Monday, July 08, 2013

The Hollywood Flop

The Lone Ranger is officially a flop. Costing a whopping $250 million, opening formally on a Wednesday after a swarm of midnight shows during a typically profitable weekend for Hollywood; the fourth of July, with its only competition a pre-established product much like The Lone Ranger, only Despicable Me 2 relied on all ages and fans of the original to fill its pocket while The Lone Ranger relied on Johnny Depp fans and faithful Lone Ranger fans with high hopes.

Where did it go wrong? What did it get right?
The movie’s failure seemed eminent – I heard no buzz about it from anyone; none from no one, be they a faithful moviegoer or a casual theater attender. Even up to this very day I have heard nor read about this movie from a regular Joe like myself who has seen or has intentions on seeing the movie. The Lone Ranger has been out of major public view for decades especially after the near-scandalous theatrical version that was released in 1981; The Legend of the Lone Ranger, which was crucified by both critics and fans. Much like this new version, it was filmed gracefully but the story robbed the main character of his mystery. The complaints we hear nowadays about pulp icons runs along the same ire discharged back then. Why did they take away the mystery? People don’t need to know every tidbit about a hero’s life, people want entertainment. What used to make Wolverine from Marvel’s X-Men so unique, he was a mystery. Marvel did away with that too and while he’s as popular as ever, he’s just not very interesting anymore. How does that impact long term development of a character? We hardly ever find out because entertainment studios are overly willing to answer the question instead of pursue the unknown, which also speaks about why we have no original creations in Hollywood.  

To return the masked man and his trusted accomplice Tonto to glory, Disney went with the team behind the highly successful, though critically split, franchise The Pirates of the Caribbean who some themselves happen to be fans if not of the mysterious cowboy, certainly fans of westerns. On paper, it seemed like a decent choice, but then Johnny Depp wanted to play Tonto. That stirred its own controversy among particular social circles, although Depp does have Native American ancestry in his blood. Another potential misstep was they chose to take the same route that led to the recent Green Hornet movie’s downfall – make the lead character a bumbling tagalong and thrust the sidekick into the hero role. It’s practically kismet that both films suffered from similar consternations considering the longstanding notion, depending on which variation of medium (comics, radio, television) of the two icons you believe, that The Green Hornet, Britt Reid, is a descendant of The Lone Ranger, John Reid, which was first implemented in The Green Hornet radio show back in 1936 and was also touched upon in The Green Hornet comic book series which debuted in 1989 from NOW Comics, using the radio shows continuity as a foundation for the new Green Hornet’s universe.
Despite the surrounding criticism of the movie’s story and characters, it sure was pretty! The cinematography uses several landscapes across America to their fullest complete with impressive action sequences, which might actually be enough to appease a generally interested moviegoer, but since Disney chose to use a familiar name with a proud legacy equalized by its following for the sake of having a built-in audience whom the mouse believed would already be suckered in enough to give up their money, the crowd they wanted might have been their Achilles heel because no matter how many movie reviewers get bought off to make positive reviews for unjust films, word on the street, word of mouth is what still makes or breaks a movie. Currently, the American economy is an unforgiving storm on a hard working person’s wallet. Going to the movie theater is no longer reasonable therefore it is no longer a first choice for most homes, so word of mouth among the ambitious movie goers and film lovers, regular people like them, is far more critical to them than anyone else. If Hollywood wants people to be interested, don’t ruin the mystery. Try some new characters; every story to tell has already been written, nowadays it’s all about how well the story gets told. Most of all, people aren’t stupid. Hollywood needs to stop treating them like they are.