But that’s true of anything, really.
Avatar is an example; folks went in with a fair bit of knowledge of what they were getting because of the astronomical amount of hype ahead of time. Saturation bombardment of the potential audience is the standard these days. Between the ads, making ofs, leaked footage, endless interviews.... you almost don’t need to actually see the movie.
That’s true.... but will it be that audience the studio wants? Success is measured on all sorts of sliding scales, and it’s possible for a movie to succeed.
If I were a studio head, would I put money into a Metal Men movie? Only if there was a talented, proven producer and/or director with a passion to make the film were behind it. They would also have to have a heck of a pitch or a great script. I don't think it is a strong enough property to go into development unless someone had a passion for it. Characters like Wonder Woman, Superman, Flash and Green Lantern are stronger and more identifiable with the public but still huge risks. But, Warners may very well have a director or producer who has that kind of passion for the Metal Men already in place.
Jaws is considered the first summer blockbuster, and it benefited a great deal from the accidental viral marketing of timing: a movie about terror at the beach during a time when people were going to the beach. I can remember endless news reports, specials, etc about shark attacks, their plausibility, false alarms, history....
Again my simple point is make a quality movie and it will find an audience. With an audience the film then has a better shot of meeting whatever definition of success any of us would like to assign to it. There are tons of mitigating factors or reasons why a movie connects with a large audience, but I think quality (and yes quality can be defined in many different ways) is the overriding one.
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