Sunday, 19 April 2020

Film Industry: Marketing - Marvel Cinematic Universe

Our final Close-Study Products will be from the Film Industry.

If we'd have had the lesson as normal, we would have learned about the importance of film marketing and what a risky business it is for film studios. The notes from this lesson are below so you can simply read through that to be up to speed.

The two Close-Study Products (CSPs) we'll be studying for the Film Industry are:
  • Doctor Strange (2016)
  • I, Daniel Blake (2016)
We'll cover both of those in the next couple of weeks.


Film industry: the importance of marketing

A summary of the notes from our research activity:

Risky business
The creative industries are a risky business for companies - it costs a huge amount of money to create a media product like a film and there's no guarantee the audience will like it.

No brand loyalty
A new, original film has no established brand or audience - it has to generate all the interest through marketing. This is why film companies prefer to make sequels, reboots or films from an established franchise (like the Marvel Cinematic Universe) - there is an existing audience ready to buy the product. 

Star power
If the film isn't from an existing franchise, film studios use star actors or directors to help generate interest in the film and find an audience. Star directors like veteran political filmmaker Ken Loach have an established audience that will always watch his films regardless of subject matter.

A matter of timing
Marketing campaigns need to be carefully timed to create excitement about the film's release. Often, the first teaser trailers will drop up to a year before release - particularly for established franchise films like the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Social media marketing
Once the film is out, the marketing campaign has less power - because audience word-of-mouth will take over. In the digital age, people will post online about the film immediately after seeing it - which means word-of-mouth is more important than ever. 

Why does Hollywood keep making sequels?




Franchises: the Marvel Cinematic Universe

Franchises and sequels are popular in Hollywood as they are close to guaranteed income for the film studios and related media companies. The Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) is a good example of this. Disney bought Marvel for $4 billion in 2009 and since then the franchise has made over $20 billion at the box office - the most successful film franchise of all time.

Film Industry: Marvel Cinematic Universe blog tasks

Read this BBC article on the Marvel Cinematic Universe and answer the following questions based on the article:

1) How many films are there in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)?

2) How much money have the MCU films made in total so far?

3) Why did Marvel create the Avengers films?

4) What will Phase Four of the Marvel Cinematic Universe involve?

5) What will happen with Doctor Strange and who is the main star?

6) Who owns the rights to Spiderman and why is the character now appearing in Marvel films?

7) Which company owns the rights to the Fantastic Four and the X-Men?

8) Look at the very end of the article. What has Disney announced regarding TV shows on their new streaming service Disney+?

Grade 8/9 extension tasks

Read this Guardian review of Doctor Strange to prepare for studying our first CSP next week. What did the Guardian think of the film?

Read this BBC feature on Marvel at 80 years old. How has it survived so long and why is the Marvel Cinematic Universe so important to the recent success of the brand?

Due - next Monday

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