs. Jason, I fear for us all."

jolanar
08-13-2003, 05:34 PM
"I was counting the days until The Matrix Reloaded's opening night," Reynolds said. "After my folks split up, I needed something steady to rely on. After more than a year of hype, I thought it'd rule theaters for months. I thought my friends and I would go, like, 10 times."

"We all know how that ended," he added.

LOL:D

ZoMBiEPeEpSHoW
08-13-2003, 07:37 PM
Originally written by The Onion :D
"Not one of these movies has had any major impact on the national consciousness," Kohler said. "Yes, many people saw Bad Boys II. But who saw it twice? Who is quoting lines from it? Who is planning a Halloween costume based on one of its characters?"

I saw it... erm... four times. I quote lines from it all the time. And Where did I put my Mike Lowery costume?

Heh... sorry. Just felt the need to post comments on my attrociously extreme fandom.

badberry
08-13-2003, 08:02 PM
Originally posted by ZoMBiEPeEpSHoW
I saw it... erm... four times. I quote lines from it all the time. And Where did I put my Mike Lowery costume?


Oh dear.


Funny article though. Pirates is the only HUGE movie in the last while.

DevilMonkey
08-13-2003, 09:28 PM
Originally posted by FeverDog420
http://graphics.theonion.com/pics_3931/confused_american.jpg
Now that would be one awsome movie about the 4 charlies angels except one turns into a huge green monster and then is being hunt down by a terminator and will smith and martin lawrence have to stop the terminator in crazy action scenes so that the angels can get their partner back. Geez I'm bored.

A.J. Hakari
08-13-2003, 09:36 PM
Are these people kidding? GRIND will most certainly command LORD OF THE RINGS-type box office figures for weeks to come.







;)

ZoMBiEPeEpSHoW
08-13-2003, 10:36 PM
Originally posted by badberry
Oh dear

I know... Meh! Welcome to my world.

Originally posted by DevilMonkeyNow that would be one awsome movie about the 4 charlies angels except one turns into a huge green monster and then is being hunt down by a terminator and will smith and martin lawrence have to stop the terminator in crazy action scenes so that the angels can get their partner back. Geez I'm bored.

I would actually pay to see that because it sounds so attrociously wild! Heh... "attrociously" is my word of the day, and I'm not even sure if it's properly spelled. Ah... one too many (t)'s.

Jon Lyrik
08-14-2003, 12:06 AM
Wait until 2013, when my movie stays at Number 1 for six weeks in a row! :)

MunkyFonkey112
08-14-2003, 07:14 AM
Yeah, the only movies this year that had staying power were Bringing Down The House, Anger Management, X2: X-Men United, Daddy Day Care [ it did really well considering it's competition ], Bruce Almighty, Finding Nemo [ obviously, lol ], and Pirates of the Caribbean.

Benny
08-15-2003, 12:03 PM
I'm glad to see there are other fans of The Onion on these boards. I laughed hysterically when i saw this article, it is point-on perfect.

Helter-Skelter
08-15-2003, 12:45 PM
I love the Onion, it's easily one of the most consistently funny websites out there.

The funny thing is, for a satricial article, it's kinda right. Every summer there's a movie that completely dominate the box-office. So, dammit!, where was this summer's BIG blockbuster! Enough of these one-weekend wonders, give us a hit with some staying power!! Without this becon of hope, we're lost.. ;)

I feel lost without one, so lost, .... help us Hollywood!