This isn’t a big action film that will play well worldwide. This is a romantic comedy. They can make a similar rom com and get 85% of the same viewership for $5 million or less.
This isn’t a big action film that will play well worldwide. This is a romantic comedy. They can make a similar rom com and get 85% of the same viewership for $5 million or less.
it would allow the new prop houses, armorers, and supply houses who switch over to take business from the old guard and make a great deal of money.
There’s a middle ground here. They can use airsoft guns when shooting the actual action, but use the real thing for closeups. It’s the same method used for hero cars in movies. The real car with all the real parts is hero 1, and generally used for all the money shots. All the stunt cars are usually dilapidated…
Me. That’s my answer. I do ot want to see that. This seems like one of the smarter decisions Netflix has made recently. You don’t need that much money to create pleasing but banal production design. I’m sure most of the budget is for above- the-line acting contracts, though. But in the age of Tyler Perry and shitty…
Only on marketing!
If I can't bust it out to light up a cigarette outside my local pub, I'm really not interested.
The Overton window in the US has been moving toward fascism for the last decade, at least. Nowadays you can hear conservatives at mainstream conventions calling for literal genocide.
Use the Force.
Please warn us before posting such images... damn that’s gorgeous. I’m not sure this sums up the 90's for me though, it’s far too nice!
They can’t sell it. You know how many divorces that would lead to? “You spent how much on what!”
It would be difficult for anyone who was alive or old enough in the 90s to forget this. This single car really turned the American auto industry on its head with its whimsical and youth-oriented marketing campaign. Also, totally wild that you could buy one from any Dodge, Plymouth, or Chrysler dealership.
Kotaku reached out to ask how it would be enforced
I’m 47, and to this day, a 300ZX Twin Turbo haunts my dreams as the car I wanted more than any other car, ever. I remember a R&T review called it “a rocket ship with a living room”. Today, these things still look totally badass and timeless, and they are so small, not bloated like modern GT cars. For me they epitomize…
I think the Dodge/Plymouth Neon needs to be on this list
I really wanted to say it was the Viper, but I challenged my assumptions. After giving it some thought, I’m pretty sure the answer is the Ford Explorer. It was the first widely-accepted soft-roader “SUV” that was really just a different-looking minivan. The beginning of the end of The Car and the beginning of the…
Neon. It is the ninetiest car to ever nineties. When I picture a nineties car it in nearly always Neon-esque with its circles and soapbars look.