"Xbox Factor" Transforming the Movie Industry

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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"Xbox Factor" Transforming the Movie Industry


"Chick flicks" have been flexing some surprising box office muscle recently, thanks to what movie industry executives are now referring to as "the Xbox factor."

The chick flick is a familiar cinematic beast: An insipid love story or syrupy tear-jerker, typically starring a hunky Hollywood half-talent, a perky actress whose name begins with "J" and a dumpy, disheveled character actor nobody can name who pops up every now and then to provide wise counsel or zany comic relief, depending on circumstances. There's obviously an audience for these things - movie studios keep making them, after all - but, angsty vampires notwithstanding, it hasn't historically been what you'd call a big money demographic.

That may be about to change, however, thanks to the so-called "Xbox factor," the term some in the industry are using to explain the loss of male movie audiences to videogame consoles. "A lot of young males are spending much more time on the internet, games and UFC [ultimate fighting]," Mandalay Pictures Chairman Peter Guber told the Sunday Telegraph [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/7279375/Chick-flicks-back-in-fashion-as-Hollywood-cashes-in-on-girl-power.html]. "They have not abandoned movies but they have diminished as a target, while the female audience has remained robust."

Videogame revenues have dramatically overshadowed the box office but it's a heavily male-dominated interest, leading Hollywood to try to figure out how to cater to the "new" female demographic. The process has been made all the more urgent by the surprising recent success of films like Valentine's Day [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0989757/], which raked in big bucks despite being trashed by critics. According to the report, 84 percent of Dear John viewers were female and 64 percent were under 25.

"For as long as anyone can remember, it's been taken as a given that the movie industry's holy grail is 13-year-old boys. Hence: The Daily Beast [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1055369/].

"But the jaw-dropping success of films such as High School Musical [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1099212/], and now, Dear John are proving that these days, it's girls who rule the entertainment industry," she continued. "The movies may be alternately cheesy and sappy, and the scripts laughable, but teen and tween girls don't care."



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Jared

The British Paladin
Jul 14, 2009
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And this is why I fear the day emotional, young, female teens take over the movie industry...
 

Plinglebob

Team Stupid-Face
Nov 11, 2008
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I see this as a good thing for 2 reasons.
A) Rom-Coms are a damn sight cheaper to make then the special effects fests that film companies use to draw male audiences and so the film companies have greater profits and so more money to spend on what could be seen as riskier projects (yeah, BIG hopes here)
B) They get the girlfriend out the house for an evening so the blokes can kill people online without being interrupted.
 

Kenjitsuka

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Sep 10, 2009
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""A lot of young males are spending much more time on the internet, games and UFC [ultimate fighting],""

Business idea: hire a room at the local theater and put up a sign:
"View the latest UFC match here now, live on our 120 foot screen! Our full surround system will make you half deaf as fighter A beats fighter B to a pulp!!!".

Seriously, this stuff gets pay per view bucks, so why not stream it live to your reeeeeally expensive "media room" a.k.a. movie theater and ask for a few bucks entrance fee?

People used to watch the News in theaters too once...
 

Zac_Dai

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Oct 21, 2008
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This is the same reason TV gets filled up reality/talent shows and terrible soap operas.
 

Zersy

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Nov 11, 2008
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Men's interest remain constant.

Womens usually vary between the decades.

EDIT: Oh and If the movie industry wants more Guys, Just make a manly movie, pretty simple ?
 

MellowFellow

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Feb 14, 2010
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Isn't the movie industry going to lose more of us guys if they keep putting out more chick flicks or do they just not care about us anymore...
 
Apr 28, 2008
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Oh my god...

The teenage girls are taking over! Run for the hills! Bring the games!

EDIT: For something more substantial, consider this:

Are there more chick flicks because men are playing more games, or are men playing more games because there are more chick flicks?

Think about it...
 

Jamienra

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Nov 7, 2009
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Im a guy and I go to the cinemas almost every week and I dont watch chick flicks. I know most guys dont, but I think the main problem with guys not going to the movies is piracy not they're Xbox/PC/PS3.
 

Gindil

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Nov 28, 2009
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Wait, WHAT?!

Women are ruling the entertainment industry because they're watching more movies?

I could expend 20 minutes looking at numbers but I'll be dogged if Avatar didn't JUST come out and rebuke their claim that movies are dominated by either gender. I'd actually take this article seriously if they would have waited and had a few more details than generalities saying somehow, boys are only concerned about playing games.
 

Tireseas_v1legacy

Plop plop plop
Sep 28, 2009
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Kenjitsuka said:
""A lot of young males are spending much more time on the internet, games and UFC [ultimate fighting],""

Business idea: hire a room at the local theater and put up a sign:
"View the latest UFC match here now, live on our 120 foot screen! Our full surround system will make you half deaf as fighter A beats fighter B to a pulp!!!".

Seriously, this stuff gets pay per view bucks, so why not stream it live to your reeeeeally expensive "media room" a.k.a. movie theater and ask for a few bucks entrance fee?
Because if you do it wrong, it's against Federal and International Law.

And they do do this for some events (concerts, some sporting events, and such), but it's largely not enough to appeal to that key demographic.
UNKNOWNINCOGNITO said:
Men's interest remain constant.

Womens usually vary between the decades.

EDIT: Oh and If the movie industry wants more Guys, Just make a manly movie, pretty simple ?
"Manly movies" are not well defined, and often what flies one year doesn't a few later (Rambo comes to mind...). I think guys now want something more on the lines of The Dark Knight, where intellect and finese play as much part of the story as the testosterone. This is a stark contrast from the 80's and 90's. They want brains as much as blood in the sense that mindless violence alone a good movie does not make, but rather the mindless violence in a context that makes it less mindless to begin with.(Inglorious Bastards).
 

tighem

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Oct 9, 2008
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I suppose it would be too much to ask for Hollywood to develop good scripts that appeal to tweens and teens? Just as with the boys, they'll churn out crap as long as it makes a buck.
 

Quoth

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Aug 28, 2008
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Hollywood will eventually be dumbed down to the level of your typical day time soap and will be filled with women furtively playing their furry banjo over the lastest silver screen hunk.

When asking my house mate, who worked in a cinema, why he disliked Twilight so much it was, he said, because the cinema was packed with teenage girls. I wasn't sure I could see the problem - but it turns out he was gay.

Men would rather play games, drink beer and watch porn / sport. In no particular order and not necessarily at the home location. Combine gaming with the advent of bigger and better high def t.v. (a lot of guys I know have their own home cinemas and blue ray) they hold the power to pause, rewind and eat and drink what ever they like. Best of all you don't have to endure the farts of the previous occupants of the seat.
 

ThirdPrize

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May 14, 2009
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Thank god, I thought for a minute they were going to make more video game and wrestling films.
 

CloakedOne

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Oct 1, 2009
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uh oh. If movies like Twilight are on the rise, we're truly in for the fight of our lives to get good movies back!
 

Gildan Bladeborn

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Aug 11, 2009
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Andy Chalk said:
"The movies may be alternately cheesy and sappy, and the scripts laughable, but teen and tween girls don't care."
  • Nicole Laporte: Young girls - you love stupid crap, and Hollywood is laughing all the way to the bank.

So basically this article boils down to Hollywood realizing "Holy crap, we can make terrible dreck and it will sell like hotcakes?!" Good to know!

I would be direly insulted if I was a female and somebody told me that though, heh.