Spielberg and the Hollywood Blockbuster Flashcards
Identify Spielberg’s first professional directing job. What was the medium? Who hired him? How old was Spielberg?
Intern at Universal Studios directing a television series “Amblin’” when he was 23 years old.
What scene did Spielberg add (that is, shoot anew) to the 1980 Special Edition version of Close Encounters of the Third Kind?
The interior of the mothership seen at the end of the film, a decision he would later regret.
In the film E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, what does young Elliot use as bait to lure the alien out of his forest hiding place?
Reese’s Pieces.
Name two films that John Williams did not score in the entirety of Steven Spielberg’s career?
Duel and The Color Purple.
Which character in The Color Purple shows Celie that a physical act such as kissing can come from love?
Shug Avery.
What kind of factory does Oskar Schindler create to “employ” imprisoned Jews from a nearby death camp?
Munitions factory, that was not actually producing ammunition.
Name the three films that, at the time of their release, moved to the top of the all-time box-office grossing films?
Jaws, ET, Jurassic Park.
The story of A.I. Artificial Intelligence is often compared to what fairytale?
Pinocchio.
At a relatively early age of about 40, Spielberg received this prestigious award from the Academy of Motion Pictures. What was the award and to whom is the award normally devoted to?
The Irving Thalberg Award, awarded to creative producers.
Identify and explain one of the recurring themes in Spielberg’s films.
The most reoccurring theme in Spielberg’s films is tension between parent-child relationships, specifically absent, reluctant, or ignorant fathers, with a common element being divorce.
What were some obstacles the US film industry had to overcome in the early 90s?
Hollywood relies on Megapictures and “Tent Poles”;
marketing costs up over 90%, star salaries double, production costs up by double digits, profit margins shrink;
box office growth low, numbers of films up 167 to 212 (now theatrical release hovers around 500);
foreign revenues bests domestic
Saturation Booking (wide open)
3000 screens or more
Platform Booking
a more precise roll out; gradual increase in screens
The 2000s in the US for the film industry saw an influx of franchises. What and how did this effect the film industry?
synergistic interaction of corporate parts; an entertainment product that is “infinitely exploitable”;
theatrical release, broadcast and cable TV, theme parks, music, internet, merchandising
What were some things that the US film industry saw in the 2010s that it had not previously experienced?
40k screen;
domestic sales highest again, domestic box office will often cover costs, foreign and ancillary create the profit;
American audiences account for 40% of global box office