AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.
Create a link to this page
Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:
Two recent studies illustrate again that the favorite Hollywood response to complaints of offensive content--"we just give people what they want'--is completely hollow.
The first bit of research came from the National Association of Theater Owners. It showed that even though Hollywood released only 110 films rated G or PG in 2004, those grossed twice as much as the flood of 540 R-rated films the studios churned out. Only four of the top 25 most financially successful movies last year were R-rated--and Mel Gibson's religious epic The Passion of the Christ was by far the top among these. In total, the 540 R-rated films pulled in $622 million. The 110 G- or PG-rated pictures, grossed $1.3 billion.
Why doesn't Hollywood pursue its own economic interests more effectively by making fewer violent, sexual, and offensive films, and more for general audiences? Because many film producers are even more interested in pushing a cultural agenda than in business success.
The president of the theater owners' group, John Fithian, had a blunt message for the studios: "Look beyond the liberal confines of Hollywood, and realize the potential and diversity of our industry, and realize what sells tickets. Family values are O.K. Family values sell tickets." And not only to children. Last year, PG movies were responsible for a 9 percent increase in moviegoing by people aged 40 to ...