RangerWickett
Legend
And I still hate it.
kolvar said:On another topic: At last, I know, how I can get a realy high post count: I open a topic and just say, that I hate it. Maybe I should do that, too. Lets see: I realy hate Himmel und Erde, a meal my mother allways made. And I hate people, who say, that they are not angry about what was said but every word they say drips with anger. I hate stupidity.
TracerBullet42 said:It doesn't work if you include it all in the same post....![]()
As another Matrix sequel hater, I agree. The second and third parts of the movie bored me. Too much double-talk, and action for the sake of action. I found myself saying, "Just get to the end so I can go home!" when I saw the second two movies in the theater...
Although that guy who yells and shoots for about twenty minutes in Revolutions...that was riveting. For years we've seen people yell like that, or shoot like that...but to yell AND shoot at the same time for an extended period of time like that...brilliant. (/sarcasm)
I'm with you RangerWickett. Although I'm not fond of the Ewoks either, but I can look past that this time...
The following chart says it all:
Matrix - % positive reviews: 87% - gross: $171 - ratio *: 7.4
Matrix Reloaded - % positive reviews: 73% - gross: $281 - ratio *:3.1
Matrix Revolutions - % positive reviews:37% - gross: $139 - ratio *: 2.9
* ratio is the total gross divided by the opening weekend gross. Great word of mouth results in a high ratio.
To follow a $281 million dollar film with a $139 million dollar film is improbable under any circumstances, but seems downright impossible when the high-grossing middle chapter includes cliffhangers to be resolved in the third one. Didn't people care how it came out?
There are some explanations for that:
The $281 million gross for #2 was misleading. That really represents four years of anticipation and a sense that it was a must-see follow-up to one of the greatest films ever made. (The Matrix is rated #32 of all time at IMDb.) The actual advance demand for #3 wasn't as great as might be indicated by the big box office for #2. The Matrix Reloaded, number 2 in the series, was already the focus of a lot of disrespect. Indicating a lower level of interest than expected, the third one only grossed $48 million in its opening weekend, about half of what the second one grossed.
The word of mouth on #3 itself couldn't have been much worse, so the disappointment at the starting block was reinforced by an even more disappointing distance run. You saw the comments from Rolling Stone and Need Coffee above. Those are the kinds of comments people were making at their water coolers at work. To use an old saw, "people stayed away in droves".
To answer my original question, most people didn't care how it all came out, and if they did care enough to see number three, they still don't know how it all came out ...
... and they told their friends to stay away.