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Mar 11

A-List Celebrities Work Hard to Promote U.S. Films Overseas

Posted on Wednesday, March 11, 2009 in Marketing Movies Overseas

969589Have you ever been witness to such zealous movie publicity appearances as we’ve been seeing lately?

The studios are suffering deeply from the recession, and what better financial shortcut to getting people out to the movie theaters, than getting your movie’s stars out and about, as opposed to the traditional million dollar movie marketing and PR campaign blowout?

Such is the case with Julia Roberts and her co-star Clive Owen who were promoting the film Duplicity in London. Meanwhile Keifer Sutherland and Reese Witherspoon were also in Europe for Monsters and Aliens, making stops in Germany as well as Ireland.

Celebrities are doing what they can to help the studios conquer the financial crunch.

Germany Monsters vs Aliens

Pic Credit: Reuters

Feb 5

URBAN MOVIE MARKETER//: 5 Ways to Get The Word Out on the Movie Push

Posted on Thursday, February 5, 2009 in Movie Marketing News, Movie Publicity Campaigns

pushh1
A movie that has Oprah Winfrey’s backing, and Tyler Perry’s high five, and is produced by Lee Daniels (the genius behind Monster’s Ball), but is not expected to do much at the box-office?

This, I had to see.

The film in question is Push (not to be mistaken with the sci-fi thriller of the same name), a movie with an all African-American that has practically wowwed this year’s Sundance Film Festival, winning multiple awards and garnering standing ovations from an audience who has seen it all.

So, how come it’s not expected to do gangbuster’s at the box office? Brooks Barnes of The NY Times pretty much sums up reason:

African-American audiences of all demographics could wince at the film’s negative imagery. As films like “The Great Debaters” and “Miracle at St. Anna” have shown, a release labeled a black film by the marketplace — and “Push” already has been — can be an incredibly tough sell to mainstream white audiences.

The movie’s Oh-No factor is at the base of its plot: the protagonist is an obese teenager who’s being sexually abused by her father, an ugly circumstance made all the more horrendous because her mother endorses the act.

push-monique

1. Oprah Show Segment. Oprah is already endorsing the movie. Why not have a special segment of her show on incest survivors? One of the movie’s stars comedian Mo’Nique has already spoken to a women’s magazine about being serially molested by her brother as a child, and has emphasized how breaking one’s silence is essential to healing. She could be Oprah’s guest of honor on the segment, complete with a psychologist and therapist panel on how we can all heal. Oprah’s audience has been known to be responsive to prescriptive segments.

2. Black Blogger Outreach
When rumors got out earlier this week that urban magazine Vibe magazine was folding, fingers were quick to point at (more…)