The Borneo Post

The definition of a must-see movie at the box office

- By Ann Hornaday

IN THE era of Peak TV, the MustSee Movie has taken on extrahigh stakes.

Although 2017 has been a dispiritin­g year at the box office so far, we’ve witnessed a handful of films break through to become pop cultural talkers: “Get Out,” “Wonder Woman,” “Dunkirk” and most recently “It” have proved that, given the right subject matter, genre convention­s and collective yearning for a you-have-to-be-there experience, the cinema can still generate the kinds of conversati­ons to rival “Game of Thrones” recaps and presidenti­al Twitter feuds.

But can a Must- See Movie be manufactur­ed after the fact? Darren Aronofsky’s “Mother!,” an audacious horror film swathed in religious, artistic and environmen­tal allegory, is trying desperatel­y to position itself as so controvers­ial that one has to see it — right now — in order to partake of the cultural conversati­on. After receiving mixed-to-mostlyposi­tive reviews from critics at festivals in Venice and Toronto, the film tanked with that rare species known as the real-life audience: It opened last weekend with a dismal F CinemaScor­e, a grade that might have remained a gentleman’s C were it not for “Mother!’s” graphic climax, featuring Jennifer Lawrence and Javier Bardem amid a Boschian, cannibalis­tic hellscape.

Or — here’s a thought! — maybe Mr and Mrs Saturday Night just didn’t buy it. Despite its intriguing premise, a magnetic lead performanc­e from Lawrence and a taboo-shattering moment made for water- coolers, in the final analysis “Mother!” simply doesn’t work: As the film’s story and style become exponentia­lly more weird and opaque, Aronofsky loses control of the film’s core ideas when the audience needs it most.

But the film’s parent studio, Paramount, has nonetheles­s leaned into “Mother!’s” most transgress­ive elements, with the studio’s worldwide president of marketing and distributi­on Megan Colligan defending the film to the Hollywood Reporter after its meagre US$ 7.5 million opening: “You are talking about a director at the top of his game, and an actress at the top her game,” Colligan told the trade publicatio­n. “They made a movie that was intended to be bold. Everyone wants original filmmaking, and everyone celebrates Netflix when they tell a story no one else wants to tell. This is our version. We don’t want all movies to be safe. And it’s okay if some people don’t like it.”

Colligan’s defensiven­ess is revealing, understand­able and not a little strategic, especially when it comes to Netflix. In recent years, the streaming site has been aggressive­ly scooping up films at festivals, outbidding indie studios and making rich package deals with name filmmakers, assuring them that they’ll reach their widest, most receptive audience with the help of Netflix’s algorithms and user informatio­n. Amazon, whose founder and chief executive, Jeffrey P. Bezos, owns The Washington Post, has done Netflix one better, providing star directors not just the promise of data- driven eyeballs on the site, but the kind of theatrical release cinematic purists still crave. ( Netflix has been more stringent, generally opening its films only in New York and Los Angeles theatres on the same day its films are made available for streaming.)

Few need reminding that this is a fraught and fractious time for legacy studios, which have tied their fates to a business model centring on endless comicbook franchises and specialeff­ects spectacles rather than quirky auteurist statements. Meanwhile, movie stars like Nicole Kidman and Laura Dern are happily winning Emmys for their work on HBO, and David Lynch’s Showtime series, “Twin Peaks: The Return,” has managed to create the precise kind of puzzlement- slashfasci­nation over the course of 18 episodes that “Mother!” crams into a febrile two hours with little more than a shrug to show for it.

Despite admirably standing by their filmmaker, Paramount clearly overestima­ted the mass appeal of what is essentiall­y a rarefied art-house curio: “Mother!” cost US$ 30 million to make and opened on 2,400 screens, whereas “Black Swan” — Aronofsky’s equally hallucinat­ory ballet movie of 2010 — cost US$ 13 million and opened wide gradually after buzz had built up. ( It surely didn’t help that “Mother!” was marketed as a horror film and opened opposite “It,” the most successful horror film of the year.) Despite hopes for generating the kind of controvers­y that puts tushies in seats, “Mother!” might run afoul of the new realities governing an industry whose survival has always hinged as much on managing expectatio­ns as on must- see phenoms. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Lawrence (right) and Bardem pose during a red carpet for the movie ‘Mother!’ at the 74th Venice Film Festival in Venice, Italy, recently. — Reuters file photo
Lawrence (right) and Bardem pose during a red carpet for the movie ‘Mother!’ at the 74th Venice Film Festival in Venice, Italy, recently. — Reuters file photo

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