I
recently asked a friend of mine at another studio how he liked one of
its films. Innocent enough question (note the use liked).
It had just gone through its first test screening, and I was curiousdid
it turn out well, or not so well. What I got
back was more like a response about someones high school equivalency
graduation exam. It did great in the top two boxes! he exuberantly
exclaimed. Our total was 77, but we were 88 among males under
21!
Cool, I said,
as I tried in vain to remember where 77 in the top two boxes fit into
the studio spin line. I pressed on: Did you like it? After
a few seconds, my friend admitted that he thought it had turned out
okay. Theyd have to find the right release date. For
him, though, the good news was that it had scored high enough with test
audiences that if the picture didnt work, he could blame marketing.
Now, Ive never worked
at another studio, but I have friends at almost all of them. I can guarantee
you that this completely stupid conversation happens over and over again,
everywhere. Ive been a part of them, and Ill say it for
the record: The test screening process is being abused by people who
have no faith in their basic human taste and instinct. Forget about
simply saying you liked or didnt like
something; now its, How did it score? All anyone wants
to know is How did it score? This entire industry is research
obsessed. What happened to personal opinion?
The moguls of yesteryear
didnt test screen a film for a recruited audience until it was
almost complete. Major decisions about structure, story, performance,
and music had already been implemented, and the most that might happen
to the film would be a few lifts here and there. Over the decades, this
process has devolved to the point where a very unfinished product is
taken into a consumer environment, questionnaires are immediately handed
out after the lights come up, and the audience is invited to recut and
sometimes reshoot the film. For too many in Hollywood, the last thing
they hear about a film has become the first thing they say about it,
and the last thing they heard came from the test audience.
Why?
How did this happen? Research can be a valuable tool, but used in the
wrong way it can lead to filmmaking by committee of the worst kind.
Its not the fault of the research people or the test audience.
The studios invite them to participate. Its how the studios react
to the information that sometimes creates the problem: Oh no!
Were good with young males, but older females are down. Get those
numbers up! So a male-oriented scene is cut, and maybe the length
of the film is shortened, and then: Hey, older females are up
but young males are down. Maybe change the music? Can we get an NSYNC
title song? Instead of finishing the film you read and greenlit,
you start a game of chase the numbers! Some films cannot
be all things to all people, yet the testing process can become an attempt
to change a seafood salad into an all-you-can-eat buffet.
We dont ask the audience
to get involved when we decide to spend the tens of millions of dollars
in the first place, so why do we empower them after the fact? Fear and
anxiety, thats whytheyve replaced taste and instinct.
When studios spend what they spend to make a commercial film, they want
to know that theyre going to be okay as soon as possible. Fine.
However, there are two basic problems with the way studios are clinging
to this kind of research.
1. Test screenings work for
straight down the middle, broad-based, crowd-pleasing films. Period.
Thats it. Those are films that can actually be graded by numbers.
In our case, films such as The Wedding Singer, Rush Hour, Austin
Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, The Mask, Dumb and Dumber...no
problem. Theyre supposed to please everyone. So the top two boxes
(by the way, that means the boxes on the test questionnaires marked
excellent and very good) need to add up to a
high number (you want mid-80s to high 90s for a CEO to smile). The definite
recommend box on the questionnaire, which points to potential
word of mouth, is the other score you want in the healthy numbers. You
want to be north of 65 to celebrate that one.
Try to apply this system
to any film thats dark or controversial or kind of a curve ball,
and thats it. Forget it. Youre scoring 50s or less in the
top two boxes, and for the rest of the films life youre
trying to convince the world that all is not lost. Its our job
as professionals to distinguish which films are suited to test screenings
and which are not. Too often, the testing process is relied upon as
a crutch and a substitute for an honest, human opinion. The ugly truth
is that some executives find it safer to point to a survey than to put
themselves personally on the line. This process must change, because
it really harms films that run against traditional form and content.
And lets face itthose can be the most interesting and daring
of the lot.
2. People are recruited
in malls and the like to attend test screenings. Im sure some
of you have been approached (Hey! Wanna see a free movie?)
by a nice-enough-looking man or woman holding a clipboard and sporting
a smile, as if theyre offering you a handshake and a campaign
promise. They show you a paragraph describing the plot of the film and
whos in it. Maybe you go, maybe you dont. If you go, you
could find yourself watching a film that you had no idea youd
be watching. Thats because its impossible to capture the
tone and integrity of an entire film in a paragraph. You can only supply
premise.
We all know that we decide
to go to a movie based on TV ads and the trailer. They give you a flavor
of what the film is and, in effect, act as a natural filter. They tell
you, Hey, if you wanna see this kind of movie, come on down!
Those test-screening recruiting paragraphs cannot do that, so a studio
might find itself with a theater full of people who would never have
chosen to see the kind of film theyre seeingand their questionnaire
scores will reflect that. Youve lost what you had gained with
the media campaign. No audience is ever really prepared for what theyre
seeing, yet these are the first people who affect the films completion.
This must be taken into account. I had to stress this point with films
such as Seven, Boogie Nights, and even the first Austin Powers
(we managed to find the only three test audiences that didnt get
the joke). How people are recruited matters, yet sometimes is all too
easily forgotten.
What I find the most valuable
about the testing process, and all the filmmakers Ive worked with
agree, is the ability to watch the film with an audience. Feel their
vibe. Feel the rhythm. When do they shuffle their feet? When are they
hooked? Are people looking at their watches? You can tell simply from
audience reaction what might need to be done to the film. If you have
to look at numbers, its more appropriate to check them on the
mainstream, obvious crowd pleasers. Youve probably heard the famous
story of the Fatal Attraction test screening that demanded a
new ending. Sometimes the answer is obvious, and the audience can supply
it with numerical validation. I argue that, more often than not, it
cannot, and shouldnt be looked to for that purpose. With any adult,
serious, or daringly original piece of work, research needs to be tailored,
and taken with a grain of salt. There is no substitute for a gut reaction.
Ive heard about and
seen numbers being used to impede and confuse a process for films that
require (gasp!) taste and instinct. Hollywood could use more of that.
The industry answer for How did you like the movie? should
not be how it scored in the top two boxes. It gets us further away from
what moved us to make the films in the first place, right or wrong,
good or bad. Theres an emotional reality involved that the filmmakers
and the studio should not forget or abandon when faced with a flood
of research information.
The harsh reality is that
the real score in the top two boxes is the vote at the box office, and
that is almost determined, conceptually, by the time you push the little
green button.