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Paperback High Concept: Movies and Marketing in Hollywood Book

ISBN: 0292790910

ISBN13: 9780292790919

High Concept: Movies and Marketing in Hollywood (Texas Film and Media Studies Series)

(Part of the Texas Film and Media Studies Series)

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Steven Spielberg once said, "I like ideas, especially movie ideas, that you can hold in your hand. If a person can tell me the idea in twenty-five words or less, it's going to make a pretty good movie." Spielberg's comment embodies the essence of the high concept film, which can be condensed into one simple sentence that inspires marketing campaigns, lures audiences, and separates success from failure at the box office.

This pioneering study explores the development and dominance of the high concept movie within commercial Hollywood filmmaking since the late 1970s. Justin Wyatt describes how box office success, always important in Hollywood, became paramount in the era in which major film studios passed into the hands of media conglomerates concerned more with the economics of filmmaking than aesthetics. In particular, he shows how high concept films became fully integrated with their marketing, so that a single phrase ("Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water...") could sell the movie to studio executives and provide copy for massive advertising campaigns; a single image or a theme song could instantly remind potential audience members of the movie, and tie-in merchandise could generate millions of dollars in additional income.

Customer Reviews

2 customer ratings | 2 reviews

Rated 4 stars
A Concept of Hollywood marketing

A good book for those interested in marketing in relation to specific films, statistics, genre's and era's. Film facts joined with marketing concepts make this one of the best books out there on American film marketing. High concept is a first step to understanding box office success in America.

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Rated 5 stars
RUN, DON'T WALK, TO THE CAMPUS BOOKSTORE!

Should be required reading not just for pointy-headed film students, but for film enthusiasts everywhere. This smart, tightly researched tome on the way Hollywood thinks you and I think offers valuable insight into the commodification of film as "thing", as opposed to art. Having revisited this book recently, I realized how much Dr. Wyatt's lucid recounting of overblown 80's movie marketing reads like a blueprint for the...

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