Disney's Failed Next Big Thing: John Carter
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- čas přidán 20. 06. 2024
- In the early 2010's Disney tried to recapture the magic of Pirates of the Caribbean by pumping out big budget blockbusters that went on to bomb at the box office. 2012's John Carter is a prime example of this, as it takes the place as the biggest box office bomb of all time. In this video essay I examine what exactly went wrong, and offer some of my thoughts on the film.
Failed Next Big Thing Playlist:
• Disney's Failed Next B...
Music Attribution:
"Study And Relax" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensecreativecommons.org/licenses/b...
"Apero Hour" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensecreativecommons.org/licenses/b...
"Smooth Lovin" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensecreativecommons.org/licenses/b...
"Sincerely" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensecreativecommons.org/licenses/b...
Morning Routine by Ghostrifter bit.ly/ghostrifter-yt
Creative Commons - Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported - CC BY-ND 3.0
Free Download: hypeddit.com/track/24bkbw
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Fanmade Trailer:
• Fan Trailer - TheJohnC...
References:
Brodesser-Akner, C. (2012, March 12). The inside story of how John Carter was doomed by its first trailer. Vulture. www.vulture.com/2012/03/john-...
Friend, T. (2011, October 10). Second-act twist. The New Yorker. www.newyorker.com/magazine/20...
Taylor, D. (2022, March 12). The untold story of John Carter, Disney’s $307M Bomb. TheWrap. www.thewrap.com/john-carter-m... - Krátké a kreslené filmy
This film is my granddad's favourite film. He used to read the Barsoom books when he was a kid, and eventually, I got into reading the books.
I miss my grandpa. Appreciate them everyday. That is, if they were good to you.
@@WretchedIconI second that ❤️ If the people you love are kind to you, really treasure every moment you can with them. I miss my paternal grandmother and my maternal grandfather so much, I think grandparents are more important than people realize.
Yep. That was the problem in a nut shell. Nobody who wasn't your granddad's age would really know who John Carter of Mars was. Then, since Disney did a bad job of informing the audience who exactly John Carter was, the movie failed. Why wouldn't it? If you suddenly saw a movie entitled Fred Garvin: Male Prostitute. Most wouldn't have any idea it was an old Saturday Night Live skit.
I love the books too. Went through a huge retro sci-fi phase back in the day cause I'm a NERRRD
To correct you on one point: the first Iron Man movie was made for Paramount, not Disney. Disney only bought Marvel a couple years later.
That's all immaterial. All things all of us do are for Disney. In one way or one time stream or another. We are all Disney.
that's why it was good. Disney is trash
That's true, my mistake
@@bubbytumby8509I know in 2024 Disney has had a lot of bad movies but there was a solid time where MCU movies, even under Disney, were good. I know it’s the cool kid thing to hate on them these days but the fact is we were all down for them a decade ago
@@nilus2k but that was before 2000
This movie is so severely underrated. I wish we got more of them.
Oh man, me too. They even sequel-baited it so hard. UGH.
@@williamedwards4151didn’t sequel bait anything, he went back…the end
Alita is the one that was baited and unfinished
@ninjanibba4259 I just could NOT get past those UNCANNY VALLEY EYES Alita had. The movie "Ex Machina" came out a few years before and was able to create a realistic cyborg with a human face on a robotic body (really they didn't add some fact to a robot body, but removed, *everything but* the face.)
I think the title change was the biggest mistake. Knowing Disney they thought that Princess from Mars would turn away the male demographic. That's why they stick with one word titles i.e. Tangled, Frozen, Brave etc
Hate to break it to you but it's true, I watched this when I was younger, and if i saw "a princess from mars" I would not have watched it.
@@umadbroimatroll7918and as a 14 years old I didn’t watch “john carter” because it sounded like a boring biography. Or war movie. Or something else based on a real man.
Well, if they made the movie today, it would be called "Jane Carter of Mars" and the main character would be a lgbtq+poc.
100% agreed. When I heard the title of this movie as a teenager, I thought it was some boring action movie and paid it no attention. If they'd stuck with "The Princess From Mars" or at least given it a more space-y title and really emphasised that this had influenced ALL OF MODERN SCI-FI and was based on a book series then my god would I have actually wanted to see it. I'm a huge fan of Flash Gordon, which as the video said, was influenced by these books - I adore campy old sci-fi! They really missed a beat.
@@umadbroimatroll7918 But calling it John Carter was so basic, they could have been more creative
Saying there was so much CGI but then years later every marvel movie is basically all CGI. Ahead of its time obviously and still looks really good
This film and TRON Legacy are the ones I wished caught on and made a splash with the public. Despite being a Tarzan fan, I was unaware of the whole Barsoom mythos before watching the movie, and checked out the book A Princess of Mars.
I swear TRON did well but Disney ditched it when they got ahold of Star Wars. Cause everyone loved TRON and they even had a tv cartoon series for it too so I feel like Disney was trying to make it their anchor sci-fi thing but they abandoned the project for easy money🙄🙄 I will never forgive them😭😭
Well there is Tron 3 coming out... with Jared Leto unfortunately. Someday I need to watch the Tron movies because I love the aesthetic and both KH worlds based on the movies
@@LeopoldLitchensteinmaybe it’ll be good?
@@toonboy2041 Here's hoping. I'm just not a Jared Leto fan is all
I think, rather than trying to make the film bomb, Disney execs became indifferent/distracted with the purchase of Star Wars. They didn’t try enough to help John Carter succeed, but they likely didn’t actively try to make it fail either. After all, the financial fall out was serious enough that it probably influenced the resignation of Rich Ross, the chairman of the Walt Disney film studio at the time. He left Disney just weeks after the film’s release.
That's my feeling too. Even if Star Wars wasn't a factor the bad press stacked against this movie already was an obstacle and in light of the costs already spent to make the movie, exec's probably would decide to write it off rather than give in to what is likely sunk cost fallacy. Though in a world where this movie turned out to be wildly successful I could imagine that the higher ups would have killed any sequel out of fear of diluting the scifi grnre and potentially impacting the plans for Star Wars.
I think there were some changes even before that that kind of left that movie an orphan in the system, the people who had accepted it were out or going out and their successors weren't interested in it, but wanted to push their choices. Maybe even wanted it to fail because it was associated with their predecessors. At least as far as I remember some people who had followed its making closely claimed that.
I didn't like it all that much. It's a fairly decent film in its own, but I was a fan of the novels since childhood and the movie changed the characters, and the world of Barsoom itself, too much to my liking. John Carter went from a bold adventurer who was rather enjoying his adventure on the new, strange planet (most of the time) to a surly widower who just wanted to go back to his gold for far too long, the princess who voluntarily decided to marry the prince of Zodanga to save her people from war became a runaway bride, her father/grandfather (there are both a father and a grandfather in the novels) who would have done anything to save her from that became the one who pushed her to do it, Tars Tarkas who is a thoroughly scary brute who didn't know Sola was his daughter for quite a while became somebody who constantly seemed to need John Carter to save him, Sola now didn't know that Tars Tarkas was her father, unlike in the novel where she knew but didn't tell to protect him... and so on. And yes, no walking cities in the novel, and the Greater and Lesser Helium are huge impressive cities, not two small fortresses. And where are the canals? Surrounded by the big agricultural areas that feed most of the planet?
About the only thing invented for the movie and not in the books I liked was making the Therns into the troublemakers who caused the constant wars between the Red nations, that would have brought a longer arc to the story than is in the novels that are more a collection of scenes and incidences, with no really solid larger plot connecting them.
What is known about Favreau's plans for his adaptation make me think I would probably have liked it a lot more, it seems to have been something adhering a bit closer to the novels, while what got made seems to have taken more inspiration from the comics adaptations by Marvel in the 70s than they do from the novels. And then making a pretty different story even from those. The movie is pretty much "inspired by" rather than a real adaptation. Not really all that close to the source material at all.
I had pretty much the same reaction you did: "this is pretty good, wish we got more."
Not great by any stretch, but a solid sci-fi actioner.
The marketing sucked for this movie. I never even heard of it, watched it not expecting much. Was very surprised how good it was. Like you say, it wasn’t a game changing, instant classic movie. But very solid nonetheless.
I wish they still had movies like this instead of the trash they’ve been pumping out recently.
The best of the "failed next big thing"s. The only one sunk entirely by bad marketing instead of only partially by it.
I still don't understand how Disney equally spent almost $300 mln. on John Carter and Indiana Jones 5 recently, but the first one looks like a big blockbuster while the latter one doesn't. Although both movies bombed.
Probably most of that went into forcing Harrison ford to be indiana jones again
I could have sworn this came out in 2008 or 2009 at the latest. Blows my mind that it was 2012
It does feel like a 2009 movie ngl
100th anniversary of the character
Imagine writing a book and 100 years later they make a movie about it! That’s wild! That’d be like me releasing a book in 2024 and the movie comes out 2124. Hahaha
This movie is better than any Disney Star Wars movie.
Yeah, sadly star wars killed this movie’s chances and as well as dune. Avatar turned the tables.
Those are not hard to reach
I adore this movie. My 8th grade history teacher was a true classic nerd who exposed us to all sorts of sci-fi he grew up with. When it came out I went to talk with him about it and he said it was great but no one went to see it. I'm glad it's still considered a solid project made from a real fan. On another note, you're my new favorite cinema youtuber. I LOVE your videos and have enjoyed them daily. Keep up the great work! 👍👍
What didnt help John Carter back in 2012 was that it came out in a time during a bit of a slog. Most audiences were awaiting the big movies of that year which were The Avengers, The Dark Knight Rises, and Skyfall, Django Unchained too which was that December. John Carter also came out decades after its inspirations were already big in popular culture. Stuff like Star Wars, James Cameron’s Avatar, Flash Gordon, etc. John Carter wasnt as new as it wanted to be & folks were eager for other major releases.
I didn't hate this movie--thought it was pretty entertaining, but also a bit slight. I saw it with some family and I remember my brother-in-law saying he liked it but was going to forget everything about it the moment he walked out of the theater. I pretty much agree with your assessment: they could have ditched at least one of the nested frame stories; Taylor Kitsch was not great; Lynn Collins *was* great and I think it's a pity that association with this movie seemed to tank her career. It should have been called "A Princess of Mars."
Wouldn't men be mad about a female taking over a male property?
@@suezcontours6653 “Princess of Mars” is literally the title of the original novel.
The irony that the IP that inspired some of the most influential and success franchises in history, waits so long to to get made it makes very little of an impact.
I love your series bro. It feels like half the culture that made the 2010s distinct is so forgotten and overlooked. Makes it hard to articulate what that decade was even like.
When it was announced in theaters, I assumed from the title that John Carter was another male protagonist YA film adaptation. Having no familiarity with the actual source material plus the lack of any taglines mentioning that this was a major wellspring of modern space scifi, I continued to dismiss it as such through the dismal box office all the way up to now.
It sounds like the poor marketing really let it down. After watching the fanmade trailer, I might go watch it.
I saw John Carter in the theater and loved it. But DisKnees didn't know how to market a classic
Changing the title was the first great mistake. The princess was hot though
Because that's all that matters
I think the bad marketing is the single biggest reason for the failure. The article in the wrap and bad press from the inside, I don't think factored that much into the failure. The majority of audiences don't follow that stuff at all or are even aware of it. The Disney Sabotage theory is interesting but if John Carter is a huge 1 Billion dollar hit, do they even buy Lucas film? Now they have a billion dollar franchise with a rich history and legacy that they can milk instead and they don't need to spend 4 billion to buy a company from someone else to get it.
I also think large reshoots are still a big sign of trouble. Fan4stic, Black Widow, Solo, all show that massive reshoots are a mad scramble to Frankenstein a workable movie when test screenings bombed. Most movies do some reshoots and have for decades, but they are usually to fix things some smaller things that aren't working or to add a scene or two because some bigger stuff got cut in editing and now you need some exposition to cover that up. The ones we hear about where they redid 70 percent of the movie almost always lead to disaster (or at least that is my impression).
But, at the end of the day, it was a solid movie that did enough world building that I would have seen a sequel to. But they blew it in spectacular fashion. Great retrospective.
Me and my friends used to get drunk and watch this
This movie is underrated and deserves better.
Nah lol this movie sucks 😂
@@somehoodedguyno it doesn’t
I really liked this movie. It had a lot of heart, fun action scenes, and I really felt Taylor Kitsch did a great job. Also Mark Strong is always the right casting choice
It makes a few misteps in terms of its structure and pacing, but I love its sense of old school romanticism and adventure. Not many things are this sincere.
I was out of the country for a few years starting in early 2012 and didn't even know this movie existed until several years later - a testament to how well Disney buried some of these failed "next big things."
Can't wait for known flop TRON Legacy
I thought TRON barely broke even
@@mrjamboree55 not even close. Budget at least $170 million, marketing at least $80 million. Box office $400 mil but Disney only gets half.
At this point, the most successful thing about the Tron franchise is a theme-park ride that was greenlit for Shanghai before anyone realized the movie was going to flop, and was a big enough hit that they cloned it at Disney World. It's the tail wagging the dog. It's history repeating itself in a way, since the original movie wasn't that successful either but the associated video games were.
@@MattMcIrvin And we are getting a sequel-reboot called Tron: Ares next year
This one is easy. Half of the people who watched the film hated it because it feels like a two hour long Daft Punk music video. The other half loved it because it feels like a two hour long Daft Punk music video.
I loved John Carter. I read The Princess of Mars when I was like 7 and when the movie came out it took me right back to those days… It didn’t fail because it was a bad movie. It failed because the House of Mouse is a joke at understanding how to market anything other than a ride now days.
In my opinion, desert fantasy is grossly underrated. John Carter and Prince of Persia are comfort films of mine, and I’m so glad Dune is giving this niche the respect it deserves.
EDIT: Does this make Dejah Thoris a Disney Princess?
I read all of the novels about 50 years ago. I remember loving them as a kid, but the Marvel Comics version from 1977 (Titled John Carter, Warlord of Mars) is the one that sticks in my head more. Especially the early issues were VERY well done.
I remember watching this with my dad on Disney+ last year. We enjoyed it well enough, but knowing ahead of time that it was based on a book series that inspired countless other Sci-Fi properties helped soften and even elevate the more cliched aspects of the film. If the marketing leaned into John Carter being the origin of several genre tropes that we know take for granted, I could see it catching peoples interest and leading them to be softer on the more "derivative" moments.
I LOVE THIS MOVIE. It has aged like fine wine. A fun smart piece and thrilling of popcorn entertainment.
I’m excited to see people talking about John Carter of Mars! This movie is a comfort watch & I watch it annually.
It’s definitely criminally overlooked
2:45 I'm pretty sure Jon Favreau didn't make Iron Man with Disney, Iron Man was made before Marvel Studios was purchased by Disney.
You're right, I mixed that up
We didn't know how good we had it. Super underrated film. The biggest flaw in my opinion is Taylor Kitsch was miscast. But overall it rocks, and Lynn Collins is perfect as Dejah Thoris.
I hate when movies are given a title after the generically named main character. It was a huge deterrent to see. Still haven’t seen it to this day.
I honestly thought John Carter was great. I've watched it about 6 times already. Not as much as The Day After Tomorrow, but yeah
John Carter is a butt kicking underrated gem. I Love it and know a lot of others who love it too.
I still think this series has a chance. Disney is never gonna touch it again,obviously.But if it has a dose have a dedicated fan base, maybe it could be an indie hit. Maybe the key is giving it to people who want to see it get the love it deserves instead of a faceless greedy company who’s only goal is to make the most money in the the shortest amount of time.
On the plus side, the original three books (the ones that focus on John Carter in the protagonist slot) are actually in the public domain.
It might work better as a series, something that could be on Netflix or another streaming service.
"Virginia!"
I still giggle when I remember Willem DeFoe's joyful bellow.
And yes, Dejah Thoris was perfectly cast. I can never recall the actress's name (even though I *just* heard you say it), but she was commanding and compelling. And a friend described her as "neat to look at". High praise from him, as that puts her up there with Ellen Barkin and Kathleen Quinlan!
It ran into the same issue Warhammer has. People who grew up with Starcraft assume that it's the original and Warhammer is the ripoff.
That may have been an issue for Warhammer for a time, but I think 40K has outlasted Starcraft at this point. And thanks to games like Space Marine and the aggressive push of gaming and merch in general 40K is more well known than Starcraft.
Ironically Warhammer by itself took a lot of influence from many different properties like Dune, like the concept of an immortal god Emperor controlling the human empire that despises AI. 40k by itself is already just Warhammer fantasy in space with Fantasy taking a lot of influence from multiple different fantasy franchises as well as real world history.
@@brandonlyon730 That's true, but it's also true of everything. As the video says Star Wars is Kurosawa mixed with Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon, Dune, Princess of Mars... everything is inspired by other stories or real life. 40K borrows a lot but it mixes it's influences into it's own soup, that's all anyone can do.
40k fans are shocked when you tell them that stuff like God-Emperor or Techpriests are not an original thing that wh came up with. (But I really like how they blended Foundation and Dune)
What was also confusing, is that Disney licensed the rights to a PUBLIC DOMAIN character like what they did with Tarzan. Then lost the rights even though ERB's estate don't legally own the characters they lost rights to.
this film had so much potiential, since a Princess of Mars is public domain future adaptations might happen.
Does Mars Need Moms fall into this category?
No, it was never really pitched as a big franchise starter, just an oddball that underperformed.
Surprised it wasn't mentioned here, since it is usually cited as a reason for the title change.
The failure of "Mars Needs Mom's" was the main reason for this movie's name change.
I’ve always liked John Carter. I still go back and watch it again. Growing up in the 1950’s/1960’s, it’s a good film if you cannot see the zipper in the monsters suit.
I remember liking this film but I can’t remember a thing about it lol
Such a shame this killed Taylor Kitsch's career; he was great in Friday Night Lights and basically every teenage girl in the late 00s had a crush on him.
Great video!
Up until now I thought I was only person to have loved this movie. None of my friends came with me to watch it in theaters, and I was one of the few people in the room. But I loved every moment of it, and was really hyped for a follow up...
I read most of the series in the late 1970s, when I was just entering my teens. I loved everything about them, and couldn't understand why Tarzan had so many movies and the Barsoom stories by the same author didn't have any. (I didn't actually read any of the original Tarzan stories until the late 90s, and when I did I discovered there weren't really any Tarzan movies, there were just a lot of movies that had the word "Tarzan" in the title.) I never knew the director of the film was actually a fan, and the trailer looked like it would be Tarzan all over again: a crappy story with the name of John Carter held on with masking tape.
Like what you said about it being derivative. Reminds me of my experience watching The Shining for the first time in my upper 30s. I'd been a horror fan for a while, but had never gotten around to seeing that classic. Then I think it was on Netflix, so I watched it. My initial reaction was "man this is so cliche and by the numbers. Look at this trope and that one and the other one". But then I realized, oh wait. All these things are tropes because everyone who did them was copying The Shining. This seems so derivative because it's actually the OG that everyone else copied.
As a kid in Nigeria, i grew up watching Tarzan and when i found out it was a book and who the author was, i started reading it and loved it🤩 Then i discovered Edgar Rice Burroughs' other works and John Carter was an instant fave of mine. This movie, despite the issues, is so fun and memorable for me and it sucks that it dailed due to over budgeting and poor marketing 😢
Back then Disney made bad movies that were still very enjoyable and family friendly. Now they just make bad movies with plots and characters that make normal adults utterly disgusted.
The biggest Disney bomb until Indiana Jones 5, and a lot less deserving.
I remember seeing that first teaser trailer at the theater. Never have I ever been confused with a trailer before.
I used to go every weekend to the cinema with my girlfriend and so we watched many movies just because they were on. I hadnt seen any review or criticism, I was midly aware of the Barsoom books, since Im a HG Weels fan.
I honestly can say I really liked this movie, not only as an action film, but my girlfriend and I really loved the love story, I think the relation betwen john and deja is very well made.
Later I heard of this movie flooping and all the critics and I couldnt understand what were they talking about, this movie is great.
BTW, the nephew thing, is kinda dumb, but is necesary to give us the sense that John spend decades searching for a way back to Barsoom, is part of what makes this a great love story.
We need a rated r reboot of this movie, even if it can be an animated series like love death and robots, the Barsoom books are actually very dystopic and these have many grotesque details, in any case, the Disney movie has great photography, art direction, costume design and it's a very enjoyable movie, but it's sad that this movie was a failure at the box office, I mean, there are a lot of awful movies that are a success, so I can't see why a movie like John Carter can't be a box office success, in anyway, I enjoyed the video 👌
I loved this movie, it is severely underrated. I watched this movie in a theater alone because I loved reading the books and I thought it did a great job adapting it.
But almost everyone I talked to about it said the same thing: they thought it was ripping off other movies.
And I was so frustrated explaining "no, actually, all of those things are ripping off it, you don't understand!"
I'm still sad about it to this day.
Just rewatched it, I tend to do two rewatchs every year and I still wanted to see the second part
I wildly enjoy this movie to this day. As well as Sorcerer’s Apprentice and Prince of Persia. Those 2010’s movies were a lot of fun.
It's such a great movie. Saw it on a whim, not knowing anything about it, and it's still one of those films that I really enjoy. i wish it had a sequel. What a shame
I saw this in the cinema when I was a kid and I thought it was great. Even now I still think its pretty underrated
Too bad
I remember reading the books when i was a teen and i was sorry to see the poor marketing doomed the film.
The teenager in me really wanted John Carter to achieve Tarzan status.
I still do.
Failer is preparation for success.
The depictions of Mars are STUNNING and the premise is classic. That said, I think:
1. Yes, I'm sorry, Kitsch does come off as a generihunk in this.
2. The CGI and Michael Bay-style action is a stain on otherwise lush scenery.
3. The marketers clearly had no grasp of science fiction history.
Man. I Called this run of films "The Disney for Boys" era. That it was reviving classic characters (John Carter, Lone Ranger) , Nostalgia (Tron) and "new classics" (Prince of Persia, Wizard Apprentice). I enjoyed many of them in the cinema, specially john carter, which i saw three times and pre ordered the bluray/DVD when it was announced. Great times for a brand which main demographic is not the one it targeted with this films.
One of the biggest mistakes they could’ve ever made with this imo is chopping the “of mars” off of the title. It takes away the hook, the thing that catches the attention of joe shmoe, that the original title, John Carter of Mars, has. Now it’s just “John Carter”, which could easily be some rando watering his lawn or driving a garbage truck or using the office photocopier. It doesn’t mean anything UNTIL you add the fantastical element of a whole different planet to it.
You said exactly why I passed on this as a kid. Yeah but what about John Carter am I here to see? Lol
I think the larger overall issue with these films is Disney focused more on franchise prospects and less on good stories
I had never heard of the book so had no idea what this movie was about. The title of just John Carter meant nothing to me, if Mars was in the title it might have hooked me as I love sci-fi. Marketing and title aside, the movie was middling, if it had been an a 9 or 10 it likely would have done better. It is rare that a big budget gem fails.
Your channel will grow a lot if you keep this level of quality. This was very well made, informative and entertaining!
Thank you!
One factor in its failure: the source material was 2-3 generations old, and only the OG ERB fans were familiar with it.
Massively influential to Michael Moorcock as well.
In fact he wrote a tribute series, "Kane of Old Mars".
Just on the year alone, this movie is nostalgic and gets its replays at home along with the sorcerer apprentice the song alone, one republic secrets. 2010 2012
Its unfortunate this film flopped because its actually pretty fun to watch!
Stanton should make a full CGI series independently of this franchise.
I think this movie was ahead of its time for sureeee
This story needs a do-over either on film or television. But not by Disney since they killed the movie's chances of a sequel.
It's also a sad reminder why Disney hasn't had a successful live action movie that isn't a live action remake or part of the brands they bought or studio they own because they sabotage every live action movie, even the good ones like this movie, that isn't a part of the brands they bought or studio they own. I mean, I'd love to see another PG 13 live action franchise from Walt Disney Studios but they don't care.
In addition to the conspiracy theory about Star Was, there was meant to be some interesting Hollywood accounting going on. Disney moved some expenses from other projects over to John Carter and inflated the bottom line. So it's a bigger bomb than it could have been.
Prince of persia to this day I love. The chemistry and the cating was great
It’s my fav spire of these failed films, but I also like most of these failed films.
I'm so disappointed this movie never got a sequel. I really like it and it got me into the books.
Iron man was released by Paramount not Disney
You're right, my mistake
Yah a lot of people forget that Many of the early MCU Movies were released by Paramount not Disney
It's definitely rewatchable - a lot of films aren't.
I can understand the gripes with the movie. But when I first watched it, I really enjoyed this movie and still do to this day.
From what I hear, this movie is *literally* a textbook example of failure-in-marketing.
Don't forget to talk about 'G-Force' and 'Tron: Legacy'
Been enjoying this series 👍 I actually forgot this movie existed, but unlike the others on the list so far, I'd like to give this one a watch again.
Was a child, thought it was alright. Nowadays I'd still say it's alright, no more no less
I remember being really excited for it but feeling bored as it went on and I can barely remember anything about it. I don't think it was paced well enough and the bland desert setting really hurt it too. Look at the posters, they play up the red of mars, look very spacey and colorful. Then you actually watch the movie and it's just beige sand and rocks as far as the eyes can see. You can't blame the press and marketing only because the critic and fan consensus was low too.
I say this as a solid movie-goer AND a fan of the original Barsoom books - there was nothing wrong with 'John Carter'. Everything about the movie itself was well done. There were lore changes, but they were logical and made for a much tighter storyline.
I don't know if JC would have made it big under different circumstances, but it certainly could have done much better. I put THAT squarely on Disney's ever-growing incompetence.
My favorite failed next big thing was Tron legacy. They really should have cashed in on that
Bro almost all these "failed next big things" are movies i loved as a kid lol
Pls, this movie got me into reading the book series when i was in middle school, i so so wish this movie took off 😭😭😭
How many classic movies or cult classic movies bombed at the box office and now are some of the greatest hits of all time so damn many!!!
My combo choice for its failure: 1) Famous beats first, 2) Non-nerds and modern audiences had no idea what it was about and why they should care, 3) Those who learned the background were intimidated by a 100 year old story with deep lore, and 4) the protagonist is a Confederate, someone a modern audience cannot excuse.
It wasn’t until about 15:20 that I realized John Carter and the Prince of Persia were different movies 😟
I loved this movie when it came out. Not that it is an incredible movie, but watching it I was very immersed and I loved the VFX. A shame it was never given a chance.
Man this movie was awesome
Not many people know about this series. It's a pretty deep cut of sci-fi. I'm a scifi geek who was in his 40s at that time, and I had never heard of John Carter. I would have tried to hype the book line while shooting the movie.
I liked the movie. I'm sorry it didn't work. Grand effort.
Maybe we'll see it again in some other form.
Why is it so many in the movie industry sabotaged their current projects just to go to Star Wars and then sabotaged that? I'm looking at you Game of Thrones!
Disney should've adapted this the same way they adapted Edgar Rice Burroughs' other works: 2D animation, Phil Collins soundtrack, and a Kingdom Hearts world that only appears in a single game.
The problem with 'John Carter' was that Disney was so hyper-focused on franchise seeding they forgot to start with good story-telling and characterization.
I remember seeing so many commercials of this movie, and just not getting why I should spend my cash on it.