I'd like to begin by saying this may actually be a good thing.
The conversation right now is "Lucy beat Hercules" and that this summer has seen a major uptick in female viewership, leading to women-focused movies becoming massive successes while male-centered ones, even while successful, falter compared to past performances. I read an article that, while broad in a lot of its suggestions (will get to that), posits that men are simply staying away from the movies this summer.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/box-office-gender-gap-why-721521
I'm looking back over some of the offerings and I'm wondering if the reason why, if true, has to do with certain types of films just not appealing to this demographic the way they did and that it's because men are starting to want more than just the standard action-explosion-guyfest. I'm also wondering because the overarching narrative is female-centered films are just more successful because it's been an untapped market, and while that may be a large part of it, I get the feeling that's not the whole picture. "Lucy" was polled as a 50/50 split along gender lines; though the article believes that "since females often call the shots in deciding which movie to go to with their husbands or boyfriends, many in Lucy's audience were couples" (which is unbelievably short-sighted, especially since the very next sentence says Hercules skewed 58% male), it could very well have been that Lucy, along with Maleficent's "this is the TRUE story" and "it looks JUST like the cartoon" hook and Divergent's and TFIOS's built-in fan-base had more to offer ALL viewers or at least is working off the "brands sell" trend. Meanwhile, male-centered or more broadly skewed films include the critically and viewer panned stuff like Robocop, the other Hercules, I,Frankenstein, Pompeii, Transcendence, and Sex Tape, as well as "hidden" movies that have interesting ideas but their trailers paint them as generic actioners such as 300 2, Noah, and Edge of Tomorrow. I get the feeling it all adds up to this trend that female-oriented films have more of an intrinsic hook or appeal based on plot or aesthetic while male-driven ones offer only rehashed ideas and repetitive themes.
My point and question: is part of the recent trend towards woman-favored movies because they have something to offer on a general, non-gender related level while men are starting to recognize and abandon the repetitive and empty cycle of stuff aimed at them, or am I completely off base here?
The conversation right now is "Lucy beat Hercules" and that this summer has seen a major uptick in female viewership, leading to women-focused movies becoming massive successes while male-centered ones, even while successful, falter compared to past performances. I read an article that, while broad in a lot of its suggestions (will get to that), posits that men are simply staying away from the movies this summer.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/box-office-gender-gap-why-721521
I'm looking back over some of the offerings and I'm wondering if the reason why, if true, has to do with certain types of films just not appealing to this demographic the way they did and that it's because men are starting to want more than just the standard action-explosion-guyfest. I'm also wondering because the overarching narrative is female-centered films are just more successful because it's been an untapped market, and while that may be a large part of it, I get the feeling that's not the whole picture. "Lucy" was polled as a 50/50 split along gender lines; though the article believes that "since females often call the shots in deciding which movie to go to with their husbands or boyfriends, many in Lucy's audience were couples" (which is unbelievably short-sighted, especially since the very next sentence says Hercules skewed 58% male), it could very well have been that Lucy, along with Maleficent's "this is the TRUE story" and "it looks JUST like the cartoon" hook and Divergent's and TFIOS's built-in fan-base had more to offer ALL viewers or at least is working off the "brands sell" trend. Meanwhile, male-centered or more broadly skewed films include the critically and viewer panned stuff like Robocop, the other Hercules, I,Frankenstein, Pompeii, Transcendence, and Sex Tape, as well as "hidden" movies that have interesting ideas but their trailers paint them as generic actioners such as 300 2, Noah, and Edge of Tomorrow. I get the feeling it all adds up to this trend that female-oriented films have more of an intrinsic hook or appeal based on plot or aesthetic while male-driven ones offer only rehashed ideas and repetitive themes.
My point and question: is part of the recent trend towards woman-favored movies because they have something to offer on a general, non-gender related level while men are starting to recognize and abandon the repetitive and empty cycle of stuff aimed at them, or am I completely off base here?