You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Culture Wars
De Palma Iraq Flick Bombs
2007-11-26
IT'S hard for Hollywood pacifists like Brian De Palma to capture the hearts and minds of America if Americans won't see their movies. While the public is staying away in droves from “Rendition," “Lions for Lambs" and “In the Valley of Elah," audiences are really avoiding “Redacted," De Palma's picture about US soldiers who rape a 14-year-old Iraqi girl, then kill her and her family.

The message movie was produced by NBA Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, who insisted on deleting grisly images of Iraqi war casualties from the montage at the film's end. Cuban offered to sell the film back to De Palma at cost, but the director was too smart to go for that deal.

“Redacted" - which “could be the worst movie I've ever seen," said critic Michael Medved -took in just $25,628 in its opening weekend in 15 theaters, which means roughly 3,000 people saw it in the entire country. “This, despite an A-list director, a huge wave of publicity, high praise in the Times, The New Yorker, left-leaning sites like Salon, etc.

A Joe Strummer documentary [of punk-rock band The Clash] playing in fewer theaters made more in its third week," e-mailed one cineaste. “Not even people who presumably agree with the movie's antiwar thesis made the effort to see it."
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#9  So hardly anyone has seen this stink-bomb of a movie, and those critics who have seen it have run shrieking from the theater. The next step in this cinematic auto de fe (for which I can hardly wait) will be the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences members turning themselves into pretzels and forsaking every shred of credibility with the movie-going public - as they try and figure out how to hang a best picture or best director award on it.

Barbara, are you going to fire up the industrial-sized popcorn popper for that one? Melted butter on mine, please. The real stuff, not that yellow oily crud.
Posted by: Sgt. Mom   2007-11-26 18:17  

#8  Isn't it again about time for all the homeless stories?
Posted by: ed   2007-11-26 16:51  

#7  The movie was released to 15 theaters. That is nothing. That is what they do to generate word of mouth before a wider release, or to get it in theaters enough to qualify for Academy Awards and such.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2007-11-26 16:50  

#6  James Carville was heard to comment over the weekend that the USA economy is in the tank...hasn't been this bad since...oh...1991. I suspect he was lokking at the box office receipts from movies such as Redacted and Lions for Lambs and concluded the average joe six-pack can't even afford the price of a movie ticket plus popcorn and soda pop. Yeah, that must be it. The economy must be in the tank.
Posted by: Mark Z   2007-11-26 16:04  

#5  Unfortunately, the fat lady ain't sung yet because international box will find a larger audience... or so Mark "No Longer Dancin' with the Stars" hopes.
Posted by: Capsu78   2007-11-26 15:00  

#4  Americans are tired of being preached too and tired of having the US always be the bad guy somehow. Make more movies like 300 and you will make money.
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-11-26 14:55  

#3  Actually, I think the conclusion is that the American people don't like anti-American, anti-military war movies. It's not that we have suddenly lost our taste for blood and violence on the big screen. We're just sick and tired of people like De Palma throwing our military under the bus to make a cheap political point.

If they make a good and sincere film that reflects the real conditions on the ground in Iraq and the incredible achievments our military has made over there, while not ignoring the obvious mishaps and atrocities made along the way, I bet you people would go see it.
Posted by: eltoroverde   2007-11-26 13:50  

#2  The conclusion is obvious, at least to Hollywood: the American people don't like war movies. So Hollywood will just stop making them.
Posted by: Rambler   2007-11-26 13:23  

#1  An amazingly low box office.

Some high school football teams get 3000 for a Friday night game.
Posted by: mhw   2007-11-26 13:17  

00:00