On “50 Shades of Black” struggling in its opening week, The Wrap writes:
Of course, it may not be that the parody genre is the problem — it may just be that today’s parodies aren’t as good, said Exhibitor Relations senior analyst Jeff Bock.
“The fact is that Fox and other studios were putting out ‘Epic Movie’ and such, and the quality wasn’t there and that’s a problem,” said Bock. “If they were funny like the ‘Airplane!’ films or ‘The Naked Gun,’ who consistently make quality spoofs, the audience trusts them. That wasn’t the case with ‘Epic Movie’ and ‘Scary Movie.’”
Robbins believes that the decline in demand for parodies is largely due to how popular humor has evolved.
“The basic idea of parody still has commercial potential, but smart, satirical humor trumps it right now,” he said. “The Mel Brooks and David Zucker libraries of films, plus ‘Austin Powers,’ are harder to imitate now because they were trailblazers with edgier humor than moviegoers were used to at the time. Some of the closest examples we have to that now are the ‘Jump Street’ films, ‘LEGO Movie’ and (presumably) ‘Deadpool.’ All of them contain a through line of parody, but they still rely on sharp writing, high production values, and blurred genre lines that masters like Brooks, Zucker, Mike Myers and others championed.”
“Fifty Shades of Black” started off the weekend with $2.2 million at the Friday box office. It currently holds a 14 percent Rotten Tomatoes score.
There are other circumstances — separate from quality — that help explain the bleak forecast for “Fifty Shades of Black.” For one thing, it’s R-rated, which Bock says “takes out a big chunk of audiences — PG-13 is usually the way to go with spoofs.”
Bock says Marlon Wayans, who wrote, produced and stars in “Fifty Shades,” isn’t considered a “top tier comedy talent, and ‘A Haunted House’ pretty much showed that.”
“Hot Shots!” boasted Charlie Sheen and a group of recognizable comedy actors who provided stability — modern parodies like “Fifty Shades” do not.
“You have to put money and talent into it; you can’t just throw it out there,” Bock added. “They’ve burned their own bridges by making so many crappy movies in that genre. There is just no shelf life to these movies,” unlike famous farces by Mel Brooks, for instance. “You can always go back to them,” he said.
So while he’s out here shading black women, white people aren’t here for him. Sounds about right. #CarryOn
Cosign. They always have to learn the hard way though.
I haven’t seen the movie yet but I’m not surprised they are trying to pretend like white parody movies are superior. Go figure.
Karma.
Don’t Be a Menace was the best one..
Damn…marlon…I don’t know how he’s gonna bounce back after this..but whatever he does…oh well.. people on twitter are dragging his a-s for this movie..
I went to see it with my boyfriend. Some funny parts but mostly trash and super stereotypical. I agree with Shayla, Don’t be a Menace was the best one!
You know , they’ve never given the Wayans Brothers the same level of praise nor respect whenever they’ve done something independent , verses mainstream Jewish production , period . Notice how they only mentioned movies with white power stronghold? They have a point about substance..Marlon has to stop making movies for a check and put passionate substance first .#FIFTYSHADESOFSHAME #HeShouldHaveWornWhiteFaceAgain #JewishPower #RespectThat