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MOVIE MARKETING
When you think about the marketing of a film, you might think about
an ad you saw on television, an interview with the director or star,
a review by some film critic, or the trailer you saw streamed on the
Internet. All of this is part of the campaign to promote, market and
attract an audience to a film.
Studios spend millions of dollars getting the word out about their film on TV,
radio, newspapers, magazines and the Internet. Studios have people and
departments whose sole responsibility is to oversee marketing and promotion.
Each film is trying to reach a "target audience," those people identified as the ones
most likely to pay to see the motion picture. So, advertising and promotion
is designed to identify what media the "target audience" pays
attention to.
Capturing their "eyeballs" is a way to reach the audience and get them
interested.
In 1962-1963, the year To Kill A Mockingbird was released, movie marketing
looked surprising similar to marketing of today. There was no Internet, of
course.
One thing going for it: a highly successful and award-winning novel published in 1961 by Harper Lee. It had won the Pulitzer Prize for literature. Bookmarks were distributed
to schools who were reading the novel, and a film study guide was
produced and distributed by The National Council for Teachers of English.
As you and your students consider this Academy Award winning film,
think about how it was marketed THEN, and how it might be marketed differently today.
Film Critic Reviews
Hollywood Reporter Original Review
(Dec.11, 1962)
NY Times' Original Review (February
15, 1963)
Original TIME magazine review, (February 22, 1963)
LOOK magazine's Original Review (Feb.26,
1963)
Variety's Original
Review
Collection of Original Reviews On
One Page
Film Quarterly's Review
(2002)
Review Marking DVD Release
(1998)
Film Site's Review
webpage
Other Review resources
Movie Trailers: view original trailer
edited trailer
Original Newspaper Advertisements
Posters
Product tie-ins (books; soundtracks;
lobby cards; video/DVD)
Publicity Stills
Awards
Resources:
The Movie Marketing
Blog
A
Case Study: Film Marketing & Judge Dredd
(17 page guide produced by BFI)
Marketing
(another BFI produced guide)
Teaching
Trailers (filmeducation.org)
©2004
Frank W. Baker
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