View Full Version : Everyone Is Saying That Will Smith Is Over


TMC
03-06-2015, 01:54 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/04/will-smith-over_n_6800882.html?ncid=tweetlnkushpmg00000067

"Focus" only made $19 million its opening weekend and Will Smith is over. Or, at least, that's what everyone on the Internet thinks. In an array of very similarly themed pieces, The Daily Beast, BuzzFeed, Vulture and The Washington Post have all questioned his future.

To be clear, "Focus" came in at No. 1 and performed well at the box office considering it's an R-rated film released in February. But $19 million dollars is not good relative to the gold standard of Literally Any Movie Starring Will Smith. Thus, the death rattle of his career has echoed through the blogs.

Let's put things in perspective: "Focus" is Smith's 15th best opening ever, behind even "After Earth" -- the scientology epic cited as his biggest career failure -- which had a debut of $27 million off a $130 million budget. (The budget for "Focus" was significantly smaller.)

"To everyone’s horror, Smith fell like Icarus while trying to make son Jaden into his own movie star in ['After Earth']," Jen Yamoto wrote for The Daily Beast. "Last month, Smith finally admitted that 'After Earth’s' massive failure 'broke' him free from the need to be the box office Ali. Conveniently, that also meant he already didn’t care if 'Focus' biffed it at the box office."

“It is a huge relief for me to not care whether or not Focus is No. 1 or No. 10 at the box office,” he said (via The Daily Beast). But what if it's No. 1 and only rakes in half his usual numbers?

Now, "Focus" is aimed at the non-lucrative audience of "mostly adults" (88 percent of audiences who saw the film opening weekend were older than 25, according to AP) and only saw modest reviews. It also can't be ignored as a shaky attempt at rebranding in the wake of "After Earth."

This was an important film for Smith. A sort of stepping stone back into the career he once had. As Betsey Sharkey of the Los Angeles Times wrote of "Focus:" "The Hollywood stakes for Smith are as high as they are for the con man he plays." Yet, there's more contributing to this supposed "failure" than his waning cool in the eyes of those under 25 critical consensus of "meh" in response to "Focus."

At Vulture, Kyle Buchanan attributed the decline to diminished returns for movie stars in general. He asserts that franchises are what matter most in the current market. "More than ever before, the source material is the star attraction," he wrote. "Actors have become truly secondary to the power of a strong franchise."

Emily Yahr, writing for The Washington Post, argued that the "the criteria for making the A-list in 2015 -- or staying on it -- has changed." She outlines different sorts of A-listers, noting the power of the franchise, but also tying in the likes of prestige, gravitas and marketability.

“The shelf-lives of A-listers are just much shorter,” Jeffrey Ulmer (the author credited with coining the letter-based ranking) told the paper. “Basically, you find a lot more actors having that spark of an A-list spark. The ability to structure a career almost as completely and militantly as someone like Tom Cruise” -- who conquered Hollywood hit by hit -- “is very tough.”

Still, Smith has a certain star pull that brought "Focus" numbers it would likely not have earned otherwise. "'Focus' is the kind of movie that needs a star of Smith’s stature to work," wrote BuzzFeed's Adam B. Vary. "At the box office, at least, Smith’s star power seems to have paid off."

This general idea is that he still has this "star power," though not as much as he once did, because, well, he's over and all movie stars and just good movies in general are over, and we are ruled by the franchise. Long live "Fifty Shades," "Twilight," etc.! And R.I.P., Will Smith's career. This is the state of the industry now.

Okay, maybe not. But in parting, we can only hope our beloved Fresh Prince's estimated $240 million net worth will ease him into this early retirement. In the words of young Jaden: "Just stare in the mirror and cry, and you'll be good."

Spark Of Spirit
03-06-2015, 09:11 PM
Honestly, he doesn't pick the best movie roles. This movie looked boring and tired from day one.

Mace Dolex
03-06-2015, 11:58 PM
Will should do the same as Nicolas Cage and start doing DTV movies, lately that's where many former A-listers are parlaying their careers.

I remember in an interview that Will was actually trying to pattern his movie choices the same as Tom Cruise, make summer blockbuster films with the occasional indie or drama role thrown in but Will has been too busy grooming his kids for stardom.

FuriosityShell
03-07-2015, 12:59 PM
That article is stupid. Even if his movies didn't make as much as they used to, that doesn't mean his CAREER is over. His career is far from over.

Blackout
03-07-2015, 02:27 PM
time for a Fresh Prince spinoff?


start it off at Uncle Phil's funeral (morbid i know) and go from there

MrCleveland
03-07-2015, 07:41 PM
Will Smith just hit a bump...he isn't Cuba Gooding Jr., who disappeared after Pearl Harbor...

Will and Grace Fanatic
03-08-2015, 12:06 PM
I don't think his career is over. It could be he revealed to much about his marriage and the public is creeped out.

Schmoopie
03-10-2015, 02:00 AM
I think his latest movie looks intriguing, although I wouldn't go see it in the theatre. Netflix is best.

cleverfun3000
03-10-2015, 12:14 PM
I think his latest movie looks intriguing, although I wouldn't go see it in the theatre. Netflix is best.

Will Smith is way past the point where the public is going to pay the full price of a movie ticket to see him. He is now strictly a wait-til-it-comes-out-on-DVD actor. He basically plays the same character in all his movies and why pay new money to see what you've seen 100 times before

http://i.imgur.com/MPcRBoU.gif

Furienna
04-13-2015, 02:37 AM
Let's put things in perspective: "Focus" is Smith's 15th best opening ever, behind even "After Earth" -- the scientology epic cited as his biggest career failure -- which had a debut of $27 million off a $130 million budget.
Okay, this is really off topic. But I just have to ask: how can it cost 130 million dollars to make just one movie? Yeah, I'm sure that many people were involved, who all needed a paycheck. But 130 million dollars? That is more money than most people can dream of! No wonder that movies flop, when they cost so much to make...