Re: Best Civil War films (or rather, the lack thereof)...
I have a theory about that (unproven). I think it was a hard sell having a slave fight for the South, and was not palatable to the major audiences. That's what I believed for a long time, but then I looked up some stats on IMDB.com to see if I could dig anything up. First, another example to contrast.
I didn't see "Ghostrider" with Nicolas Cage (and God willing never will), but here are some stats on this movie, considered a box office bomb:
Opening weekend gross: $52,022,908 (USA) (18 February 2007) (3,619 Screens)
Now contrast that with RWTD:
Opening weekend gross:$64,159 (USA) (28 November 1999) (8 Screens)
8 screens! Even in the UK it opened on 140 screens and 14 in Australia!
What I don't know is why it was so covered up. It doesn't make sense to me, as the cast was full of stars, the director had previously had great success here as a director with both The Ice Storm and Sense & Sensibility. He had the success necessary to make his next big-budget movie, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, a movie that went on to be nominated for 10 Academy Awards, winning four.
I've tried in vain to figure out how and why RWTD slipped through the cracks.
I got this from an aunt for Christmas but haven't seen it yet. I've heard people mention "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" a couple of times, and wondered if others have seen the surreal and ghostly version of this from 1962, La Rivière du hibou. It was highly memorable and very 'arty' for a Civil War film, and almost no dialogue the entire 28 minutes.
Originally posted by guad42
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I didn't see "Ghostrider" with Nicolas Cage (and God willing never will), but here are some stats on this movie, considered a box office bomb:
Opening weekend gross: $52,022,908 (USA) (18 February 2007) (3,619 Screens)
Now contrast that with RWTD:
Opening weekend gross:$64,159 (USA) (28 November 1999) (8 Screens)
8 screens! Even in the UK it opened on 140 screens and 14 in Australia!
What I don't know is why it was so covered up. It doesn't make sense to me, as the cast was full of stars, the director had previously had great success here as a director with both The Ice Storm and Sense & Sensibility. He had the success necessary to make his next big-budget movie, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, a movie that went on to be nominated for 10 Academy Awards, winning four.
I've tried in vain to figure out how and why RWTD slipped through the cracks.
Has anyone seen "Ambrose Bierce: Stories of the Civil War"?
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