What do you do if you're a studio with a project that has celebrated director Werner Herzog reimagining the absolutely bonkers cult film "Bad Lieutenant" with an A-list cast that includes Nicolas Cage, Eva Mendes and Val Kilmer? If you're First Look, you pretty much dump it directly to DVD/BluRay.
The studio has announced that Herzog's film, "Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call New Orleans" will be released to home video on February 23, 2010 (check out the amusing Russian poster). With a limited theatrical already release penciled in for November 20th, we can't remember the last time a studio announced the home video release of a film almost a month before it's due to hit cinema screens. With this news, we're going to guess that the theatrical release will probably be strictly a NY/LA only affair. We don't see First Look striking up too many prints to send around the country if it's going to be on Blockbuster shelves and in Netflix queues three months later.
We think this is a bummer move by First Look who clearly haven't been been looking at what's been developing in theaters over the past few weeks. As Paramount and IFC has shown with "Paranormal Activity" and "Antichrist", audiences are craving original, out there films. If First Look had bothered to open their Internet browsers, they would've noticed a good share of buzz for "Bad Lieutenant: Port Of Call New Orleans" had already developed based on its utterly loony trailer alone. The film has Nicolas Cage at his most unhinged in years, talking to imaginary lizards and seeing souls dance in front of his cranked out eyes. This is kind of stuff Internet memes are made of. If First Look had a marketing department that did more that create sell sheets for retailers, they probably could've built up a decent campaign to fit with a limited rollout. And while the film did receive mixed reviews at its festival appearances (our EIC didn't particularly care for it), it does have its champions, including a rave from NY Times critic Manohla Dargis, who noted that audiences audibly gasped and laughed throughout, and called the film a ticket "straight to movie heaven."
Unfortunately, this is the state of the cinematic climate. Directors of Herzog's daring and caliber are going to struggle more than ever to get decent distribution. We just hope a better fate awaits his other film from this year, the David Lynch produced "My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done" [ed. though that picture is even worse than 'Lieutenant,' so good luck there].
10/26/2009
'Bad Lieutenant' Released For NY/LA Only? DVD/BluRay Announced For February
Posted by
Kevin Jagernauth
at
12:31 PM
Labels: Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans, David Lynch, Eva Mendes, Nicolas Cage, Val Kilmer, Werner Herzog
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11 comments:
Don't be stupid. The company that made Bad Lieutenant owns First Look.
I think the poster is in Greek.
As I understand it, this whole project was pretty much conceived as a cash grab by the financier who owned the rights to the Bad Lieutenant title.
The fact that Herzog and a great cast were brought on board and that the movie might be awesome is entirely secondary so it's not a shock it's getting the bum's rush of a release.
You're right though, if IFC can attempt to make a cult phrase out of Chaos Reigns, surely there is money to be made in "lucky crack pipe" t-shirts.
I live in Chicago and our big downtown multiplex has had posters up for BL:POCNO for a while, which means it'll be playing there. Since your "NY/LA" theory is pure speculation, I'm pretty sure I just shot it down.
I can confirm that it's playing in San Francisco.
The poster is definitely not in Russian.
Can I point out how odd it is for that poster to not transliterate the actor's names?
I understand titles, as well as titles that get changed to local dialects/languages. But universally, people's names, particularly those of public figures, are always presented "as is". In other words, Nicholas Cage is listed as "Nicholas Cage", he's not "Nikoaaz Keitz".
That's just kind of weird.
The posters up in a local theater outside of Chicago, too. Though this is the same theater currently showing a Baader Meinhof Complex trailer before Coco Beofore Chanel despite it coming out before that film and having it's Chicago run long over by the time Coco started its own. Selfishly I hope it plays in Chicago, but I'd really love for something so crazy and weird to open wide and enter the cultural zeitgeist.
Publicists in DC are claiming it opens here in a couple of weeks.
it's currently scheduled to open in Minneapolis December 4, and if it's opening wide enough to hit there, I assume it's hitting a decent amount of other big city markets also.
http://www.switchbladecomb.com/news/coming-soon-to-landmark-theatres-45/
It's the Greek poster.
ps: I'm from Greece.
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