two pages of crazy
4/21/2011 1:55:29 PM
4/21/2011 2:00:17 PM
the fountainhead is actually a good read but even if you can get with the philosophy on even the most base "embrace excellence" kinda level the heroes of her works are pretty much as terrible people as the antagonists.
4/21/2011 2:01:53 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Objectivism_(Ayn_Rand)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayn_Rand#Philosophy[Edited on April 21, 2011 at 2:02 PM. Reason : .]
4/21/2011 2:02:31 PM
Does anyone have a response to the Hickman thing?
4/21/2011 2:04:09 PM
anyone ever suggested that Rand had Aspergers?
4/21/2011 2:06:15 PM
^I've seen that suggested about Roark in The Fountainhead and I could see it, might be an extension of her
4/21/2011 2:07:04 PM
Roark was the extension of Bill Hickman.[Edited on April 21, 2011 at 2:26 PM. Reason : sp]
4/21/2011 2:25:44 PM
BTW, Ayn Rand ended up taking Medicare and Social Security at the end of her life.
4/21/2011 2:43:30 PM
LOL!http://www.nypost.com/p/blogs/movies/box_office_atlas_shrugged_collapses_1oWcoz9xOxcmfdaik24uFN
4/26/2011 12:42:12 PM
4/26/2011 2:25:08 PM
^not everyone. at least her colleagues weren't all hypocrites.
4/26/2011 3:32:39 PM
^ They were idiots. A libertarian owes it to society to drain the government of all the resources they can. And keep in mind how little money was spent making this movie (only $10 million). In two weeks they have made back about 15% what it cost them to make it. How many other movies can claim that?
4/26/2011 6:18:24 PM
A majority of films earn back a significant portion of their budgets, and I'd say probably 80% or more earn back more than what you're talking about with this piece of shit.The biggest box office disaster of all time in terms of raw dollars was Sahara. It lost $120 million, but still earned back 50% of its budget.Even fucking Ishtar earned back 25% of its budget.
4/26/2011 6:38:46 PM
http://boxofficemojo.com/weekend/chart/Judging by the gross and the budget it seems that most do far better than it. On the other hand, it is no "Mars Needs Moms".
4/26/2011 7:39:48 PM
4/26/2011 8:07:19 PM
i'll tell you what grossed at least 15% of its budgetKEVIN CORCHIANI IS FIRST MOVIE
4/26/2011 9:05:09 PM
That is a pretty cool website Kris.
4/26/2011 10:54:48 PM
Thanks, although Cif82 posted it before me on page 1.
4/26/2011 10:56:56 PM
If you don't like the movie, its b/c you were probably prejudice against its statement before you ever saw it... If you don't see the points its making then you are too stupid to give an opinion...
4/27/2011 12:24:07 AM
You realize it has been critically panned, right? Your statements only exhibit your own bias.
4/27/2011 12:27:05 AM
4/27/2011 12:34:17 AM
4/27/2011 12:45:33 AM
^I think it was sarcasm moronI liked the book, good message. The movie just isnt that good. The market is speaking.
4/27/2011 9:01:57 AM
it's a retarded unrealistic message...certain things are impossible due to human nature
4/27/2011 9:29:52 AM
^^ I guarantee you that was in no way meant as sarcasm. LoneSnark has said stuff like that before.As for bringing in 15% of the production budget on opening weekend, that's an unmitigated disaster for a mainstream release--it's also an amazing feat for an independent release. This movie is somewhere in the middle, though.Mainstream releases come out the same day in every city in the country, opening simultaneously on 2000 to 3500 or so screens. Indie releases tend to start small in New York and LA--we're talking two to four or five screens opening weekend--and then expand to more cities based on performance. Film prints are expensive. Let's say it costs $1500 to manufacture a two hour long 35mm print. On opening weekend, a film does $50,000 per screen in New York and LA (this is a very high number). This translates to about $10,000 per screen in Raleigh and Cary on opening weekend, so it makes since to make a bunch of prints and get it to the secondary and tertiary markets as soon as possible.Now look at the other end of the spectrum--let's say the film grosses $5,000 per screen on opening weekend. If it ever makes it to the triangle (it probably won't), it'll most likely be in a couple of months. It never would have made financial sense to make more prints. If it does play at the Rialto or Galaxy, it's going to be the same beat-up print that played in New York two months ago.Digital cinema changes all of that, of course, and Atlas Shrugged is available on 35 and digital. If they were smart, they would've done all digital, because the psychos going to see it wouldn't give a shit about the quality of the presentation.There's a couple of things worth noting about Atlas Shrugged in particular. Box Office Mojo now lists the production budget as $20 million, not $10 million, and if that's true, the opening weekend gross was closer to 6% of the production budget. Production budgets don't include things like advertising, but this film didn't have any, so that doesn't really change anything.Secondly, this film opening on about 300 screens nationwide. While this kind of makes sense (they needed to get as many of the diehards out to see it on opening day before the reviews were out), as I've said, it's an unusual release strategy. What doesn't make sense AT ALL, however, is that they expanded to 50% more screens on the second weekend. That is straight up crazy. This is a niche movie. If they wanted to show it in small towns, they should have waited another week and shipped the prints to other towns. The people who care about it aren't going to forget about it and they'll wait if they have to. Nevertheless, they expanded aggressively, yet in the second weekend they did HALF the business they did in the first weekend. That's a disaster. They brought the film to as many people as they could, and those people resoundingly said "no thanks". I hope, for their sake, that it was mostly digital. (I hope, for America's sake, that it was all on film.)tl;dr what a colossal fuck up
4/27/2011 11:17:22 AM
Parts 2 & 3 have been axed by the producer.
4/27/2011 10:32:18 PM
fuckin' free market
4/27/2011 10:44:29 PM
Ayn Rand's writing style sucks and her books are incredibly boring. I have no desire to see a shitty adaptation of that. At he end of the day, all of us are primarily self-interested. We look out for ourselves, and while we're capable of feeling empathy, selfishness is a moral imperative; our ability to do good, bad, or anything at all, is dependent on our consciousness staying intact, which means staying alive. While I'm not an Objectivist, many of you have very clearly missed some of the subtleties of Rand's philosophy. The perception that selfish and moral behaviors are mutually exclusive demonstrates a critical misunderstanding of human nature. People aren't usually altruistic, so let's stop designing governments and organizations in such a way that assumes they all are.
4/27/2011 11:52:59 PM
4/28/2011 2:54:48 PM
4/28/2011 4:39:01 PM
I read the book and enjoyed it, but I don't plan on seeing the movie. Seems like it could definitely be a borefest.[Edited on April 28, 2011 at 5:04 PM. Reason : .]
4/28/2011 5:02:44 PM
I would see an Atlas Shrugged movie, but not a poorly-made trilogy split across a few years.In the book's defense, it has more of a plot and is a less boring read than the Lord of the Rings.
4/29/2011 5:58:32 PM
11/13/2011 10:48:27 AM