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18 votes
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99-year-old Dick Van Dyke reacts to his life in photos: 'Mary Poppins,’ 'Chitty Chitty Bang Bang'
27 votes -
‘Wicked: For Good’ opening to $150m; records broken for Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande, Jon M. Chu, Broadway musical feature take and more
20 votes -
Glenn Close - promoting the new Knives Out - "I'm not as fierce as I seem"
8 votes -
Twenty-five movies, many stars, zero hits: Hollywood falls to new lows
26 votes -
Tatsuya Nakadai, Japanese film legend that starred in ‘Ran,’ ‘Harakiri’ and ‘The Human Condition’ trilogy, dies at 92
12 votes -
Sabrina Carpenter and Lorene Scafaria teaming on ‘Alice In Wonderland’-inspired musical for Universal
6 votes -
Netflix’s opposition to movie theaters cracks as pressure mounts from exhibitors and talent
11 votes -
Inside David Ellison’s dramatic first 100 days at Paramount: courting Tom Cruise blockbusters, forging ties with Donald Trump and daring anyone else to buy Warner Bros. Discovery
6 votes -
Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz in talks to return for new ‘Mummy’ movie from Universal; Radio Silence to direct
32 votes -
Nick Offerman | Closet Picks
9 votes -
Gotham Film Awards nominations: ‘One Battle After Another’ leads with a record six nods
7 votes -
Johnny Depp to star in ‘Ebenezer: A Christmas Carol’ at Paramount with Ti West directing; Andrea Riseborough also joins movie dated for November 2026
11 votes -
“No one asked for this reboot”: ‘Tron’ may mark end of Jared Leto’s franchise-leading days
25 votes -
Diane Keaton, Oscar-winning star of ‘Annie Hall,’ dies at 79
27 votes -
‘Marty Supreme’ was NYFF’s surprise screening, earns raves. Timothée Chalamet gives ‘career-best work’.
4 votes -
‘Taylor Swift: Showgirl’ at $33m an awesome anomaly for album pic launch; Dwayne Johnson sees lowest opening ever with ‘The Smashing Machine’ at $6m
19 votes -
Will an AI actress really become ‘the next Scarlett Johansson’?
27 votes -
‘One Battle After Another’ at $22m+ reps record debut for Paul Thomas Anderson; Leonardo DiCaprio’s eleventh movie to open to $20m+
8 votes -
Robert Redford, golden boy of Hollywood, dies at 89
35 votes -
Tim Curry says Rocky Horror was originally a 'failure' in rare interview
25 votes -
John Candy: I Like Me | Official trailer
20 votes -
‘Superman’ sequel ‘Man of Tomorrow’ sets July 2027 release date
17 votes -
Dwayne Johnson uncontrollably sobs as ‘The Smashing Machine’ gets fifteen-minute Venice standing ovation and generates Oscar buzz
25 votes -
Oscar-nominated actor Graham Greene dead at 73
22 votes -
Karen Gillan joins the new ‘Highlander’ and has the best reaction to the news
28 votes -
There seems to be something going on with Sydney Sweeney and the media covering her films
Sydney Sweeney has been the subject of a lot of controversies as of late. But what I want to focus on is how media outlets have been covering the release of her two new films, Americana and Eden....
Sydney Sweeney has been the subject of a lot of controversies as of late. But what I want to focus on is how media outlets have been covering the release of her two new films, Americana and Eden.
Some background:
Americana is a genre film. It was shot and screened in 2023 to relatively positive reviews. The company that financed it, Bron, went bankrupt shortly after the film's screening. Due to this bankruptcy Lionsgate was able to acquire the rights to the film for cheap. While the film was made on a nine million dollar budget, Lionsgate purchased it for three million, with two million of that coming from international rights sales. Meaning that Lionsgate only spent one million acquiring the domestic distribution rights. In order to get more VOD sales and streaming deals, Lionsgate gave the film a small theatrical release with next to nothing in marketing.
Eden premiered at TIFF in 2024. Directed by Ron Howard the film also stars Jude Law, Vanessa Kirby, Ana De Armas, and Daniel Bruhl along with Sweeney. The film was financed at a net cost of 35 million dollars. It received mixed to negative reviews and only Netflix was willing to purchase it. Ron Howard opted to go with a smaller distributor, Vertical (who are mostly known for straight-to-video trash but have been slowly building themselves as a more legitimate art-house distributor), due to wanting a theatrical release which no one wanted to give the film. Vertical made a deal for less than 20 million dollars for the film.
Now, each distributor had their reasons for acquiring each film. Lionsgate saw a cheap film with a rising star which was well-received. It was an easy profit for them and helps build up their library as they are looking to be sold off. Vertical, having released last year's acclaimed The Order, is trying to build a filmmaker friendly reputation. Buying a non-commercial film with a high profile cast and a high profile director gives them more exposure and allows them to be more in the conversation for prestige filmmaking.
The film's financiers, however, are the money losers in both situations. Whether or not the distributors lost money doesn't really matter. Money losers are money losers and these films should be described as such.
And this is where it gets weird.
In the wake of Americana's opening we got two different articles about the film's box office. One from Deadline and one from IndieWire. Covering for the film, arguing that they weren't money losers for the reasons I myself just gave earlier. This weekend, as Eden just released, Deadline releases yet another article defending the film's performance.
This is too much coverage for these films that no one saw. Comparable films never get articles like this. So what's going on?
Here's my conspiracy theory. Sydney Sweeney is friends with Jeff Bezos. She attended his wedding and a few months ago there were heavily circulated rumors about her being the new Bond girl a franchise that Bezos unfortunately owns.
The media outlets that cover the entertainment industry: Variety, Deadline, Hollywood Reporter, and IndieWire are all owned by the same person: Jay Penske. Penske and Bezos run in the same circles, rich guy circles, and have attended philanthropic events at the same time. What I believe is happening is that Bezos is using his influence and connections for these outlets to write out positive headlines for Sweeney, due to her controversies, to create a more flattering image of her and her career.
It's odd, to say the least.
21 votes