Categories
Toys

I was given several items from Mattel for Christmas…does that make me outdated?!

Mattel and Hasbro ‘terrified’ as kids want more high-tech Christmas gifts

As tablets and smartphones replace action figures and board games as gifts for kids under the Christmas tree, Mattel and Hasbro are reportedly “terrified” that their brands are becoming outdated. In a new interview, an expert on the subject claims the two toy companies are worried that they won’t have much of a future if things keep going the way they’re going.

“The top two guys, Mattel and Hasbro, they are terrified,” Sean McGowan, managing director of equity research at Needham & Company, tells the Financial Times (via BGR News). “They should be terrified, but the official party line is they’re not terrified.”

It seems as though the two companies do have cause for concern. Mattel’s highest-selling product of the year was a plastic cellphone case, and tablets and other forms of high technology don’t seem like they’re going anywhere any time soon. Though officially the companies aren’t expressing fears in regards to the tech revolution, it could be that we’ll see a rebranding in the future.

Categories
Movies

But was it a good year for movies?

Hollywood studios rake in record $10.8B for 2012

Ticket sales at U.S. theatres are up for the first time in three years as Hollywood studios took in a record $10.8 billion domestically in 2012.

The industry rebounded this year, with ticket sales projected to rise 5.6 per cent to 1.36 billion by Dec. 31, according to box-office tracker Hollywood.com.

That’s still well below the modern peak of 1.6 billion tickets sold in 2002, but in an age of cozy home theatre setups and endless entertainment gadgets, studio executives consider it a triumph.

“It is a victory, ultimately,” said Don Harris, head of distribution at Paramount Pictures. “If we deliver the product as an industry that people want, they will want to get out there. Even though you can sit at home and watch something on your large screen in high-def, people want to get out.”

U.S. domestic revenue should finish up nearly 6 per cent from 2011’s $10.2 billion and top Hollywood’s previous high of $10.6 billion set in 2009.

The year was led by a pair of superhero sagas, Disney’s The Avengers with $623 million domestically and $1.5 billion worldwide and the Warner Bros. Batman finale The Dark Knight Rises with $448 million domestically and $1.1 billion worldwide.

Sony’s James Bond adventure Skyfall is closing in on the $1 billion mark globally, and the list of action and family-film blockbusters includes The Hunger Games, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part Two, Ice Age: Continental Drift, Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted, The Amazing Spider-Man and Brave.

While domestic revenues inch upward most years largely because of inflation, the real growth areas have been overseas.

International business generally used to account for less than half of a studio film’s overall receipts. Now, films often do two or even three times as much business overseas as they do domestically. Some movies that were duds with U.S. audiences, such as Battleship and John Carter, can wind up being $200 million hits overseas.

Before television, movies had ticket sales estimated as high as 4 billion a year in the U.S. in the 1930s and ’40s. But movie-going eroded steadily through the 1970s as people stayed home with their small screens. The rise of videotape in the 1980s further cut into business, followed by DVDs in the ’90s and big, cheap flat-screen televisions in recent years. Today’s video games, mobile phones and other portable devices also offer easy options.

It’s all been a continual drain on cinema business, and cynics repeatedly predict the eventual demise of movie theatres. Yet Hollywood fights back with new technology of its own, from digital 3D to booming surround sound to the clarity of images projected at high frame rates, which is being tested now with The Lord of the Rings prelude The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, shown in select theatres at 48 frames a second, double the standard speed.

“People want to escape. That’s the nature of society,” said Dan Fellman, head of distribution for Warner Bros. “The adult population just is not going to sit home seven days a week, even though they have technology in their home that’s certainly an improvement over what it was 10 years ago.”

Even real life violence didn’t turn audiences away. Some moviegoers thought twice after a gunman killed 12 people and injured 58 at a screening of The Dark Knight Rises in Colorado, but if there was any lull in attendance, it was slight and temporary.

Hollywood executives are already hyping their 2013 lineup, which includes the latest Iron Man, Star Trek, Hunger Games and Thor installments, the Superman tale Man of Steel and the second chapter in The Hobbit trilogy.

“I’ve been saying we’re going to hit that $11 billion level for about three years now,” said Paul Dergarabedian, a box-office analyst for Hollywood.com. “Next year, I think, is the year we actually do it.”

Categories
Star Wars

That was probably a smart move!!

J.J. Abrams Turned Down Star Wars 7 Gig Out of Loyalty to Star Trek

J.J. Abrams at one point could have traded in the Enterprise for a ride on the Millennium Falcon. But he didn’t and now we know why.

The director—who boldly resurrected Star Trek’s big-screen adventures with 2009’s reboot and now next summer’s highly anticipated Star Trek Into Darkness—confirms he was offered the chance to come aboard the new Star Wars films Disney announced after buying George Lucas’ empire.

But he opted not to because he didn’t want to abandon his commitment to Captain Kirk and company.

“There were very early conversations and I quickly said that because of my loyalty to Star Trek, and also just being a fan, I wouldn’t even want to be involved in the next version of those things,” Abrams told Empire magazine via comingsoon.net. “I declined any involvement very early on. I’d rather be in the audience not knowing what was coming, rather than being involved in the minutiae of making them.”

However, the filmmaker did wish the Mouse House and new Lucasfilm honcho Kathleen Kennedy, who’ll be overseeing the new Star Wars episodes, the very best, even if the two rival series end up possibly competing at the box office.

“I guess the franchises could go up against each other, but I’m not thinking that far ahead!” Abrams added. “I’m a huge fan of Star Wars, Empire and Jedi, and the idea of the world continuing is exciting and will be amazing. [Star Wars producer] Kathy Kennedy is a friend and there are no smarter producers. It’s in great hands.”

No word yet whom producers are looking at to take the helm of Star Wars: Episode VII, but various names rumored to be in the running include Matthew Vaughn, Darren Aronofsky, Alfonso Cuarón and even Steven Spielberg.

Star Trek Into Darkness hits theaters on May 17, while the next Star Wars installment isn’t expected to drop until 2015 at the earliest.

Categories
People

May he rest in peace.

Charles Durning, king of character actors, dies at 89

Charles Durning grew up in poverty, lost five of his nine siblings to disease, barely lived through D-Day and was taken prisoner at the Battle of the Bulge.

His hard life and wartime trauma provided the basis for a prolific 50-year career as a consummate Oscar-nominated character actor, playing everyone from a Nazi colonel, to the Pope to Dustin Hoffman’s would-be suitor in Tootsie.

Durning, who died Monday at age 89 in New York, got his start as an usher at a burlesque theatre in Buffalo, N.Y. When one of the comedians showed up too drunk to go on, Durning took his place. He would recall years later that he was hooked as soon as heard the audience laughing.

He told The Associated Press in 2008 that he had no plans to stop working. “They’re going to carry me out, if I go,” he said.

Durning’s longtime agent and friend, Judith Moss, told the AP that Durning died of natural causes in his home in the borough of Manhattan.

Although he portrayed everyone from blustery public officials, to comic foils to put-upon everymen, Durning may be best remembered by movie audiences for his Oscar-nominated, over-the-top role as a comically corrupt governor in 1982’s The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.

Many critics marvelled that such a heavyset man could be so nimble in the film’s show-stopping song-and-dance number, not realizing Durning had been a dance instructor early in his career. Indeed, he had met his first wife, Carol, when both worked at a dance studio.

The year after Best Little Whorehouse, Durning received another Oscar nomination, for his portrayal of a bumbling Nazi officer in Mel Brooks’s To Be or Not to Be. He was also nominated for a Golden Globe as the harried police lieutenant in 1975’s Dog Day Afternoon.

He won a Golden Globe as best supporting TV actor in 1991 for his portrayal of John (Honey Fitz) Fitzgerald in the TV film The Kennedys of Massachusetts and a Tony in 1990 as Big Daddy in the Broadway revival of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof.

Career started on stage

Durning had begun his career on stage, getting his first big break when theatrical producer Joseph Papp hired him for the New York Shakespeare Festival.

He went on to work regularly, if fairly anonymously, through the 1960s until his breakout role as a small town mayor in the Pulitzer- and Tony Award-winning play That Championship Season in 1972.

He quickly made an impression on movie audiences the following year as the crooked cop stalking con men Paul Newman and Robert Redford in the Oscar-winning comedy The Sting.

Dozens of notable portrayals followed. He was:

– The would-be suitor of Dustin Hoffman, posing as a female soap opera star in Tootsie.

– The infamous seller of frog legs in The Muppet Movie.
– Chief Brandon in Warren Beatty’s Dick Tracy.

– He played Santa Claus in four different movies made for television.

– He played the Pope in the TV film I Would be Called John: Pope John XXIII.

“I never turned down anything and never argued with any producer or director,” Durning told The Associated Press in 2008, when he was honoured with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Other films included The Front Page, The Hindenburg, Breakheart Pass, North Dallas Forty, Starting Over, Tough Guys, Home for the Holidays, Spy Hard and O Brother Where Art Thou?

Durning also did well in television as a featured performer as well as a guest star. He appeared in the short-lived series The Cop and the Kid (1975), Eye to Eye (1985) and First Monday (2002) as well as the four-season Evening Shade in the 1990s.

“If I’m not in a part, I drive my wife crazy,” he acknowledged during a 1997 interview. “I’ll go downstairs to get the mail, and when I come back I’ll say, `Any calls for me?”‘

Durning’s rugged early life provided ample material on which to base his later portrayals. He was born into an Irish family of 10 children in 1923, in Highland Falls, N.Y., a town near West Point. His father was unable to work, having lost a leg and been gassed during World War I, so his mother supported the family by washing the uniforms of West Point cadets.

The younger Durning himself would barely survive World War II.

He was among the first wave of U.S. soldiers to land at Normandy during the D-Day invasion and the only member of his army unit to survive. He killed several Germans and was wounded in the leg. Later he was bayoneted by a young German soldier whom he killed with a rock. He was captured in the Battle of the Bulge and survived a massacre of prisoners.

Military left ‘too many bad memories,’ Durning says

In later years, he refused to discuss the military service for which he was awarded the Silver Star and three Purple Hearts.

“Too many bad memories,” he told an interviewer in 1997. “I don’t want you to see me crying.”

Tragedy also stalked other members of his family. Durning was 12 when his father died, and five of his sisters lost their lives to smallpox and scarlet fever.

A high school counsellor told him he had no talent for art, languages or math and should learn office skills. But after seeing King Kong and some of James Cagney’s films, Durning knew what he wanted to do.

Leaving home at 16, he worked in a munitions factory, on a slag heap and in a barbed-wire factory.

Durning and his first wife had three children before divorcing in 1972. In 1974, he married his high school sweetheart, Mary Ann Amelio.

He is survived by his children, Michele, Douglas and Jeannine. The family planned to have a private family service and burial at Arlington National Cemetery.