Sony Pictures (a.k.a. Columbia/Tri-Star) has broken the box office,
passing the previous record of $1.2 billion in domestic grosses for
one year. The studio hit the record high six weeks earlier in the year
than the previous record-holder, Disney, leading the box office pack
for the first time in over 25 years. How'd they do it? Bugs! Men
In Black's aliens were pretty buglike. Julia Roberts went
buggy in My Best Friend's Wedding. And Starship Troopers
proves that bugs and tight pants mix just fine. Just one fly in Sony's
ointment. The run of hits is the product of the past administration
and the dŽjˆ vu will continue until next Memorial Day Weekend's release
of Godzilla. Well, at least next year's monster is a reptile.
Thank goodness for evolution.
Former b.o. king, Walt Disney Studios, is going through its next evolution.
Studio chief Joe Roth says that the studio will cut back to 22
releases next year after putting 40 flicks in theaters this year. By
1999, he says Disney will release only 15 films. As Roth told The
Hollywood Reporter, "You have to make your shots count." All of
this would seem to make a lot of sense since no matter how cheaply you
make a film, releasing the film costs at least $20 million and close
to $40 million on average these days. This year, that's about $1.2 Billion
(with a capital "B") out of Disney's pocket before you even pay for
the movies! If they cut 25 films from the schedule, saving $800 million,
even missing one Men In Black-size hit and a few other moderate
hits would leave the studio in better financial shape than they're in
now.
Finally, studio-moguls-to-be, Charlie Sheen and Bret Michaels,
have started production on No Code of Conduct, their latest venture
as Sheen/Michaels Productions (The first was a cheesecake calendar).
Michaels will direct the film that he and Charlie wrote, with Charlie
acting his butt off as a former vice cop. How original! One novel thing.
The boys will be served legal papers in a few days that claim they refused
to make good on their oral contract with Alexander Tabrizi and
Anthony Esposito, a couple of producers who helped initiate the
project on this, their maiden voyage.
Anything on your mind? Don't be shy, e-mail
me.



