Well this is
embarrassing; I've been spelling it "gray". Generally, for British
versus American spellings, I prefer "e" to "a", but
"o" to "ou". So they are using the one I like, but I do not
appreciate it.
This post actually
started as a joke, but then it caught hold in my brain, and I wanted to follow
it to its logical absurd conclusion.
There was a lot of
buzz on Twitter when casting was announced for the 50 Shades movie. I don't
know whether it was an official announcement or a leak, but many people were
unhappy, because that was not whom they had pictured and it was just wrong!
What they were not
realizing is that it is quite possible that their favorites had turned down the
roles. There would be plenty of good reasons for doing so. They could object to
the subject matter, which I would totally get.
If their objection
was more to the source material, not so much for content as literary quality or
plot issues, that is also very reasonable. There is cause to believe you might
not get a very good movie, and that can make people look like not very good
actors or box office draws. People who are complete unknowns can't be picky,
but if the movie wants to book a name, and the name believes they have a
future, that's when you start being selective.
Now, if a bad movie
is commercially successful, it could still be a career boost, but there are no
guarantees here. Most of the articles I have read about the book listed the
prevalence of e-readers as a factor in its success, because you could read it
without anyone seeing you. People may be embarrassed to go to the theater. It
might still do well with downloads or on-demand, but even the most successful
direct-to-video feature is probably not the career boost that a moderately
successful theatrical release would be.
If you are having
trouble finding reliable box-office draws, going after television actors is a
reasonable strategy, so Charlie Hunnam totally made sense. I guess that fell
through, and Dakota Johnson has some credits but is still better known for her
parents.
So, I have those
flickering thoughts, like wondering if they asked Aaron Paul and Kristen
Ritter, or someone who has died on Game of Thrones. Also, there is so
much emphasis on tent-poles and cross-promotion now, is anyone working on that? Like
maybe parties with catalogs of sheets, ties, and cuffs, like dirty Pampered
Chef? Ultimately, where my mind went was that you need to go after people who
say yes to everything, and my first thought was Samuel L Jackson and James Franco.
Okay, you are
probably thinking that the ages and physical descriptions don't match, but
doesn't it sound interesting to have a movie that is basically Samuel L Jackson
spanking James Franco?
They may make
questionable film choices at times, but in this case that is a plus, and as
actors they both really go for it! I can see legitimate concerns about Jackson getting to into it
and killing Franco, but that's what you have stunt coordinators for.
I believe Franco could
play Ana as a girl, wholly committed to that, and he was recently a college
student, so he could even be a little method. Jackson could really
capture that controlling and damaged side of Christian.
It could work the
other way too. I mean, Franco could play a rich sexual deviant who gets what he
wants in his sleep, and Jackson might do
interesting things with Ana, but I feel like the other way is a better fit. He's
had Christina Ricci chained up, so he could build on that experience. Sometimes
the obvious choice is the right choice.
And you still
wouldn't have a movie that I would go see, but I bet it could still become a
classic.
(No, I still
haven't read the books. For more on my feelings about that, see http://sporkful.blogspot.com/2012/08/lets-talk-about-sex.html
and http://sporkful.blogspot.com/2012/08/hurts-so-good.html.)
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