Hollywood losing faith in spiritual movies

Fri May 16, 2008 6:17am EDT
 
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By Gail Schiller

NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - When director Andrew Adamson began promoting "The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian," which opens in theaters Friday, he prepared for specific questions about the Christian audience that helped 2005's "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe" gross $292 million at the domestic box office.

"Religion seems more important here in the U.S. than anywhere," Adamson says. "As I'm promoting it here, everyone is asking me about the religious aspect. When I promoted it in France, everyone was asking why Americans are so obsessed with the religious aspect."

Indeed, Adamson's first "Narnia" came on the heels of 2004's "The Passion of the Christ," which grossed $370 million domestically and tipped studios to a potentially untapped audience of faithful moviegoers.

But in the years since, studios that have waged extensive faith-based campaigns have garnered mixed results, leading some in Hollywood to lose faith in the practice.

Universal arranged advance screenings for religious leaders for 2007's "Evan Almighty" and January's "The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: A VeggieTales Movie." But attendance was not particularly heavy from religious audiences, and "Evan Almighty" ended up a costly bomb.

"From our experiences marketing to faith-based communities, we believe that moviegoers searching for appropriate entertainment don't exist independent from the mainstream," says Adam Fogelson, Universal's president of marketing and distribution. "In fact, they are the mainstream and depend on traditional marketing to inform decisions about which films seem right for themselves and their families."

Faith-based campaigns have failed to deliver big numbers even for such recent Christian-themed films as "The Nativity Story" (2006, $38 million) or "Facing the Giants" (2006, $10 million). For that reason, several marketing executives say they are shying away from faith-specific outreach.

"After 'Passion,' everybody met with all of these faith-based marketing companies, and they were going to help us all change the world," a senior studio marketing executive says. "We hired them a few times and it wasn't anything you could track or put your finger on, and it didn't seem super valid, so I'd rather spend my money elsewhere."  Continued...

 
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