Cerise
Well-Known Member
...with the rest of the country? Their current surge of anti-war films "In the Valley of Elah" "The Kingdom" "Rendition" "Lions for Lambs" and now "Redacted" have failed at the box office. Failed to make money, and failed to promote their anti-troop, anti-war viewpoint.
Why does Hollywood believe an American audience wants to see a movie that slanders the people who fight and the reasons they fight for them?
Are these directors and financial backers just trying to push their America-bashing agenda, or have they been misled by one too many polls that have portrayed the majority of people in this country against the war and believed they could cash in on that sentiment? What's the dealio?
Just because anti-American films get rave reviews and awards from Euro-weenies and other lib sycophants who tell then how wonderful they are, it doesn't mean that these pictures will sell. These film makers surround themselves with like minded libs and assume that the rest of the country thinks like them. They are out of touch with their paying audiences.
"Redacted's" domestic total as of Nov. 18, 2007: $25,628.
Why does Hollywood believe an American audience wants to see a movie that slanders the people who fight and the reasons they fight for them?
Are these directors and financial backers just trying to push their America-bashing agenda, or have they been misled by one too many polls that have portrayed the majority of people in this country against the war and believed they could cash in on that sentiment? What's the dealio?
Just because anti-American films get rave reviews and awards from Euro-weenies and other lib sycophants who tell then how wonderful they are, it doesn't mean that these pictures will sell. These film makers surround themselves with like minded libs and assume that the rest of the country thinks like them. They are out of touch with their paying audiences.
"Redacted's" domestic total as of Nov. 18, 2007: $25,628.
When Peter Berg tested "The Kingdom" on Americans, he was horrified when the audience cheered when the FBI killed the terrorists at the end. "Am I experiencing American bloodlust?" the director agonized. Berg's contemptuous reaction toward American audiences may point to a few of the reasons these movies are faring poorly at American box offices. http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/outlook/5290900.html