A blog dedicated to American fantasy author, Lloyd Alexander, his life, his writings, and the documentary film about him.
Thursday, April 7, 2016
Quote on Prydain's Beginnings
I wanted to release a Lloyd Alexander quote that is lesser known. This quote is found in "Lloyd Alexander: A Critical Biography" by James S. Jacobs. This quote was referencing the time period when he first came up with the concept for the Prydain series.
Monday, April 4, 2016
The Chronicles of Prydain Film, Potential Audience (Part 1 of 4)
(Source: jkunzart.com) |
As a deeply devoted fan of Lloyd
Alexander’s Chronicles of Prydain, I have been thinking a lot about the
announcement that Disney has acquired the rights to these stories. As was written by Yahoo Movies, Disney is
revisiting a property, which was the basis for one of their least successful
animated films of all time.
(Source: Wikipedia) |
What does Disney need to do to
avoid another financial disaster, and to build a series of blockbuster films? I
offer the following thoughts, well aware that Disney is completely qualified
and able to answer this question without me. However, with the countless hours
of research that I have done on Lloyd Alexander and on these books, perhaps I
can offer a unique and valuable perspective.
First, allow me to state the
obvious. In order for a film to be financially successful, you need people to
come and see it; a lot of people, and a lot of times. How much money does a film like this need to
make to be deemed “successful”? It depends. It depends on what the production
and marketing costs are, as well as the studios expectations for the film. For
comparison’s sake, let’s look at the Chronicles of Narnia (which are in some
ways comparable to the Prydain books).
(Source: imdb.com) |
Due to the success of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, the
studios decided to spend more money on Prince
Caspian. The production budget for the second film was $225 Million. With
the raised budget, the expectations and hopes were also raised. It brought in a
worldwide gross of $419.7 Million, and ultimately when Walden approached them
about doing the third film in the project, Disney decided to pass. The second
film had not been successful enough.
Turning back to the Prydain books.
There are 5 books in the series, providing potential for a series of films. If
Disney were to spend around $200 Million on the first Prydain movie, in order
for it to be successful enough for them to want to make other movies in the
series, they would likely hope to bring in a gross of around $600 Million (this
is my own estimate, and has in no way been confirmed by Disney).
With a goal of $600 Million dollars and an average ticket price of $8.50, they would need to sell well over 70 Million tickets. Where will those 70 million ticket sells come from? I’ve broken the potential audience into three groups:
1.
Fans of the Prydain books
2.
Fans of the Disney animated movie The Black Cauldron
3.
Non-fans (people who have neither read the books
nor seen the movie, or are impartial to, or dislike them).
I recognize that categories 1 & 2 are not mutually exclusive, however there seems to be large percentages of those groups which don't fit into the other, so the purposes of my writing, I am treating them as exclusive groups.
In my next three blog posts, I will look at each of these three audiences, and give my thoughts on what would need to happen in order to capitalize on each audience to maximize ticket sales.
In my next three blog posts, I will look at each of these three audiences, and give my thoughts on what would need to happen in order to capitalize on each audience to maximize ticket sales.
(Narnia financial information and average ticket price courtesy of BoxOfficeMojo.com)
Friday, April 1, 2016
Lloyd Alexander Quote
Over the next few months, I hope to release a series of Lloyd Alexander photos and quotes that are unfamiliar to most. I thought I would start it off, however, with a photo and quote that are a little more recognizable by his fans. Stay tuned for some new material. And let me know what you think of this.
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