LawsAndSausages Tagged Articles at Cinematical
A Short Goodbye: Laws and Sausages
Filed under: Tribeca », Laws and Sausages »

Dear Faithful Laws and Sausages readers (both of you),
Laws and Sausages will be on a brief hiatus for the next few weeks, while your intrepid reporter (uh, that's me) focuses her energies (both of them) on developing Fill-In-The-Blank (or whatever it's called, as of next week) and covering Tribeca. I'll be back on the first Thursday of May, with a recap of Tribeca and a look at the state of the American film festival in general. Unless something really, amazingly worth emergency columning about happens between then - in which case, your vacation from me will be cut short. Sorry about that. Hopefully it won't happen.
love and kisses,
Karina
ps: check out the new Laws and Sausages logo - whaddya think?
The Wax and Wane of Hollywood Conservatism: Laws and Sausages
Filed under: Disney », Warner Brothers », Politics », Laws and Sausages », Columns »
Last column (and, uh, yeah -- it's been a while), I teased you with the promise of a column about V for Vendetta, the opening weekend sucess of which seemed unlikely for a host of reasons. The film, after all, has faced a host of obstacles on its 20 year journey from B & W British comic strip to Warner Brothers' most prominent Spring widget: the Wachowski-brother-speared adaptation was abandoned by comic co-creator Alan Moore (who, to be fair, has a general policy of distancing himself from filmatizations of his work); after the London bombings last summer, WB was forced to abandon both its original release date (November 5, the 400th anniversary of Guy Fawlkes' aborted bombing of the British Houses of Parliament) and its original marketing campaign ("Remember, remember, the 5th of November..."). But most interesting of all was the outsized fervor the film instigated, months and months before its release, amongst conservative film critics.
Add it all up, and and Vendetta's $26 million opening seemed sufficient for study. But two things happened the following week: 1) I finally got around to seeing the film, and 2) Vendetta's numbers dropped a precipitous 52% in its second weekend, with the holdover title easily falling victim to Inside Man's $30 million opening onslaught despite an advantage of 500 screens. The weekend-to-weekend drop isn't exactly a mark of failure -- at virtually exactly this time last year, another comic adaptation, Sin City, opened just under $30 million, dropped 50% a week for about six weeks, and was eventualy considered one of the year's biggest hits -- unless we're playing this as a zero-sum game, On those terms, V for Vendetta could safely be considered a massive failure: the most pretensiously political film to come from a studio in some time, it's managed to fail to either rally the Left or vidicate the Right. On the ideological spectrum, there's no winner here -- which means everybody loses. But just the very fact of Vendetta's failure to inspire much more than a shrug from most parties points to the possibility that the culture wars might be far less potent than certain pundits – not to mention publicists – would have you believe.









