Showing posts with label dear john. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dear john. Show all posts

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Epistolary typecasting


Iron Man 2 may have come out last Friday, but we all know that the summer movie season doesn't really start until today, with the release of Letters to Juliet.

What?

Epistolary? That's a pretty big word for a Friday, Vance.

Okay, let me throw you a bone:

epistolary (adjective)

1. in or carried on by letters: an epistolary friendship.
2. of, pertaining to, or consisting of letters. consisting of letters.

And Amanda Seyfried seems like she's starting to get typecast in movies that are of, pertaining to, or consisting of letters.

Okay, I only have two examples, but they're kind of funny examples, aren't they? First there was Dear John, which came out in February, and invokes the language of letters in its title. The plot involves a long-distance relationship Seyfried's character carries on with a guy serving in Iraq. Then there's Letters to Juliet, another letter-related movie. It's set in Verona, Italy, where Romeo & Juliet was set. Seyfried's character answers love letters that are left by the lovelorn on a particular wall, kind of like coins flipped into a fountain as wishes. (That setting, actually, reminds me a little bit in spirit of another Seyfried film involving romantic escapism: Mamma Mia!)

I don't have anything more profound to say about Seyfried making two movies in three months that revolve around the writing of letters. In fact, I'd like to use this post to show you that I can, actually, write something short now and again.

So yeah -- consider it noted that Amanda Seyfried has been the (willing) victim of epistolary typecasting, and let's move on.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Building a brand


Another Nicholas Sparks movie hits theaters today.

If you don't know who Nicholas Sparks is, you're obviously not a big fan of romance novels, God, and movie posters with two people holding each other lovingly.

Nicholas Sparks writes the kind of books you might attribute to someone like Danielle Steel. Well, that is, if you don't know much about Danielle Steel, which I didn't until I just looked her up. I guess her characters are more like soap opera characters, rich and frivolous. Sparks instead concentrates on a more wholesome brand of threatened love among mostly young people, and often in gorgeous settings. Beaches and other bodies of water seem to be a recurring theme. Oh, and did I mention God? Christianity creeps its way into most of his work, but, having seen only two of his films, I don't remember it hitting me over the head.

One big advantage Sparks has over someone like Steel -- his books actually get made into theatrical releases, rather than TV movies.

Dear John is the fifth movie -- from the fifth different director and fifth different screenwriter/screenwriting team -- made from a book written by Sparks. And those movies have had such a similar advertising campaign, one can only refer to it as brand building. Let's consider the other ones, in the order of their release:



Notice any similarities? It's almost a full circle thing with Message in a Bottle and Dear John, but the positions of the genders are reversed, it's a slightly different time of day, and it's a slightly different camera depth.

I've only seen A Walk to Remember and The Notebook, and I reviewed The Notebook. A Walk to Remember is terrible, and The Notebook is actually good. (That may be the difference between starring featherweight Shane West and Mandy Moore vs. starring heavy hitters Ryan Gosling and Rachel McAdams). My wife and I also like to joke about Nights in Rodanthe, specifically, the way the word "Rodanthe" sounds super harlequin to us.

The interesting thing about the Sparks brand is that it crosses several studios in addition to the different directors and writing teams. While Warner Brothers did release three of the movies (Message, Walk and Rodanthe), The Notebook is from New Line and Dear John is from Screen Gems.

What's interesting also to me is the modesty of these films' aspirations. They are almost intentionally niche, either intended as an alternative for teenage girls who consider Twilight too pagan for them, or in the case of Rodanthe and Message, for middle-aged women who love a good weepie. Yet somehow, they make remarkably consistent money, meaning almost 100% of the niche must patronize these films. Speaking in domestic totals only, Message in a Bottle made $52 million, A Walk to Remember made $41 million, Nights in Rodanthe also made $41 million, and The Notebook was (deservedly) the king with $81 million. Given the relatively small budgets for these films, that makes them all hits.

Don't be surprised if Dear John follows suit. In Amanda Seyfried and Channing Tatum, they've got two young stars who are familiar enough to put asses in the seats, but still fresh enough faces that they don't demand huge salaries. Having Tatum's character back and forth from Iraq also gives the film a sense of immediacy that will please a second target audience -- the audience that thinks it's too intelligent for romance movies.

Stay tuned, because the sixth movie based on a Sparks novel -- The Last Song -- is due out in just two months. Care for a sneak peek at the poster?