| Chris Hu said: There is no magic formula that defines what makes a great movie or game. That being said Titanic or Avatar will never be considered great. Also with games most of them don't age well so what is considerd great now might not be so in the near future. With movies its a different story Django Unchained is a great movie now a will be so in the future also. As a matter of fact over time its greatness will probably increase. My original point still stands enjoying something doesn't make it great. I enjoy Kung Pow! Enter the Fist I would rate it 7/10 which is miles higher then its 14/100 metascore but even though I enjoy it I wouldn't consider it a great movie. There are plenty of people that enjoy things that are really only mediocre or even bad that doesn't make something great. |
I think youre miss-understanding my overall point of target audiences.
The audience for Kung Pow, as great as the film actually is, is totally different to the audience for Enter the Dragon. Even then, KP actually made a profit and maintains its cult following to this day. Its a good film and reaaaally enjoyable if youre wanting a spoof martial arts comedy.
Take Call of Duty for example. To me and you, these games may simply be rubbish Yearly cash ins. To 10s of Million of people these games are the best of the bunch. Activision know the audience they want and Activision get that audience.
Obviously sales isnt the only factor we can use to judge quality... That would be silly to have only one way... But I think its the most important factor.
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