FShuttari
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Post by FShuttari on Dec 28, 2014 23:54:27 GMT -5
So with all the controversy surrounding this film, I'm still pretty happy I got to see it.
The first 30 minutes of this film are absolutely hysterical and the middle part slows down and sets up some stuff for the last 20 minutes with the actual "Interview" taking place and repercussions of that.
Overall a fun effort and if it wasn't for all the crazy things that were surrounding it. This movie would not have gotten as much attention.
8/10
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Jibbs
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Post by Jibbs on Dec 29, 2014 0:52:27 GMT -5
You don't think this movie would have gotten as much attention if it didn't incite international terrorism? Fascinating.
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daniel
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Post by daniel on Dec 29, 2014 13:36:19 GMT -5
It was like watching that Vice special where they went to N. Korea and you could tell everything was fake and contrived, but then you have Rogen and Franco interjecting with their usual juvenile antics and humour. The Franco plot of really falling for Kim and connecting with him was more that I expected from this film, and I think if they had focused more on that aspect and played to that part, it would have been better. Rogen was needed to be the voice of reason, but everything else from him aside from talking sense into and saving Franco was mostly unnecessary and a waste of time.
For being a stupid-humor film, this ranks as average.
4/10 (just below average)
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Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2014 13:55:00 GMT -5
That's about what I anticipated.
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Ramplate
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Post by Ramplate on Dec 29, 2014 14:04:43 GMT -5
Man Wants Refund After Buying $650 in Tickets to ‘The Interview
Sony apparently isn’t the only one who lost money on “The Interview” last week.
A man in Ohio tried to cash in on the buzz surrounding Seth Rogen and James Franco’s new comedy when he purchased $650 in tickets or 50 passes at $13 each to the movie.
According to WCPO in Cincinnati, Jason Best learned that a local theater in Clifton was among the 300 theaters to play the controversial film on Christmas Day and hoped to resell the tickets online at a higher price (i.e., he wanted to scalp them).
“I saw all the hype about ‘The Interview’ on the 23rd and thought, ‘Hey, folks are selling these tickets in other cities and it seems like that’s the thing to do right now so why not give it a shot so see how it goes,”’ he said.
But the plan backfired once Sony announced it was streaming the film online for half the price on sites like YouTube, Hulu and Netflix.
Now the man is demanding a refund from the Esquire Theatre.
“I thought I’d get my money back because the theater’s website *very clearly* said the tickets were refundable,” Best told WCPO in an email.
But a theater manager told Best that the arthouse didn’t have a website and that “The Interview” was listed as a special event.
It turns out Best had purchased the tickets from movietickets.com, which specifically warns on its website that theater owners reserve the right to withhold refunds for special events.
Plus the manager said that scalping tickets was illegal.
The $40 million-budgeted “Interview,” which expanded to iTunes on Sunday, recently changed from a wide to limited release after North Korean hackers threatened to harm theatergoers.
The R-rated comedy earned nearly $3 million at the U.S. box office this weekend.
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Deexan
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Post by Deexan on Dec 29, 2014 14:39:27 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Dec 29, 2014 15:13:28 GMT -5
Damnit Deexan. I was going to post that!
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SnoBorderZero
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Post by SnoBorderZero on Dec 29, 2014 15:28:06 GMT -5
That's awesome, I bet he thought he was really smart when he did it only to have it all come crumbling down.
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Dracula
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Post by Dracula on Dec 30, 2014 8:29:29 GMT -5
Streamed it through Xbox last night.
The Interview(12/29/2014) With all the crazy shenanigans that have gone on around the release of this film its actual qualities as a movie have gone somewhat overlooked. This is a movie that pretty clearly comes from the mind of Seth Rogen and it covers the usual theme that tends to run though his work: slackers rising to a situation and managing to accomplish something. The difference is that this time the thing they’re accomplishing is a world changing piece of spycraft. The hijinx along the way are mostly in line with what we’ve come to expect from Rogen and Co. and I wouldn’t necessarily recommend it to people who aren’t fans of his previous work. A decent number of the jokes land, a decent number don’t, and on a strictly comedic level I’d probably rank it somewhere in the middle of his oeuvre. As a movie I think it has a number of good qualities but never quite lives up to its potential.
I think James Franco is actually kind of bad in the film, he didn’t seem like a real talk show host and he never fully develops his idiot persona into a fully realized comedic character. I also think the movie makes some of Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg’s weaknesses behind the camera a bit more obvious than they were in their last film, This is the End. That movie almost felt like a found footage movie and that made some rather questionable camerawork and cinematography fit in with an overall aesthetic, but here it just seems kind of sloppy. The cinematography is often really dark, and not in a way that seems stylish, just in a way that seems underlit and kind of amateurish. There are also some ideas here that just seem kind of underdeveloped. The film seems to set up a motif in which Kim Jon-un’s weak ego and megalomania is juxtaposed with the Franco character’s own diva-like behavior, but the movie never really completes this thought. So, the movie is flawed in a number of ways, but I still quite liked it. It has a certain audacity to it and a bold willingness to build a comedy around a rather sad real world situation. All told I much prefer it to Rogen’s other effort this year, Neighbors, and generally think it deserved to be remembered as more than just “that movie that got Sony hacked.”
*** out of Four
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Jibbs
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Post by Jibbs on Dec 30, 2014 18:46:42 GMT -5
A full star over The Imitation Game. Nice.
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Neverending
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Post by Neverending on Dec 30, 2014 19:10:47 GMT -5
I haven't watched The Imitation Game, and probably won't unless I have to, but I'm gonna agree with Dracula in his defense of The Interview. Seth Rogen is awesome. Knocked Up. Superbad. Pineapple Express. Observe & Report. This Is The End. Those are all great comedies and The Interview is part of that list. "They hate us cause they anus" has already entered my vocabulary. Add it to Ian's important movie list!
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Dracula
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Post by Dracula on Dec 30, 2014 19:56:58 GMT -5
A full star over The Imitation Game. Nice. Yes, The Interview is a better, more creative, and less calculated effort than The Imitation Game. Obviously they function in different genres, but The Interview lived up to its potential more.
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FShuttari
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Post by FShuttari on Dec 31, 2014 11:59:45 GMT -5
I really enjoyed this movie more than "Neighbors" even though both are hilarious.
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PhantomKnight
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Post by PhantomKnight on Jan 4, 2015 18:03:29 GMT -5
There's one word that can be used to adequately sum up The Interview: stupid.
The first five to ten minutes are all you'll need to gauge whether or not this movie will be for you. If you're one of the ones who still enjoys Seth Rogen's long over-played and now numbing sense of humor, you'll obviously enjoy it. If not, then move along, nothing to see or care about here.
Oh, where to begin? Okay, let's start with the Dave Skylark character. In movies like these, there are two kinds of stupid. There's the sort that's actually charming and funny while still straddling the line of smart, then there are the Dave Skylarks of comedy movies; characters that are such complete, utter morons that their stupidity winds up being more of a distraction than anything else. It's supposed to be funny that a man this vapid and obnoxious is tasked with a mission of great importance to the country, spouting such oh-so-clever catchphrases along the way such as, "They hate us cause they anus!" Oh my God, what a kneeslapper! Not! Skylark plays more like a painfully unfunny side character on a cheesy sitcom that constantly makes jokes and remarks that are supposed to make you laugh, but instead merely inspire stone-cold unamused faces and this movie feels like a two-part episode of that sitcom which focuses more on him for whatever reason. If, halfway through, a movie with this kind of plot can get you to say, "Can't they just kill the main character instead?" then you know the movie's in trouble. All that was missing was an obligatory laugh track after all of Skylark's "hilarious" jokes and antics. Obviously, the script is trying to farce every real-life vapid entertainment talk show hosts with their equally vapid talk shows, of the E! variety, but Dave Skylark is way too cartoonishly overwritten for any of that spoofing to work, and it serves to only make it more obvious that comedy isn't James Franco's strongest suit.
As for the story itself, if all it takes for (allegedly) North Korea to threaten violence over a movie is a barrage of jokes about dicks, peeing, pooping and other humor that feels like it was written by 12 year-olds, then they should get their priorities straight. A real biting political satire could've been made from this premise in the hands of a better filmmaker, and for about two minutes, the titular interview actually gets pretty interesting, but in the hands of Seth Rogen, The Interview is a juvenile action comedy that maybe wants to Say Something...right after it finishes assaulting you with lame potty humor and jarringly gory action.
In other words, it needed all this "controversial" publicity for people to give a damn about it. Big surprise. I would rather just watch This Is The End again.
*/****
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Neverending
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Post by Neverending on Jan 20, 2015 19:49:22 GMT -5
The Interview will be on Netflix this weekend. January 24th to be exact. It has made $40 million through digital rentals and video-on-demand.
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Deexan
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Post by Deexan on Jan 21, 2015 6:37:39 GMT -5
'The Interview' Lost Sony $30 Million, Says Theater GroupBreaking its self-imposed silence, the National Association of Theater Owners contends that Sony will lose at least $30 million on The Interview. It also declares that the movie's day-and-date release in cinemas and on VOD changes nothing despite "starry-eyed" comments suggesting it marks a paradigm shift. "In this simultaneous-release game, Sony is $30 million in the hole and almost out of cards," says Patrick Corcoran, vice president of NATO. "The only game changed here was just how much Sony left on the table." Corcoran's comments came in a lengthy column he wrote this week for Boxoffice Magazine, an official NATO publication. Until now, NATO has remained silent on The Interview, the R-rated comedy starring Seth Rogen and James Franco as two bumbling journalists hired by the CIA to assassinate North Korean president Kim Jong Un. A week before its scheduled Dec. 25 nationwide release, Sony pulled the movie following a direct threat against theaters by the group responsible for hacking the studio. After President Obama — whose administration believes North Korea is behind the cyberattack — criticized Sony for canceling the film, Sony said it would go ahead and release The Interview in theaters and on VOD on Christmas Day (it had already been in talks with VOD providers). However, only a few hundred independent cinemas were willing to play it, since most exhibitors have a blanket policy against carrying a movie that's being made simultaneously available elsewhere. The major theater chains, including AMC Entertainment, Regal Entertainment and Cinemark, were said to be furious with Sony for the way it handled the matter, because they had initially asked the studio to simply delay the film's release instead of pulling it altogether. Yet because of the volatile nature of the situation, NATO and its executive board decided to refrain from making any public comments. Corcoran's column marks the first time that NATO has made its views known. To date, The Interview has earned $5.9 million in theaters. Assuming it even gets to $7 million, Sony will get half of that back, or $3.5 million, explains Corcoran. The comedy has earned north of $31 million on VOD. "We haven't heard any new digital dollar figures from Sony since Jan. 4, so it's a little hard to estimate where it will end up, but I'm feeling generous. Say $50 million," wrote Corcoran. "Given the chaotic nature of the ad-hoc release plan and Sony's desperation to play the movie on any home-release platform that would take it, I'm going to assume, less generously, that Sony pockets 60 percent of that sum instead of the customary 70 percent." According to Corcoran, that means Sony will get back $30 million in VOD revenue for a total $33.5 million, far from enough to make up for the film's production budget of $44 million and marketing expenditures of at least $30 million. "Let's be generous again and assume the same international box office that might have resulted from a traditional release — although with so many pirated, pristine digital copies out in the wild, that may be tough. Add $10 million," Corcoran continued, bringing revenue to $43.5 million, compared to expenditures of $74 million. Sony sources insist that the budget was closer to $40 million and that the marketing budget was lowered to $20 million because of The Interview being pulled. Most industry experts, however, dispute that marketing was reduced by that much and put the total spend closer to $40 million. The studio has announced that The Interview will be released on DVD and Blu-Ray on Feb. 17, but Corcoran questions whether much revenue will be generated since it has been available on VOD. "The cobbled-together simultaneous release of Sony's The Interview is a Rorschach test. What you see generally tells more about you than it does about the release model of The Interview. Those inclined to believe that simultaneous theatrical and home release is an inevitable point to its $31 million home tally and $5.9 million theatrical take and see a 'game changer.' Some, like me, see a blot," Corcoran said. Continuing, he added: "Netflix's Ted Sarandos sees a 'great example of what can happen with a big-budget movie if you give them distribution choices. I hope it's eye-opening for the industry.' For once, we agree. So let's open some eyes." www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/interview-lost-sony-30-million-764366
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Neverending
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Post by Neverending on Jan 21, 2015 13:26:22 GMT -5
The Interview will also stream, FOR FREE, on Sony-owned Crackle.
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frankyt
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Post by frankyt on Jan 21, 2015 13:37:18 GMT -5
With commercials.
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Doomsday
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Post by Doomsday on Jan 21, 2015 13:37:28 GMT -5
Man....people payed for this.
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SnoBorderZero
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Post by SnoBorderZero on Jan 21, 2015 13:43:15 GMT -5
Man....people payed for this. That's what I was thinking, I watched it for free the other night and would never pay for the film. Not that it was a trainwreck, but it wasn't good either. $44 million. I mean over a quarter of that alone went to Rogen and Franco, but man did this film look cheap as hell. The North Korea backgrounds looked like Syfy channel quality.
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Tardumb
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Post by Tardumb on Jan 27, 2015 15:48:03 GMT -5
This had a lot of laugh out loud moments for me, but was a bit slow at times. I thought Franco was mostly hilarious. I thought he found a sweet spot in his over the top dramatics.
If you didn't like this, I am going to assume you are just PEANUT BUTTER AND JEALOUS.
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Doomsday
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Post by Doomsday on Jan 27, 2015 15:54:52 GMT -5
I watched this with the Lady. I gotta say...it wasn't dog shit.
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donny
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Post by donny on Jan 27, 2015 17:19:38 GMT -5
Which one, watching with the lady or the movie?
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IanTheCool
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Post by IanTheCool on May 17, 2015 16:40:21 GMT -5
It was like watching that Vice special where they went to N. Korea and you could tell everything was fake and contrived, but then you have Rogen and Franco interjecting with their usual juvenile antics and humour. The Franco plot of really falling for Kim and connecting with him was more that I expected from this film, and I think if they had focused more on that aspect and played to that part, it would have been better. Rogen was needed to be the voice of reason, but everything else from him aside from talking sense into and saving Franco was mostly unnecessary and a waste of time. For being a stupid-humor film, this ranks as average. 4/10 (just below average) There's one word that can be used to adequately sum up The Interview: stupid.
The first five to ten minutes are all you'll need to gauge whether or not this movie will be for you. If you're one of the ones who still enjoys Seth Rogen's long over-played and now numbing sense of humor, you'll obviously enjoy it. If not, then move along, nothing to see or care about here.
Oh, where to begin? Okay, let's start with the Dave Skylark character. In movies like these, there are two kinds of stupid. There's the sort that's actually charming and funny while still straddling the line of smart, then there are the Dave Skylarks of comedy movies; characters that are such complete, utter morons that their stupidity winds up being more of a distraction than anything else. It's supposed to be funny that a man this vapid and obnoxious is tasked with a mission of great importance to the country, spouting such oh-so-clever catchphrases along the way such as, "They hate us cause they anus!" Oh my God, what a kneeslapper! Not! Skylark plays more like a painfully unfunny side character on a cheesy sitcom that constantly makes jokes and remarks that are supposed to make you laugh, but instead merely inspire stone-cold unamused faces and this movie feels like a two-part episode of that sitcom which focuses more on him for whatever reason. If, halfway through, a movie with this kind of plot can get you to say, "Can't they just kill the main character instead?" then you know the movie's in trouble. All that was missing was an obligatory laugh track after all of Skylark's "hilarious" jokes and antics. Obviously, the script is trying to farce every real-life vapid entertainment talk show hosts with their equally vapid talk shows, of the E! variety, but Dave Skylark is way too cartoonishly overwritten for any of that spoofing to work, and it serves to only make it more obvious that comedy isn't James Franco's strongest suit.
As for the story itself, if all it takes for (allegedly) North Korea to threaten violence over a movie is a barrage of jokes about dicks, peeing, pooping and other humor that feels like it was written by 12 year-olds, then they should get their priorities straight. A real biting political satire could've been made from this premise in the hands of a better filmmaker, and for about two minutes, the titular interview actually gets pretty interesting, but in the hands of Seth Rogen, The Interview is a juvenile action comedy that maybe wants to Say Something...right after it finishes assaulting you with lame potty humor and jarringly gory action.
In other words, it needed all this "controversial" publicity for people to give a damn about it. Big surprise. I would rather just watch This Is The End again.
*/**** Ain'ter's gonna ain't.
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