Another problem, as Mark Harris wrote earlier:


This seems like fairly extreme hyperbole - I see no reason or compelling evidence to think Don’t Look Up was more seen then, for example, King Richard. There will be reporting on general public awareness surveys soon I think, which I think will be stronger than the anecdotal evidence and using search engine trends (though I think it’s obvious to anyone that other than Car Power of the Dog will absolutely have the least awareness and has clearly been seen by less people then even Nomadland, the least seen Best Picture winner and one of the least seen nominees in history). (Last year’s surveys found Mank the least known of the Best Picture nominees). The crisis as I see it a continued choice from the Academy to pick movies like Belfast and Dog over more popular options. Had things just gone a few votes the other way and La La Land and 1917 were recent giant hit Oscar movies I think more people would care about the results, but as of this year the highest grossing BP winner of the past ten years will be Green Book, and yet people still get mad at it like it wasn’t this gigantic hit audiences loved (that eventually made tons of money in Asia also, for whatever reason). I don’t really know what point I’m getting at but I think there have been plenty of gigantic hit movies that were “worthy” enough to be in the conversation that didn’t win that, had they won, would have provided everyday viewers more reason to care next year.domino harvey wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 3:53 am I know people here don't like it but Don't Look Up was by far the most widely seen film nominated for Best Picture since probably Black Panther. So more like two with Dune. Your point doesn't change much with that correction though!
https://deadline.com/2022/01/dont-look- ... 234908110/Ribs wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 5:38 amThis seems like fairly extreme hyperbole - I see no reason or compelling evidence to think Don’t Look Up was more seen then, for example, King Richard.domino harvey wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 3:53 am I know people here don't like it but Don't Look Up was by far the most widely seen film nominated for Best Picture since probably Black Panther. So more like two with Dune. Your point doesn't change much with that correction though!
There’s no reason to suggest any of these numbers possibly bear any resemblance to reality. Until there’s independent public interest research that one of the trades will inevitably publish, the best way to interpret general interest when titles are predominantly streaming is usually with something like Google activity, where Don’t Look Up while more popular then the other nominated films of this year has not approached the peaks of films like Star is Born, Joker, or even Parasite in the past few years. I just specifically find the statement comparing its performance to Black Panther completely unjustified.domino harvey wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 6:09 amhttps://deadline.com/2022/01/dont-look- ... 234908110/Ribs wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 5:38 amThis seems like fairly extreme hyperbole - I see no reason or compelling evidence to think Don’t Look Up was more seen then, for example, King Richard.domino harvey wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 3:53 am I know people here don't like it but Don't Look Up was by far the most widely seen film nominated for Best Picture since probably Black Panther. So more like two with Dune. Your point doesn't change much with that correction though!
I have no idea why you are riding this so hard, but when presented with actual evidence, you reply with an insistence that it’s wrong and your feelings are right, so I have no interest in continuing this “completely unjustified” discussion with you.Ribs wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 1:17 pmThere’s no reason to suggest any of these numbers possibly bear any resemblance to reality. Until there’s independent public interest research that one of the trades will inevitably publish, the best way to interpret general interest when titles are predominantly streaming is usually with something like Google activity, where Don’t Look Up while more popular then the other nominated films of this year has not approached the peaks of films like Star is Born, Joker, or even Parasite in the past few years. I just specifically find the statement comparing its performance to Black Panther completely unjustified.domino harvey wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 6:09 amhttps://deadline.com/2022/01/dont-look- ... 234908110/Ribs wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 5:38 am
This seems like fairly extreme hyperbole - I see no reason or compelling evidence to think Don’t Look Up was more seen then, for example, King Richard.
I said “since” in that it’s probably the most widely seen since one of the most demonstrably popular films of all time was nominated, not that it’s more widely seen than it.tenia wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 1:27 pm
This being written, Black Panther sold at least 72m tickets domestically alone, which looks like a completetely different league.
We're not talking about popularity, but about how many eyes have seen the film itself
Within my specific context, they're one and the same, or at the very least very much inter-related. I'm telling you what they've seen or intend to watch. No one had seen Don't Look Up, no one expressed an interest in seeing Don't Look Up.therewillbeblus wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 6:15 pmWe're not talking about popularity, but about how many eyes have seen the film itself
I feel seen. I still haven't caught up to last years mess of nominated movies.domino harvey wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 4:32 am I should say, to pick up what Brian's laying down, I care a lot less these days too (my record of having seen all Best Picture nominees has been incomplete for I think four years now!). But in general I find myself caring less about keeping up with most new films when there are so many unseen films from eras and national cinemas/movements I do care far more about. I'm officially getting old, and I didn't consent to it!
Well, even if you doubt Netflix's figures, Don't Look Up has 441k ratings on IMDb which is a lot. It is much closer to Dune (494k) than to King Rihard (53k).Ribs wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 1:17 pmThere’s no reason to suggest any of these numbers possibly bear any resemblance to reality. Until there’s independent public interest research that one of the trades will inevitably publish, the best way to interpret general interest when titles are predominantly streaming is usually with something like Google activity, where Don’t Look Up while more popular then the other nominated films of this year has not approached the peaks of films like Star is Born, Joker, or even Parasite in the past few years. I just specifically find the statement comparing its performance to Black Panther completely unjustified.domino harvey wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 6:09 amhttps://deadline.com/2022/01/dont-look- ... 234908110/Ribs wrote: Wed Feb 23, 2022 5:38 am
This seems like fairly extreme hyperbole - I see no reason or compelling evidence to think Don’t Look Up was more seen then, for example, King Richard.