barsoomcore said:
You have evidence for this? Or are you now making stuff up?
What does this have to do with Hijinks' comment? Hijinks asserted that more people like musicals because of Chicago. I pointed out that there is no evidence to suggest that is true. You come along and note that in the wake of Chicago (and bizarrely, Moulin Rouge, which can't honestly be counted as any sort of big success), two more musicals have reached the big screen in the following three years. Although let us note that in the three years PREVIOUS to Chicago we saw The King And I, Hedwig And The Angry Inch and indeed the not-as-well-received-as-you-seem-to-think Moulin Rouge. So it's tough to argue that we're seeing some dramatic increase in the number of musical projects getting moved forward.
And even if we DID, that's no evidence that Hijinks is correct -- that's evidence that studio execs THINK Hijinks is correct. And studio execs have proven notoriously bad at predicting what people want.
Facts. I love facts.
No, I'm not making it up. I've read several stories since Chicago won best picture about Hollywood studios greenlighting more musicals because of its success.. Associated Press, Entertainment Weekly, several other places.
And while Moulin Rogue wasn't as successful at the box office as Chicago was, it was nominated for several Oscars and that helped it do well in DVD sales. So it is considered a success. If Chicago hadn't followed it with greater success the next year, it probably would have been considered an abberation. But because of Chicago, studio execs consider it the start of a trend.
As for Hijinks' comments -- yes, there is no factual proof. But if you reread my last paragraph, I was making the same point you are. We can't know if Chicago made musicals more popular with audiences until some more musicals are released and box office figures are tallied. But the Hollywood studios
think that musicals are now more popular with audiences -- that's why they've finally greenlighted several musicals that for years couldn't get made: Phantom of the Opera, Rent, The Producers (also being released this year), others that are currently in production.
Personally, I don't think audiences are ready to go see
traditional movie musicals, where the songs spring out of the action. I think the reason large numbers of people were able to enjoy Chicago is because almost all of the songs were presented as either fantasy sequences or as musical numbers staged in a club.