575 ["Chainsaw" test screening]
, revised around seven o'clock. Pen % fun % Pavilion www.biquge.info
It's not easy to write a book, please forgive me, thank you!
After Warner Bros. got this summer's "Chainsaw", they watched it and didn't think anything about it. It's nothing more than a murderer using a scheme to make a few people kill each other.
Although it is a little new compared to those horror films where the murderous maniacs go into battle in person and kill everyone without leaving any armor, it is nothing more.
The movie "Chainsaw" is from Hong Kong, it is neither a big production nor a big star, and the box office is estimated to be hundreds of thousands to more than one million US dollars, so they are naturally reluctant to vigorously promote it, but they are ready to test it in several theaters in Los Angeles first.
If the box office response is good, then expand the scale of the release, and if the box office response is just average, then simply drop the picture. After all, whether it is publicity or movie copying, it costs money. Even if you can't make money, you can't lose money.
But as the director of this film saved a plane man in the summer and became a big American hero, and the news that his new film "Chainsaw" was about to be released was also reported by the media, the style of painting immediately changed.
This movie, which was originally "mediocre" and no one cared about, suddenly became hot and known all over the country.
In the three theaters where "Saw Horror" was released, there were people queuing up early to buy tickets, wanting to see this movie shot by the "rescue hero" in the summer. The popularity is comparable to the pomp and circumstance of "Star Wars Episode III: Return of the Jedi" three years ago.
"Do you want to expand the scale of the show right away?" said William Perez, distribution manager at Warner Bros. Inc., to his boss, Steve Rogers.
After Warner Bros. got this summer's "Chainsaw", they watched it and didn't think anything about it. It's nothing more than a murderer using a scheme to make a few people kill each other.
Although it is a little new compared to those horror films where the murderous maniacs go into battle in person and kill everyone without leaving any armor, it is nothing more.
The movie "Chainsaw" is from Hong Kong, it is neither a big production nor a big star, and the box office is estimated to be hundreds of thousands to more than one million US dollars, so they are naturally reluctant to vigorously promote it, but they are ready to test it in several theaters in Los Angeles first.
If the box office response is good, then expand the scale of the release, and if the box office response is just average, then simply drop the picture. After all, whether it is publicity or movie copying, it costs money. Even if you can't make money, you can't lose money.
But as the director of this film saved a plane man in the summer and became a big American hero, and the news that his new film "Chainsaw" was about to be released was also reported by the media, the style of painting immediately changed.
This movie, which was originally "mediocre" and no one cared about, suddenly became hot and known all over the country.
In the three theaters where "Saw Horror" was released, there were people queuing up early to buy tickets, wanting to see this movie shot by the "rescue hero" in the summer. The popularity is comparable to the pomp and circumstance of "Star Wars Episode III: Return of the Jedi" three years ago.
"Do you want to expand the scale of the show right away?" said William Perez, distribution manager at Warner Bros. Inc., to his boss, Steve Rogers.
After Warner Bros. got this summer's "Chainsaw", they watched it and didn't think anything about it. It's nothing more than a murderer using a scheme to make a few people kill each other.
Although it is a little new compared to those horror films where the murderous maniacs go into battle in person and kill everyone without leaving any armor, it is nothing more.
The movie "Chainsaw" is from Hong Kong, it is neither a big production nor a big star, and the box office is estimated to be hundreds of thousands to more than one million US dollars, so they are naturally reluctant to vigorously promote it, but they are ready to test it in several theaters in Los Angeles first.
If the box office response is good, then expand the scale of the release, and if the box office response is just average, then simply drop the picture. After all, whether it is publicity or movie copying, it costs money. Even if you can't make money, you can't lose money.
But as the director of this film saved a plane man in the summer and became a big American hero, and the news that his new film "Chainsaw" was about to be released was also reported by the media, the style of painting immediately changed.
This movie, which was originally "mediocre" and no one cared about, suddenly became hot and known all over the country.
In the three theaters where "Saw Horror" was released, there were people queuing up early to buy tickets, wanting to see this movie shot by the "rescue hero" in the summer. The popularity is comparable to the pomp and circumstance of "Star Wars Episode III: Return of the Jedi" three years ago.
"Do you want to expand the scale of the show right away?" said William Perez, distribution manager at Warner Bros. Inc., to his boss, Steve Rogers.
After Warner Bros. got this summer's "Chainsaw", they watched it and didn't think anything about it. It's nothing more than a murderer using a scheme to make a few people kill each other.
Although it is a little new compared to those horror films where the murderous maniacs go into battle in person and kill everyone without leaving any armor, it is nothing more.
The movie "Chainsaw" is from Hong Kong, it is neither a big production nor a big star, and the box office is estimated to be hundreds of thousands to more than one million US dollars, so they are naturally reluctant to vigorously promote it, but they are ready to test it in several theaters in Los Angeles first.
If the box office response is good, then expand the scale of the release, and if the box office response is just average, then simply drop the picture. After all, whether it is publicity or movie copying, it costs money. Even if you can't make money, you can't lose money.
But as the director of this film saved a plane man in the summer and became a big American hero, and the news that his new film "Chainsaw" was about to be released was also reported by the media, the style of painting immediately changed.
This movie, which was originally "mediocre" and no one cared about, suddenly became hot and known all over the country.
In the three theaters where "Saw Horror" was released, there were people queuing up early to buy tickets, wanting to see this movie shot by the "rescue hero" in the summer. The popularity is comparable to the pomp and circumstance of "Star Wars Episode III: Return of the Jedi" three years ago.
"Do you want to expand the scale of the show right away?" said William Perez, distribution manager at Warner Bros. Inc., to his boss, Steve Rogers.
After Warner Bros. got this summer's "Chainsaw", they watched it and didn't think anything about it. It's nothing more than a murderer using a scheme to make a few people kill each other.
Although it is a little new compared to those horror films where the murderous maniacs go into battle in person and kill everyone without leaving any armor, it is nothing more.
The movie "Chainsaw" is from Hong Kong, it is neither a big production nor a big star, and the box office is estimated to be hundreds of thousands to more than one million US dollars, so they are naturally reluctant to vigorously promote it, but they are ready to test it in several theaters in Los Angeles first.
If the box office response is good, then expand the scale of the release, and if the box office response is just average, then simply drop the picture. After all, whether it is publicity or movie copying, it costs money. Even if you can't make money, you can't lose money.
But as the director of this film saved a plane man in the summer and became a big American hero, and the news that his new film "Chainsaw" was about to be released was also reported by the media, the style of painting immediately changed.
This movie, which was originally "mediocre" and no one cared about, suddenly became hot and known all over the country.
In the three theaters where "Saw Horror" was released, there were people queuing up early to buy tickets, wanting to see this movie shot by the "rescue hero" in the summer. The popularity is comparable to the pomp and circumstance of "Star Wars Episode III: Return of the Jedi" three years ago.
"Do you want to expand the scale of the show right away?" said William Perez, distribution manager at Warner Bros. Inc., to his boss, Steve Rogers.
After Warner Bros. got this summer's "Chainsaw", they watched it and didn't think anything about it. It's nothing more than a murderer using a scheme to make a few people kill each other.
Although it is a little new compared to those horror films where the murderous maniacs go into battle in person and kill everyone without leaving any armor, it is nothing more.
The movie "Chainsaw" is from Hong Kong, it is neither a big production nor a big star, and the box office is estimated to be hundreds of thousands to more than one million US dollars, so they are naturally reluctant to vigorously promote it, but they are ready to test it in several theaters in Los Angeles first.
If the box office response is good, then expand the scale of the release, and if the box office response is just average, then simply drop the picture. After all, whether it is publicity or movie copying, it costs money. Even if you can't make money, you can't lose money.
But as the director of this film saved a plane man in the summer and became a big American hero, and the news that his new film "Chainsaw" was about to be released was also reported by the media, the style of painting immediately changed.
This movie, which was originally "mediocre" and no one cared about, suddenly became hot and known all over the country.
In the three theaters where "Saw Horror" was released, there were people queuing up early to buy tickets, wanting to see this movie shot by the "rescue hero" in the summer. The popularity is comparable to the pomp and circumstance of "Star Wars Episode III: Return of the Jedi" three years ago.
"Do you want to expand the scale of the show right away?" said William Perez, distribution manager at Warner Bros. Inc., to his boss, Steve Rogers.
After Warner Bros. got this summer's "Chainsaw", they watched it and didn't think anything about it. It's nothing more than a murderer using a scheme to make a few people kill each other.
Although it is a little new compared to those horror films where the murderous maniacs go into battle in person and kill everyone without leaving any armor, it is nothing more. (To be continued.) )