Tag: ghost-in-the-shell
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12 Essential Live Action Anime Adaptations
WB/Paramount New World Pictures New Line Cinema Warner Bros. Showgate Asmik Ace Entertainment/Pathé/Samuel Goldwyn Films Warner Bros. Warner Bros. Toho Toho Toho Paramount Pictures Warner Bros./Netflix -
‘Ghost in the Shell’ Is Expected to Lose at Least $60 Million
Not to pile on, but this might be even sadder than Shia LaBeouf’s $26 at the U.K. box office. “Ghost in the Shell” cost around $110 million to make, and it has only made about $62 million so far, worldwide. It was expected to do quite a bit better than that in its opening weekend, and Deadline quoted film finance experts who estimate it will lose at least $60 million overall.That’s based on a worldwide box office projection of around $200 million ($50M domestic and the rest international), and combined print/advertising/production costs of more than $250 million.
The loss could be a lot more if the production cost was under-reported. As Deadline put it:
“Some sources even assert that the production cost for Ghost is far north of $110M and more in the $180M range — if that’s the case, Ghost is bleeding in excess of $100M.”
This could be the end for any hopes from Paramount/DreamWorks to create a franchise based on the manga source material.
We’ve already gone through several reasons why fans just didn’t turn out for Scarlett Johansson’s Major, so hopefully Hollywood and the studios don’t take the wrong lessons from this — although they’ll probably do whatever they can to point the blame elsewhere.
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Here’s Why ‘Boss Baby’ Crushed ‘Ghost in the Shell’ at the Box Office
Given all the fanboy chatter, pro and con, about “Ghost in the Shell” over the past year, one might have expected the $110 million Scarlett Johansson sci-fi/action picture to open big at the box office.As it turned out — nope.
Conventional wisdom had it that “Beauty and the Beast” would win its third straight weekend with upwards of $45 million, while “Ghost” and cartoon “The Boss Baby” would both open around $25 million. But while “Beauty” held up as well as expected, “Boss” surged ahead with an estimated $49.0 million No. 1 debut, while “Ghost” underperformed in third place with just an estimated $18.6 million.
Just three months in, 2017 has already been a robust year for moviegoing, with sales up 5 percent from this time last year, and with eight $100-million blockbusters released before the crocuses poked out from beneath the snow. Some have been predictable smashes like “Beauty,” “Logan,” or “The LEGO Batman Movie,” though there have also been sleeper surprises like “Hidden Figures,” “Split,” and “Get Out.” While these films provide escapism from daily political events, 73 percent of audiences attended “Boss Baby” because it is an animated film.
An impressive marketing campaign, especially a trailer before “Beauty and the Beast” on that Disney hit’s opening weekend, boosted awareness for “Boss Baby” amongst families, giving it “must-see” status. And its presence on social media was strong, too, starting with teaser trailers last fall and continuing with viral clips so clever they may have made the movie look funnier than it really is.Johansson, on the other hand, is notoriously anti-social media, and her relative lack of online promotion didn’t do “Ghost” any favors. Years ago, the star revealed in “Interview” that she can’t think of anything I’d rather do less than have to continuously share details of my everyday life. I’m always surprised that certain actors have Twitter accounts.” That stance on social, coupled with the film’s complicated/hard-to-understand storyline (one that was even harder to sell) didn’t do the anime adaptation any favors.
The “whitewashing” controversy over Johansson’s casting didn’t help, either. Based on the iconic and influential anime, “Ghost” had the opportunity to honor its source by casting an Asian lead. On paper, you can see why the filmmakers went with Johansson instead; she’s an international star, she’s the most prominent actress in the mega-popular “Avengers” franchise, and she’s proved she can open sci-fi/action thrillers on her own with 2014’s “Lucy,” an original story that the star powered to a $43.9 million opening and a $463.4 million worldwide gross.And yet, Johansson’s popularity and box office history weren’t enough to sell domestic audiences on “Ghost,” which, for all its cult fanbase, is a largely unknown property to average moviegoers. In fact, she might have been a deterrent, either because the ads made the movie look a lot like a “Lucy” retread, or because moviegoers of color, who’ve been very vocal on social media about their opposition to seeing Johansson in this role, stayed home.
After all, complaints of whitewashing — the casting of white actors in roles seemingly meant for performers of color — have been growing for years, from “Iron Fist.” Meanwhile, recent hits like “Hidden Figures” and “Get Out” show that there’s a large, racially mixed audience for movies where people of color heroically assert their own dignity and worth.
Bad buzz hurt “Ghost’s” chances at the box office significantly — critics gave it a “meh” 42 percent on Rotten Tomatoes. And Paramount holding off all-media press screenings until the Wednesday before release is all but proof that the studio knew they had less than a hit on their hands. With critics complaining that the movie’s striking visuals overwhelmed its lackluster storytelling, audiences seemed to agree; they gave the film a weak B grade at CinemaScore. True, the reviews for “Boss Baby” weren’t much better (49 percent at RT), but audiences liked it more and gave it much stronger word-of-mouth, indicated by an A- at CinemaScore.
One reason “Ghost” may have earned poor reviews and low box office numbers is its studio, Paramount. The troubled Hollywood studio seems to have marketed “Ghost” haphazardly in the United States, making it the latest big-budget flop from the studio that also had trouble selling domestic viewers on such recent films as “xXx: Return of Xander Cage,” “Rings,” “Monster Trucks,” “Allied,” and “Ben-Hur.”Then again, maybe the American release was an afterthought. Most of these films did much better overseas than they did here, and “Ghost” looks like it will follow that pattern. (It’s already earned $40 million abroad.)
Indeed, Johansson went to Tokyo last November to promote the movie to a receptive audience. In Japan, they’re familiar with the “Ghost” story, they like visual spectacle, they like Johansson, and they’re not offended by the casting of a white American star, perhaps because Japanese moviegoers have plenty of homegrown movies that offer heroes who look like themselves. But it’s not exactly a win-win for us or Hollywood when, out of two bad movies coming out, we picked the least terrible film to put at the top of the box office.
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Box Office: ‘Boss Baby’ Fires ‘Beauty and the Beast’
By Brent LangLOS ANGELES, March 26 (Variety.com) – “Boss Baby” is enjoying the view from the top.
The animated comedy bottled up a leading $49 million from 3,773 locations, edging out Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast,” a box office juggernaut that’s dominated the multiplexes since debuting three weeks ago. “Beauty and the Beast” added another $48 million to its mammoth $395.5 million domestic haul. The weekend’s other new release, Paramount’s “Ghost in the Shell,” bombed, taking in a demoralizing $19 million.
Critics were cool toward “Boss Baby,” which centers on a cuteness standoff between babies and puppies. Alec Baldwin, in vulpine “Glengarry Glen Ross” mode, voices a power suit-wearing infant, leading a vocal cast that includes Tobey Maguire, Steve Buscemi, Jimmy Kimmel, and Lisa Kudrow. DreamWorks Animation produced the film for over $100 million, with Fox distributing the picture. Heading into the weekend, “Boss Baby” had been projected to debut to $30 million.
“The picture works because it’s a great concept and having Alec Baldwin, who is such a well known voice, voicing a baby is near genius,” said Chris Aronson, Fox’s head of domestic distribution.
Aronson said he was surprised that the reviews for the film weren’t stronger.
“I was shocked and still am,” said Aronson. “It’s nice when you have critics and audiences aligned, but it’s painful when you don’t get it. You wonder why do audiences like it so much and the reviewers don’t?”
“Ghost in the Shell,” an adaptation of a popular Japanese manga about a cyber-enhanced warrior (a be-spandexed Scarlett Johansson) who must take down a cabal of terrorist hackers, was produced in conjunction with DreamWorks Pictures and Reliance Entertainment. If it wants to fight its way into the black, it will need to get a big lift from foreign crowds. To that end, the science-fiction story pulled in $40.1 million abroad from 50 foreign territories.
Paramount has gone through a punishing run at the box office, enduring costly flops such as “Allied” and “Ben-Hur,” while going through a series of executive shakeups that resulted in the ousters of chairman Brad Grey and vice-chairman Rob Moore. It has a newly named studio chief in Jim Gianopulos, the former head of Fox’s film division, whose task it will be to bring more creative stability to the company.
“Ghost in the Shell’s” rollout was nearly subsumed by controversy over its casting and accusations that by tapping Johansson the film had engaged in “whitewashing.” It was cited as exhibit A in a larger, industry-wide debate about studios’ habits of employing white actors in Asian roles. The furor surrounding the casting found its way into many of the negative notices that the picture received, and was the subject of several critical thinkpieces.
“It was a small, but vocal group,” said Megan Colligan, Paramount’s marketing and distribution head. “It had some impact, but it was more of the impact overall on reviews. I think people are becoming more vocal on these types of issues. I haven’t worked on many large-scale action movies that have a female lead, so I wish it had been embraced more.”
Lionsgate’s “Power Rangers” and Warner Bros. and Legendary’s “Kong: Skull Island” rounded out the top five, earning $14.5 million and $8.8 million, respectively. The Power Rangers reboot has grossed $65.1 million in two weeks of release, while the latest King Kong remake has made $147.8 million after four weeks in theaters.
Year-to-date, the domestic box office is up more than 5% and ticket sales this weekend were up more than 30%. The weekend caps a hot run at the box office with such hits as “Logan” and “Beauty and the Beast” powering domestic revenues in March to over the $1 billion mark for the first time in history.
In limited release, Focus Features’ “The Zookeeper’s Wife” opened to a strong $3.3 million in 541 locations this weekend. Jessica Chastain stars in the film as a woman in World War II-era Warsaw who tries to save Jews during the Holocaust. Focus will expand the movie to between 800 to 1,000 theaters.
“It just struck a chord with audiences,” said Lisa Bunnell, Focus’ distribution president. “To have a female character who goes out there and puts herself on the front line just resonates. People in this country are looking for heroes.”
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Scarlett Johansson Addresses ‘Ghost in the Shell’ Whitewashing Backlash
When fans got their first look at Scarlett Johansson as the Major in “Ghost in the Shell,” there was an immediate reaction. The character is known as Major Kusanagi in the Japanese source material, and some manga fans — and fellow actors — were disappointed that a white star was cast in the role, even if that white star is the very popular, talented, and bankable Johansson.Nothing against Scarlett Johansson. In fact, I’m a big fan. But everything against this Whitewashing of Asian role.???? https://t.co/VS6r6iish9
— Ming-Na Wen (@MingNa) April 14, 2016
It’s like way to reduce race to mere phys appearance as opposed to say culture, social experience, identity, history https://t.co/JDbu9s0DPt
— Constance Wu (@ConstanceWu) April 15, 2016
Johansson is on the new cover of Marie Claire and she addressed the controversy around her casting:
“I certainly would never presume to play another race of a person. Diversity is important in Hollywood, and I would never want to feel like I was playing a character that was offensive. Also, having a franchise with a female protagonist driving it is such a rare opportunity. Certainly, I feel the enormous pressure of that—the weight of such a big property on my shoulders.”
She also addressed being lauded as “the highest-grossing actress in Hollywood history,” clarifying:
“Just because I’m the top-grossing actress of all time does not mean I’m the highest paid. I’ve had to fight for everything that I have. It’s such a fickle and political industry.”
But her status as the highest-grossing actress is probably connected to her casting in “Ghost in the Shell,” since she is a box office draw around the world, especially in action roles (like Black Widow in the Marvel Cinematic Universe).
A while back, “Ghost in the Shell” producer Steven Paul defended Johansson’s casting to BuzzFeed.
“I think everybody is going to end up being really happy with it. They’re going to be very, very happy with it when they see what we’ve actually done with it, and I don’t think anybody’s going to be disappointed.”
He said the setting of the movie is in “an international world” as opposed to just the fictional Japanese city of Niihama in the source material.
“There [are] all sorts of people and nationalities in the world in ‘Ghost in the Shell.’ We’re utilizing people from all over the world. … There’s Japanese in it. There’s Chinese in it. There’s English in it. There’s Americans in it. […] I don’t think it was just a Japanese story. ‘Ghost in the Shell’ was a very international story, and it wasn’t just focused on Japanese; it was supposed to be an entire world.”
The cast includes Pilou Asbaek, Michael Pitt, Takeshi Kitano, Juliette Binoche, Kaori Momoi, and Chin Han. Kaori Momoi, who plays the mother of Johansson’s Major, praised the star’s devotion, skill, and professionalism, telling the Associated Press, “I felt blessed to have worked with her.”
“Ghost in the Shell” dropped a new teaser during the Super Bowl, and the film will be released March 31.
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Watch All the 2017 Super Bowl Movie Trailers Right Here
Super Bowl spots don’t come cheap.If you’re Hollywood, you’re shelling out $5 million for one spot — a very expensive chance to get a lot of eyes on your (hopefully) next big blockbuster. 2016 gave us some uh-mah-zing TV spots for films like “Jason Bourne” and “10 Cloverfield Lane.”
What does 2017 have in store? Watch below to find out.
“Baywatch”
“A Cure for Wellness“
“The Fate of the Furious““Logan““Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales“ “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2““Ghost in the Shell““Transformers: The Last Knight““Life” -
‘Ghost in the Shell’ TV Spot: Scarlett Johansson Is Stripped of Her Life
With the Super Bowl just days away, Paramount Pictures has released its intense new “Ghost in the Shell” TV spot early.
The preview for the sci-fi thriller is only 30-seconds long, but it is full of action. It shows off star Scarlett Johansson as her cyborg character, The Major, and demonstrates just how tough she is. Nothing seems to faze her — not even falling from buildings or crashing through glass.
Indestructible and impressive as The Major looks, the TV spot hints at a dark side to her abilities. “They did not save your life,” we hear. “They stole it.”The film is based on Masamune Shirow’s Japanese manga of the same name. The story is adapted by screenwriters Jamie Moss and Ehren Kruger, and the film is helmed by Rupert Sanders. The cast also includes Pilou Asbaek, Takeshi Kitano, Juliette Binoche, and Michael Pitt.
Be ready for a wild ride when “Ghost in the Shell” hits theaters on March 31.
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See Scarlett Johansson in Action in First ‘Ghost in the Shell’ Teasers
Despite the ongoing outcry over actress Scarlett Johansson’s controversial casting, studio Paramount is determined to drum up intrigue for its upcoming anime adaptation “Ghost in the Shell,” releasing five new teaser trailers for the flick.All of the clips are incredibly short — the longest one clocks in at 15 seconds, while the others run for only 10 seconds each — and don’t feature much, plot-wise, though when taken as a whole, begin to paint a picture of the mysterious world in which the film is set. Johansson stars as Major, a human-cyborg hybrid and the lead of a special ops task force, and several scenes show her in action.One of the clips reflects Major’s more robotic side, depicting her unplugging herself from what looks like a giant charging station. Another features a group of what appear to be monks, all hooked up to another power source.
“This is just the beginning,” intones one character as Major stalks through a dimly-lit hallway, wielding a weapon. That line can also double as a promise from Paramount that there’s more footage to come.
“Ghost in the Shell” also stars Beat Takeshi Kitano, Juliette Binoche, Michael Pitt, Pilou Asbæk, Kaori Momoi, Chin Han, Lasarus Ratuere, Yutaka Izumihara, and Tuwanda Manyimo. It’s due in theaters on March 31, 2017.
Photo credit: YouTube/Paramount Pictures
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Top Rated Movies for Anime Fans
It’s time to come out of the basement. So you play Dungeons & Dragons every weekend with your drow-elf-loving friends; so you’ve beaten The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask once a year since 2001; so you build life-sized Lego statues of your favorite “Game of Thrones” characters. Come on out of the nerd cellar and celebrate: Everyone’s a geek now, and it’s OK to embrace the weird and wonderful.And Japanese anime — for all it’s bombastic style, intricate craft, and heady narratives — is definitely part of that nerd-tastic fantasy celebration. Roger Ebert was ahead of the curve in 1999 when he wrote that “Japanese animation unleashes the mind,” helping everyone “understand that animation is not an art form limited to cute little animals and dancing teacups.” These are some of the greatest movies that do said unleashing.
‘Akira’ (1988)
Though anime has been around since animation has been around, 1988’s “Akira” was anime’s ambassador to the rest of the world. If only more ambassadors came with badass motorcycles and city-destroying psychic mutants.
In a lot of ways, director Katsuhiro Otomo‘s movie — adapted from the manga series he also penned — crystallizes the best modern anime has to offer. Not only is every frame a fluid piece of pop art, its radical sci-fi trappings conceal an absolute head-trip of a mature narrative about government cover-ups, teen angst, and grotesque body horror. Like the British Film Institute said, it’s this cocktail of factors that makes “Akira” the “most influential Japanese film of its era, animated or otherwise.”
‘Perfect Blue’ (1999)
Great anime, from “Patlabor: The Movie” to “Metropolis,” has a science-fiction obsession. But the late Satoshi Kon‘s “Perfect Blue” sheds the sci-fi and showcases anime’s range. You wouldn’t be wrong for thinking the movie’s plot sounds like an early draft of “Black Swan.” When J-pop singer Mima Kirigoe breaks up the band to pursue a solo career, her pursuit of edgier expression makes her lose her dignity, her clothes, and maybe even her mind, as she’s plagued with everything from hallucinations to bloody piles of dead bodies stacking up in her wake. “Perfect Blue” pulls off the psycho thriller with the best of the subgenre.
And it doesn’t hurt that you could frame just about every cell of the densely detailed, pinup-on-acid animation and hang it up on the wall.
‘Ghost in the Shell’ (1995)
Getting back to sci-fi — “Ghost in the Shell” not only defined how tons of other anime flicks would look in the coming decades, it left its mark on Hollywood in a big way. Apart from the controversial, Scarlett Johansson-led American live-action remake, this cyberpunk icon stirred up the gene pool “The Matrix” sprang from. Pages of green code flying across the screen? Check. Jacking in to a virtual existence via a creepy hole in your neck? Check. Martial arts meets existential dread? Check. In addition to influencing everyone from the Wachowskis to James Cameron, “Ghost in the Shell” taught an entire generation what the phrase “deus ex machina” means. So that’s a bonus.
Much of the Studio Ghibli Catalog
The studio founded by legendary directors Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata could easily have a list all its own, three times as long as this one. And you’d be missing out if you didn’t include a whole bunch of Ghibli flicks on your animated journey. Start with Miyazaki’s “My Neighbor Totoro” to ease yourself in to the mix of heartfelt fantasy, whimsical creatures, and childlike nostalgia that defines the studio. Then move on to his “Princess Mononoke” for a dose of hard-hitting but child-friendly adventure that makes it easy to see why it’s one of the biggest movies in Japanese history. Follow that up with the most gut-wrenching animation you’ll ever watch in Takahata’s “Grave of the Fireflies,” the traumatic tale of two recently orphaned siblings struggling to survive the brutal last days of World War II in Japan.
After that one, you’ll need all the whimsy “Kiki’s Delivery Service,” “Spirited Away,” and “Howl’s Moving Castle” can throw at you. Consider that a prescription.
Sources
- We’re All Nerds Now
- Japanese Animation Unleashes the Mind
- Early Japanese Animations: The Origins of Anime (1917 – 1931)
- 10 Great Anime Films
- Photo of Scarlett Johansson in ‘Ghost in the Shell’ Reignites ‘Whitewashing’ Controversy
- Ten Anime Films You Should See Before You Die
- Hollywood Is Haunted by ‘Ghost in the Shell’
- Top 10 Studio Ghibli Movies
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First ‘Ghost in the Shell’ Image With Scarlett Johansson Gets Strong Reaction
Paramount and DreamWorks just released the first photo from “Ghost in the Shell,” a live-action adaptation of the Japanese animation. The image, showing Scarlett Johansson, was issued along with a press release announcing the start of production in Wellington, New Zealand. Scarlett is said to play Major in the film, which is being directed by Rupert Sanders.Here’s the synopsis:
“Based on the internationally-acclaimed sci-fi property, ‘Ghost in the Shell’ follows the Major, a special ops, one-of-a-kind human-cyborg hybrid, who leads the elite task force Section 9. Devoted to stopping the most dangerous criminals and extremists, Section 9 is faced with an enemy whose singular goal is to wipe out Hanka Robotic’s advancements in cyber technology.”
The rest of the cast includes Beat Takeshi Kitano, Juliette Binoche, Michael Pitt, Pilou Asbæk, Kaori Momoi, Chin Han, Lasarus Ratuere, Yutaka Izumihara, and Tuwanda Manyimo.
When Scarlett was announced as the lead for this film, many frustrated fans cried “whitewashing” — leading to a Care2 petition with more than 65,000 signatures — and those fans are still frustrated today. However, other fans are excited to see her in character on the big screen.
“Ghost in the Shell” started trending on Thursday, after the release of the photo and press release, and here are some reactions:
Even Olivia Munn, who is half Chinese, could’ve been a better lead for Ghost in the Shell than Scarlet Johansson. #HollywoodRacism
— Victor Hernandez (@toliro) April 14, 2016
O.O ¿Que Scarlett Johansson protagoniza Ghost in the shell?!! OOOOOOOOOOOOUH YES!!!!
— ☭BEZHOR☭ (@bezhor) April 14, 2016
UGH STOP WHITEWASHING OUR STORIES!!! Our first look at Scarlett Johansson in ‘Ghost in the Shell’ https://t.co/a2CKl4d1DD @angryasianman
— Fei Mok (@alifeofgreen) April 14, 2016
Re: Ghost In The Shell. Anime characters have a look. Assuming all those characters are meant to be Asian is in itself racial stereotyping.
— The House Of WTF? (@TheHouseOfWTF) April 14, 2016
Also I’m still upset they got Scarlett Johansson to be in the new ghost in the shell she isnt even Japanese. Stop white washing these movies
— Josh (@BombermanHero) April 14, 2016
I’m prob not gonna see the Ghost in the Shell movie even tho I like ScarJo.
I’m tired of Hollywood casting white people for Asian charas— Sarah Neila Elkins (@NeilaK20) April 14, 2016
Yeah, Scarlett Johansson is an odd choice, but I still trust she’ll do awesome in Ghost in the Shell and I’m excited for it.
— Alex Is Evil (@Alex_Is_Evil) April 14, 2016
Are they seriously whitewashing the shit out of Ghost In The Shell? You’re shittin me yeah? IT IS 2016. THERE ARE PLENTY OF GREAT POC ACTORS
— Ritzy (@ritzyfoxx) April 14, 2016
Scarjo is pretty but wouldn’t Kiki Sukezane from Heroes Reborn be a better choice for Ghost in the Shell? pic.twitter.com/6G8YtQo2ch
— Lisa Vikingstad (@LisaVikingstad) April 14, 2016
ScarJo in Ghost in the Shell…what, people want a Japanese girl playing a Japanese girl? Next they’ll be suggesting a dwarf play a dwarf!
— Sarah Nelson (@VermillionWorks) April 14, 2016
Between Ghost in the Shell & Dr Strange, this could have been a huge 2 years for Asian actors in great sci-fi/fantasy roles. Should have.
— Josie (@knifeinmyteeth) April 14, 2016
Yes, I wonder why they cast the bankable star Scarlett Johansson in the expensive Ghost in The Shell rather than an unknown. Mystery, that.
— Matthew Stott (@MattStottWrites) April 14, 2016
It’s not like they could have cast anyone else as Motoko for Ghost in the Shell. pic.twitter.com/Bvfp9NUwH7
— waswolf (@doppelhanger) April 14, 2016
So many people complaining about Scarlett Jo casting in the Ghost In the Shell live action.
If it hurts you that much, go watch the anime XD— Joey (@TheAn1meMan) April 14, 2016
What are your thoughts on this? Will you see the movie? Paramount will release it in the U.S. on March 31, 2017.Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.
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