I love John Carter, as is well-documented. I’m also fascinated with inside Hollywood stories, so I had to read John Carter and the Gods of Hollywood. This book by a Hollywood filmmaker examines why this movie did so poorly at the box office.
As I discussed last year, I was pleasantly surprised by the movie when I finally watched it. In fact, after seeing it, I was disappointed that it had been written off as such a disaster. And that meant we probably won’t be getting any sequels. So, given all that, I had to read Michael Sellers’ book just to find out what the heck happened to my beloved John Carter!
Robert Rodriguez and Jon Favreau were both attached to direct a John Carter movie when Paramount had the film rights a decade ago, which they had purchased from the family company started in 1923 to protect Burroughs’ creations, Edgar Rice Burroughs Inc. (“ERB”). Nothing ever came of these efforts, however, and the rights reverted to ERB. But then Andrew Stanton, of Finding Nemo fame, talked Disney into acquiring the rights and letting him direct the $250 million epic.
Fast forward to the marketing for the movie. Sellers spends much of his book detailing Disney’s failed efforts – and, more importantly, its general lack of effort – to market the movie. At times, his book reads like a textbook on social marketing. He also details his attempts, through his website, www.thejohncarterfiles.com, to make up for Disney’s feeble marketing. He and a friend made a fan trailer that was better than the official trailers. They even highlighted the fact that everyone from George Lucas to James Cameron has poached Edgar Rice Burroughs’ legacy with a great slogan: The epic tale that inspired 100 years of filmmaking.
Throughout the book runs a theme of hopefulness – the author keeps thinking that he or Disney will do something to turn around the impending disaster, although we all know nothing worked (which makes the constant dreams of a turnaround in the book a bit annoying). The book even ends with one last wish – that the fans could join together and inspire a sequel.
I’d love a sequel but I don’t hold out much hope that it will happen after what Disney did to the first John Carter movie – a travesty Sellers documents well in his book. My only complaints about his book have to do with the editing – there were too many typos and the book was far too long. He could have cut out much of the detail on the social media front, along with multiple pages he included of cut and paste comments from online sources, without hurting his story.
But because its US copyright protection is rapidly eroding, ERB is now turning to trademark law to protect its marks – John Carter and Tarzan primary among them – in order to keep profiting from Burroughs’ genius. Last year it filed suit against a comic book distributor, alleging trademark infringement and unfair competition – not copyright infringement. If only ERB could have sued Disney for bungling the marketing of the John Carter movie!