Hot Topics | |
---|---|
Caustic Saint wrote:It's opening on time in countries like Estonia, Ecuador, Slovenia and Guatemala, but Japan waits nearly two months? Anybody know the reasoning behind this?
Caustic Saint wrote:It's opening on time in countries like Estonia, Ecuador, Slovenia and Guatemala, but Japan waits nearly two months? Anybody know the reasoning behind this?
Wayne Karrfalt wrote:A major policy shift came late last year when Twentieth Century Fox decided to terminate an exclusive booking arrangement with Toho subsidiary Toho-Towa that dated back to 1972. The contract authorized Toho-Towa to distribute all Fox films outside of the key cities. (Fifty-three percent of Titanic's JY25.5 billion box-office revenue came from outside the key cities.) But Fox Japan, whose rentals totaled JY16.9 billion last year, must still go through Toho to book films in the key cities.
kotatsuneko wrote:why anyone over the age of 10 would want to watch star wars is beyond me..
AlbertSiegel wrote:
cstaylor wrote:Says the gameplayer otaku with the cartoon Avatar.kotatsuneko wrote:why anyone over the age of 10 would want to watch star wars is beyond me..![]()
Caustic Saint wrote:
(Oh, and General Grievous was a laughable cartoon character - which just shows how screwed up Lucas is, since Grievous was a serious badass in Clone Wars - an actual cartoon!)
"Star Wars: Episode Three -- Revenge of the Sith" got lost in translation for some fans at a movie theater in New Jersey.
It seems there was a reel mix up and, at some point in the film, Anakin Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi started to speak Japanese.
People at the Loews Cineplex at Monmouth Mall in Eatontown chanted, "stop the movie, stop the movie" during Wednesday's midnight premiere.
The lights came on and the manager told the audience that the movie would not continue.
Loews marketing senior vice president John McCauley tells the Asbury Park Press the audience was offered the choice of squeezing into other theaters, getting a pass for another showing or receiving a refund.
It's not known how the Japanese version was spliced in.
kotatsuneko wrote:why anyone over the age of 10 would want to watch star wars is beyond me..
Naniwan Kid wrote:This seems weird to me for many reasons.
1) Will they really DUB Star Wars in Japanese theaters?
Naniwan Kid wrote:2) Is it already done? Considering the movie isn't released in Japan until July...
Naniwan Kid wrote:3) Why would this copy be in America? I am sure Japanese voice actors in Japan will do the dubbing....
"Star Wars: Episode Three -- Revenge of the Sith" got lost in translation for some fans at a movie theater in New Jersey.
It seems there was a reel mix up and, at some point in the film, Anakin Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi started to speak Japanese.
People at the Loews Cineplex at Monmouth Mall in Eatontown chanted, "stop the movie, stop the movie" during Wednesday's midnight premiere.
The lights came on and the manager told the audience that the movie would not continue.
Loews marketing senior vice president John McCauley tells the Asbury Park Press the audience was offered the choice of squeezing into other theaters, getting a pass for another showing or receiving a refund.
It's not known how the Japanese version was spliced in.
Naniwan Kid wrote:I did find that this was a part of the "Star Wars" thread. Sorry for any repitition.
Naniwan Kid wrote:Still, this seem strange to me. Usually "geinojin" do the dubbing, so did they go to America to record it? I kinda doubt it. So why would this reel be mixed up with something else? I smell conspiricy....
Group asks Burger King to halt 'Star Wars' deal
By Bruce Horovitz, USA TODAY
Tue May 24, 6:21 AM ET
The Force may - or may not - be with Burger King's latest Star Wars-themed Kids Meals.
One day after a record-shattering weekend for Star Wars, Episode III: Revenge of the Sith, an advocacy group is asking Burger King to stop the tie-in of its Kids Meals with the film because it is rated PG-13.
The same group, Dove Foundation, got McDonald's 13 years ago to apologize for "confusion" from its promotion of PG-13 Batman Returns with Happy Meals. Now, it's going after BK's latest Kids Meal promotion - targeted at kids ages 4 to 9. The meals feature characters from Sith or other Star Wars films.
"When Burger King puts that in a Kids Meal, there's an implicit endorsement of the movie," says Dick Rolfe, chairman of Dove Foundation.
This is no small matter. Product licensing and promotion is a $100 million annual business. Since the first Star Wars was released in 1977, the six films have racked up almost $9 billion in merchandise sales and product promotions.
For Burger King, the stakes are huge. The No. 2 burger chain is in the 16th month of a major rebound. The Star Wars promotion, dubbed "Choose Your Destiny," is the 50-year-old chain's first global promotion.
Burger King officials insist the promotion isn't specific to the latest film (the others are rated PG), but one that relates to the chain's long-term relationship with the Star Wars franchise. Executives point out that only four of the 31 Kids Meal toys are specific to Sith.
The toys "clearly celebrate not just one film but the entire Star Wars saga," says Edna Johnson, a Burger King spokeswoman. "The reception at our restaurants and from our customers has been overwhelmingly positive."
But Rolfe says "the tie-in is very specific to this film." Wrappers around Kids Meal toys all promote Sith, he notes.
Dove Foundation, a non-sectarian family advocacy group, sent an overnight letter to Burger King last Thursday requesting the promotion be stopped. It also conducted a national phone survey of 889 adults and says 83% felt the promotion was not appropriate for kids.
Another critic says the fault isn't that of Burger King but Star Wars creator George Lucas. "It's irresponsible of George Lucas to OK the marketing around this PG-13 movie to young children," says Susan Linn, a Harvard psychologist and author of Consuming Kids: The Hostile Takeover of Childhood.
"Star Wars is broader than a single movie," says Lynn Fox, a LucasFilm spokeswoman. "Parents know that Star Wars has been a positive influence."
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests