Friday, February 20, 2015

Filmmaker Hughes put spotlight on teen insecurities



Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club, just two of Hughes more teen targeted movies that directly hit the topic of teen insecurities. Over the past years the film industry has produced films containing a good amount of teen issues, teen insecurities, and stereotypes. Hughes imagined a world where conformity ruled but where there was always enough wiggle room for the kids who wanted to play by their own rules and challenge the stereotypes. His films were made to show the struggle of teens even those who are privileged like those in the Breakfast Club. Hughes made it a point to show a different side of the average teen and tried to push this world to be ruled by conformity.

Friday, January 30, 2015

The Present State of Modern Action Sports Film Distribution


Article

Lately the action sports industry is becoming a monopoly, with big businesses running filmmaker and their companies into the ground.  All the best filmmakers were stuck in these exclusive contracts. Critics believe that for this to stop filmmakers shouldn't sell their films into an exclusive contract. The filmmakers should manage the distributors and have 3-5 distributors in each major international region sell the products. This well help bring more profit back to the filmmaker.They will get less money upfront but much more in the back end.

Friday, December 5, 2014

From 'Field Of Dreams' To 'Draft Day': Who Cares About The Front Office?

http://www.npr.org/blogs/monkeysee/2014/04/20/305318125/from-field-of-dreams-to-draft-day-who-cares-about-the-front-office

The 80s and 90s the time where sports films were huge hits and were used for more then just racial issues. Money ball is a great example along with Draft Day, Million Dollar Arm, and the upcoming movie million dollar arms. What makes sports films work really is the connection to the sport itself. But what these movies have in common  is a similar plot detail , instead of solely focusing on the coaches, athletes, and teams these films focused on the bigger part of sports the executive and scouts that make the teams. The recent movie Draft Day is a good example, the movie bases of the owner trying to look for players to draft we see what really goes on beyond the field.

Sports Films Used for Racial Issues?

Article

Recently in the film industry Hollywood has been using sports legends to tell stories about race. Films like Jackie Robinson and Remember the Titans are just two examples. What both of these films have in common is that both have a story line about color men trying to break through racial barriers and enter the world of sports. Sport films appear to be the way that Hollywood is most comfortable with for talking about racial issues. These films are advertised by making the trailer about the colored person or minority's journey to break through the white barrier and showing clips of success and failure. They make you have a connection with the main character.

The Expanding of Sports Documentaries

Article

HBO has been the main the place for sports documentaries for years. Now more networks are investing and making sports documentaries, and even though they aren't getting rich off them netwoirks making more and more time on their network channels for them. "Sports TV is flying high right now. To me, the documentaries are catching part of that. The networks need programming.”  said Aaron Cohen, a writer and producer who’s worked on Emmy-award winning documentaries. ESPN is putting the most into documentaries with their series “30 for 30” each being like a 10 to 20 minutes film documentary. The reasons for new popularity for sports docmentaries are simple, documentaries keep viewers engaged once live events end.