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* the Bourne films
* Fight Club and V For Vendetta take over as signifiers of iconoclastic cool among high school seniors, et al.
Who were the most bankable stars in the 2000? I was thinking Russell Crowe but then I looked over his filmography and apparently I imagined that. Maybe the peak of Clooney as movie star but obviously he has a strong 90s presence.
― Doctor Casino, Monday, 27 April 2015 22:09 (nine years ago) link
- Social interactions fully transactional - whether it's likes, RTs, whatever.
- Economy(ies) at event horizon where 100% of financial movements occur in One Percenter land. In terms of economic significance, the rest of us are as important and tolerated as picnic ants.
― Elvis Telecom, Monday, 27 April 2015 22:33 (nine years ago) link
Oh man, Will Ferrell will be in there for sure - Old School, Elf, Anchorman, Talladega Nights - none of those have gone away at all. Ben Stiller also did shockingly well for himself, with Zoolander, Dodgeball, Along Came Polly... and both of the first two Meet the Parents films - inexplicably - were top ten for their years, as was Night at the Museum (!).
I guess it was nice that comedies could still even make the list back then - that's actually a big shift in the 2000s that might go unmarked by history. Now it's all big epics, superheroes, and animated things, and so far in the 2010s the only essentially comic top ten grossers are Men in Black III, which is borderline action/scifi, and The Hangover II. From 2001 to 2010 there's My Big Fat Greek Wedding, Men In Black II, Bruce Almighty, Meet the Fockers, Hitch, Night at the Museum, The Simpsons Movie, Mamma Mia!, Hancock (really?), The Hangover... plus non-CGI-blockbuster-style action and adventure pictures like Ocean's Eleven and Twelve, Mr. and Mrs Smith, Bad Boys II, I Am Legend, National Treasure: Book of Secrets, and Minority Report, and odd things like Signs and Passion of the Christ... none of which I can imagine making the top list today. Not saying any of those are precious underdog gems crushed by the blockbuster onslaught - - - just that what kind of thing makes a blockbuster has shifted, though this also has to do with the growing Asian market, etc.
Brokeback Mountain, Avatar, and Passion of the Christ for "event" films, btw.
― Doctor Casino, Monday, 27 April 2015 22:40 (nine years ago) link
Thing that sticks out as most different to me was the existence of Borders. I used to spend a lot of time there, amazed by the variety of magazines and wondering who on earth read them all (I can't help but think the magazine selection killed them more than books, cafe, films and music). I remember a point where there must have been like 6 or 7 magazines about vintage monster movies on the go. Shitloads of arty fashion magazines. Also remember seeing a fascinating magazine about cutting edge theatre set design.
Remember in the early 00s looking in the classics section and most of them were £1.50, this truly shocked me but it wasn't long before most of them were raised to regular book prices.
MySpace definitely.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Tuesday, 28 April 2015 01:09 (nine years ago) link