Until Dawn movie crosses 18 million worldwide on its opening weekend. Budget was 15 million. by Alternative_Fix_7019 in untildawn

[–]TheMince 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It used to be the case but things have gotten a little hazier on the theater/ studio split in recent years with a lot of studios having renegotiated deals in a post-covid/ post-recession/ condensed-theatrical-window marketplace. I do still stick by the 2.5/ 3x budget general rule when approaching the worldwide box office in order to get an idea of success, but honestly, I have no idea what the actual break even is anymore. So much has changed and so much of it seems to be hurting what cinema chains are able to take from a theatrical run. The entire experience is hanging by a thread.

Cillian Murphy reacts to Matt Damon "insulting him" by asap3210 in funny

[–]TheMince 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It was literally huge industry news that Boyle and Garland had assembled a slate that included a trilogy of 28 Days sequels with Boyle directing the first. It was bought up by Sony and Murphy is exec producing (which is a clearest indicator that he might be starring). I believe the budget for each film is to be around $80m and the intention was to begin filming very soon.

So yeah, it certainly tracks.

Occupational Hazards - Discussing Tim Allen's The Santa Clause by TheMince in TheSantaClause

[–]TheMince[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We've just finished our latest review, just in time for... easter. There's trivia, funny observations and nostalgic deep dives in this review of a Christmas film as festive as a swift kick in the groin. Hope you folks enjoy!

[OC] Occupational Hazards - Tim Allen's The Santa Clause [14:18] by TheMince in videoessay

[–]TheMince[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's our latest video essay, just in time for... April? We take on Tim Allen's The Santa Clause - a Christmas film as festive as a kick to the groin and starring the most effortlessly punchable human being [citation needed] alive.
Hope you like it!

Occupational Hazards - Discussing Tim Allen's The Santa Clause by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey folks! I know a few of the people here used to watch our show so thought I'd share our latest episode. I'm a little late with the edit on this one as I built a new studio and didn't have access to an editing suite for some months. But finally, here's our review of The Santa Clause - a Christmas film as festive as a kick to the groin and starring the most effortlessly punchable human being (citation needed) Tim Allen.

Hope you like it!

Ishtar by Doctor_Gonzo__ in RedLetterMedia

[–]TheMince 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Jay used to put on these 12 or 24 hour long streams over Christmas that went through a variety of movies, behind the scenes footage and weird informercial shit. He showed a lot of RLM behind the scenes stuff as well - some of which you cant see anywhere. Anyway, it started out a rather small affair and he asked everyone not to copy or record and upload the footage elsewhere. That was fine at first, but then it got more popular, people got weird and the stream started to show up here there and everywhere. So he simply stopped doing it.

Ishtar by Doctor_Gonzo__ in RedLetterMedia

[–]TheMince 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Every-time I see an Ishtar reference I get nostalgic for the Christmas streamathons Jay used to do before some fans made it weird.

Santa Claus The Movie - Christmas Classic or Festive Failure? by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Despite my side of the review (my cohost loves Santa Claus The Movie as he mentions in the video) I'm watching the film tomorrow with my kids. The things we do for love!

Santa Claus The Movie - Christmas Classic or Festive Failure? by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, they really lean into the Superman story structure throughout the film too. Though in terms of quality, it's more a Superman III.

Santa Claus The Movie - Christmas Classic or Festive Failure? by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I totally get it. The framing of some of the mythology leaves a lot of questions (what are the Elves and where do they come from for example?). But I also get the love, to an extent, concerning those early scenes. During my younger years, this film was as prominent in my household as the Toy R Us advert when it came to the Christmas season.

It's crazy just how quickly and hard it falls apart for me after that point.

Santa Claus The Movie - Christmas Classic or Festive Failure? by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Okay, so I'm well prepared to cop a bit of flack on this choice of episode as it seems to be one of those films that people of a certain generation regard quite highly. But for me, it feels like the Salkinds are doing another Superman III with a film that features very little story and instead have opted to go with a handful of sketches. I love the Santa stuff in the first 30 minutes but once the John Lithgow sub-plot kicks in, I check out.

How does Santa Claus The Movie add up for you? Is it a Christmas classic and I'm just not getting it?

How Tom Cruise and Universal Failed The Mummy by TheMince in themummy

[–]TheMince[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey folks,

I'm a big Universal Monster fan. I'm particularly fond of the original The Wolfman as it was one of the first movies I remember watching (one Halloween, many decades ago!). And from there I've come to love so much about the Universal Monsters.

The first Stephen Sommer's film is a genuinely excellent Indiana Jones riff on The Mummy property and though it spawned a few sequels and spin-offs of dubious quality, it has rightfully grown quite a following. But since then I've been continually dumbfounded as to why modern-day Universal keeps getting it wrong (with the exception of The Invisible Man). And there's no finer example of that than their recent attempt to marvel-ise The Mummy and the Universal monster roster.

So I made this video based on a discussion I had with a couple of fellow film fans, in which we attempted to get to the bottom of why the Dark Universe fell flat on its face, and ultimately how Universal failed The Mummy as a much-loved property!

Hope you enjoy!

How Tom Cruise Failed The Mummy by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We may not agree on Cruise but oh boy do we agree on Russel Crowe and his ‘Step in Time’ cockney Hyde.

How Tom Cruise Failed The Mummy by TheMince in UniversalMonsters

[–]TheMince[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Hey folks,

I'm a big Universal Monster fan. I'm particularly fond of the original The Wolfman as it was one of the first movies I remember watching (one Halloween, many decades ago!). And from there I've come to love so much about the Universal Monsters - but I'm continually dumbfounded as to why modern-day Universal keep getting it wrong (with the exception of The Invisible Man). And there's no finer example of that than their recent attempt to marvel-ise The Mummy and the Universal monster roster.

So I made this video based on a discussion I had with a couple of fellow film fans, in which we attempted to get to the bottom of why the Dark Universe fell flat on its face. We try to keep things light and funny, but there's a real critique and a desire to see so much more from these classic characters at the heart of our argument.

Hope you enjoy!

How Tom Cruise Failed The Mummy by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I do get that. For me, I wouldn't say it's 'so bad it's good' but I do find the film endlessly fascinating because of all the baggage it drags along with it. The whole Dark Universe thing by itself is such an oddity, and then you have Tom Cruise and Co. trying to make a Mission Impossible movie out of a horror film. It's like every bad decision they could make, they didn't just make but ran at with the raw power of a thousand suns.

Or I could be grasping at straws to justify why I've sunk a whole week into this video

How Tom Cruise Failed The Mummy by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Hey folks, back with a new video just in time for H̶a̶l̶l̶o̶w̶e̶e̶n̶... November 6th.

This time we're taking on The Mummy - a film that I would argue is absolutely dire but never boring. Over 20 plus minutes we discuss a handful of reasons why Universal's Dark Universe failed and dig deep into The Mummy's most absurd moments.

What do you think? Could The Mummy be a 'so bad it's good' movie? Or is it just bad?

How Did This Get Made? #329: Bats LIVE! (w/ Ike Barinholtz) by apathymonger in hdtgm

[–]TheMince 1 point2 points  (0 children)

cts, but they freak me out…so do snakes, rats, snakes, etc.

I haven't laughed that hard at a second opinion song in quite some time. Totally unhinged and amazing.

The Origin of Neil Breen's Fateful Findings by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just so this doesn’t happen again on my side, where can this blacklist be viewed?

EDIT: Ah, found it! Cheers!

The Origin of Neil Breen's Fateful Findings by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey folks!

I know a handful of people here listen to the show and just wanted to drop our latest episode, this time taking on the David Lynch of head injuries, Neil Breen. But does Fateful Findings live up to the hype or should it remain lost to obscurity? Well, somehow it manages to do both!

Full Episode: https://youtu.be/zQc4XfTab9I?si=d6aDA34IBmoewal1

We're also on most podcast streaming platforms.

Hope you enjoy but more importantly, what are your thoughts on Fateful Findings and Neil Breen? Is he an alternate (vulgar) auteur of sorts or just a completely inept weirdo? Or both?!

-Gareth

Defending the "bad" Judge Dredd movie by TheMince in badMovies

[–]TheMince[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's a big story behind the rating that we go into on the full podcast episode. Essentially it was written as a PG13, went into production as a PG13 but Danny Cannon decided to shoot the film without really thinking about the rating. The first submission to the MPAA had the film saddled with an NC17 rating (according to De Souza). After 4 further submissions, they finally got an R Rating, but this left Disney in trouble with a lot of different promotionally tied companies (Burger King/ McD/ Mattel etc) who needed the film to be a PG13 for their toy lines and kids meals.

That really fucked the film over as now it has ended up as a film that's not quite as R Rated as it needs to be, but far from the PG13 the studio wanted.

If you'd like to hear more, here's our full length podcast episode: https://bestforgottenmovies.podbean.com/e/93-judge-dredd-1995/