Friday, March 5, 2010

Creativity and Process

Last night’s ushering gig was for a panel discussion on the creative process as it relates to movies. The speakers were Brett Ratner (director of X-Men 3, producer of Prison Break, among other things), Peter Guber (producer of A Few Good Men, 7 Years in Tibet and Batman Returns, among many, many others) and Bob Balaban (producer of Gosford Park, director of The Exonerated and actor in many things – you might recognize him as the studio executive who leaves Hollywood and joins Greenpeace to save whales in order to impress Elaine on Seinfeld). There were a few things that I took away (four if you include the fact that Campbell Brown from CNN is prettier in real life than on TV, wench, pretty or smart, pick one).

The first is that the Oscars are pretty much the big ball of hooey that I’ve always figured they were. And are getting hooier by the minute. One significant item I found out is that the only category where you are required to have seen all entries in order to vote is foreign film. Thank you and good night. The Academy just lost all semblance of credibility with me. Oh, I heard Sandra Bullock was good in that. Let me check that box.

Second, and really sad for me personally, is the disappearance of the middle budget film. Once upon a time, if you really, really wanted to get your movie made, you’d figure out a way to do it for between $5 million and $30 million, and if you had any sort of a reputation or were considered a hot prospect, odd were that you’d be able to get it made. But because they’ll only double the investment at best, and make another piddly $15 million, they aren’t considered good business. So those are movies that tell a good story and need enough money to pay for a modest location in the real world and good actors with some name recognition, but you aren’t going to blow anything up, shoot at the top of the Eiffel Tower or film in 3D. So what you are getting is big, tent-pole, franchise, merchandise tie-in movies. Or the Blair Witch Project. And even the Blair Witch Projects are getting harder to see, because the studios are afraid of buying something that isn’t the Blair Witch Project or Little Miss Sunshine. So, anyone who’s a fan of movies where people talk, you may be SOL in the next few years at the picture show.

And lastly, and least fully, I started thinking about something as I watched the 3 people talk. It was interesting to me that the two most financially successful people on the stage (Ratner and Guber) focused less on luck and talent in what they do than on the hard work. They focused on the things that they could control: how much effort they could put into a project and how well they were able to apply their talents. Bob Balaban is less financially successful, but, in my eyes at least, more interestingly successful. He focused more on being open to opportunities as they came along. The acting thing wasn’t offering him new challenges, so he decided he’d take a directing gig and found he enjoyed it. Then he wasn’t that excited with the directing projects he was getting, so he decided to start producing projects he found meaningful. When he wrote a script for kids, and was offered to turn it into a book instead – hey, okay, that can work too. He seemed to have a lot of pots on the stove, and when one cooled down, he could turn and concentrate on something else. Always busy. I’m not sure what the lesson is here on this. But it’s definitely something to think about.

7 comments:

WashingtonGardener said...

i think lesson is you make your own luck and are ready when opportunity presents itself

ps i have always found academy voters knowledge and taste lacking - ever since avinty projects like Dances with Wolves and Mel's Scottish farce swept the categories in their years

FirePhrase said...

I actually loved Dances with Wolves, but I'm curious to watch it in another 10 or 20 years to see if it still holds up.

I started to really doubt the Academy's wisdom when Say You, Say Me from White Nights won best song. Ugh. It's not even a good Lionel Richie song. It didn't hold up 10 minutes later, let alone 10 years.

glorm said...

What a minute! The voters don't have to actually view all the entries, but they will vote for "the best"? (except for Foreign movie). Did I read that correctly?

victory4angela said...

I guess this reminds me of why it's so hard to find a good movie these days. I hardly ever go to the movies anymore since I usually don't find anything I want to fork over $12 to go see. (Plus, sadly Mike is a "blow up the Eiffel Tower" kind of guy.) I've just discovered Netflix and watched a whole bunch of movies during the twin blizzards last month (Mike was in TX). I just don't go to the movies like I used to.

I saw Blind Side (loved it - pulling for Sandra) and Avatar (liked it, but not worthy of an Oscar). I can probably squeeze in Hurt Locker tomorrow afternoon since Mike bought the DVD (explosions!).

Maybe they should divvy up the movies so the academy will actually have time to watch them. I know there's a LOT of movies but it's not like they're like most of the regular people who have to slog to work for at least 8hrs/day and 50 weeks/yr. While they're jet-setting around or being driven here and there, they can watch a movie or two.

FirePhrase said...

Yep, Glo, you heard it right. They don't even have to see the movies in order to vote. Right from the mouths of 3 actual Academy members. Kinda takes the old shine off that golden boy, doesn't it?

The thing that really makes me frustrated is that those smaller movies are the ones that you really have to make an effort to go see. While the giant movies (that really are the agri-business of the movie industry, low nutritional value and possibly hazardous to your brain chemistry) you can go to the nearest multiplex, where it's showing on 4 screens. When was the last time you actually didn't get in to see a movie you wanted to, close to the time you wanted to at the multiplex? Um, yeah the little film only made $1 million. But it was playing on a fraction of the movie screens. Really feels like they rig the game when talk movie money.

I'll still say Moon was the best movie I saw last year. I think it cost $5 million to make, and to me it looked like way more than that on the screen. Just shows that sometimes the answer to better movies isn't throwing more money at the screen.

FirePhrase said...

And you are so right, Ang. These are supposed "movie" people. Shouldn't they want to keep up with what's going on, just the way your doc should pick up a copy of Lancet every once in awhile? And don't they always claim to "love film"? Seems like they would have at least seen the pictures causing the most buzz in the year, even just to keep abreast of what's going on.

WashingtonGardener said...

pps they all get free screener copies of all the nominated movies - so how is THAST for ridiculous that they don't watch them all

TIME: Quotes of the Day