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The Evolution of Hollywood's Calculated Blockbuster Films

Blockbusted

by Alexander Ross

Type
Stories
Subject
Economics
Keywords
economics, 1970s, blockbusters
Publishing date
2023
Publisher
Lexington Books
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover • 298 pages
6 x 9 ¼ inches (15.5 x 23.5 cm)
ISBN
978-1-6669-1108-4
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Book Presentation:
In this book, Alexander Ross highlights how creative entrepreneurs saved the Hollywood studios in the 1970s by establishing the calculated blockbuster, consisting of key replicable markers of success, as Hollywood's preeminent business model. Ross demonstrates how visionary individuals such as Coppola, Spielberg, Lucas, and Zemeckis helped create the modern, calculated blockbuster business model (BBM). However, with the rise of streaming giants and the studios struggling to compete, many consumers of entertainment now elect to partake from the comfort of their homes, making the difference between “cinema” and “television” anachronistic. Revisiting the history of those 1970s blockbusters and their ongoing impact on contemporary filmmaking, Ross offers distinct analysis on whether the calculated blockbuster can continue to lead, or if the streamers will continue to generate their own content and, eventually, fully control the dissemination process. For scholars and students in film, pop culture and business along with aspiring filmmakers, screenwriters, producers and executives, the book will be a valued resource.

About the Author:
Alexander Ross is a researcher in history at New College, University of Oxford.

Press Reviews:
"Alexander Ross outlines in extensive and unique detail how studios make money not just on blockbusters, but also eventually from all movies. He uses his vast experience, inside knowledge, and scholarly expertise to lay out both the successes and the mistakes of the ‘blockbuster era.’ I highly recommend this book to scholars in film studies and business, film school students working toward a career in the film industry, and budding film producers and studio executives."
-- Hal Lieberman, former president of production at Universal Pictures

"This book provides an original and welcome contribution to the literature about Hollywood. Building on his years of experience in the film industry, insights from prominent industry actors, and rigorous research, Alexander Ross offers a compelling account of the rise of the modern blockbuster business model through detailed case studies of seminal movies, and of its viability in the streaming video-on-demand age. A valuable read for cinema students, scholars and professionals."
-- Allègre Hadida, University of Cambridge

"In these case studies, Alexander Ross debunks many myths. His case studies demonstrate the relentless attention of studio executives to the possibilities of generating revenue. He captures this practice and, in so doing, provides a valuable contribution to the hard-nosed worldview of Hollywood."
-- John Sedgwick, Oxford Brookes University

"You are holding a volume which, to my relatively seasoned mind, adds a unique contribution to text-based cinema studies. This book is a persuasive, rigorously researched study of the evolution of the contemporary Hollywood blockbuster."
-- Paul Sammon, independent author

"Ross helps to bridge a gap between scholars and industry practitioners by analyzing a key stage in the industry’s history and the impact of innovative developments over that period. Only by taking more multidisciplinary approaches to research, exemplified in this book, can we better appreciate the ever-changing nature of this fascinating industry."
-- Fiona Lettice, University of East Anglia

See the publisher website: Lexington Books

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