Mainstream film  

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 +"In [[1968]], Dennis Hopper, Peter Fonda, Jack Nicholson, Bob Rafelson and Henry Jaglom made ''[[Easy Rider]]'', the most successful [[cult film]] of all time. It was such a success that it probably isn’t a [[cult film]] at all, but a [[mainstream film|mainstream movie]]."-- ''[[Moviedrome]]'' by Alex Cox
 +|}
 +[[Image:Hollywood.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Hollywood]] is iconic for [[mainstream cinema]]]]
{{Template}} {{Template}}
-'''Mainstream films''' can best be defined as [[commercial]] [[film]]s that know a [[wide release]] and play in first run theatres (A [[movie theater]] that runs primarily [[mainstream]] film fare from the major film companies and distributors, during the initial release period of each film). Being sold at popular stores (such as [[Amazon.com]] or its affiliates), or more typically, at [[general store]]s (such as [[Wal-Mart]] and its affiliates) can also be an indicator. [[Hollywood]] movies are usually considered mainstream and [[Blockbuster (entertainment)|blockbuster]]s are also mainstream films. The boundary is vague. Mainstream suggests middle-of-the-road and implies [[commercialism|commercial]] viability, sometimes implying that the commercial viability is tantamount to a loss of artistic creativity. The opposite of mainstream film may be [[experimental film]], [[art film]] or [[cult film]].+'''Mainstream films''' are [[commercial film]]s that know a [[wide release]] and play in first run theatres (A [[movie theater]] that runs primarily [[mainstream]] film fare from the major film companies and distributors, during the initial release period of each film). Being sold at popular stores (such as [[Amazon.com]] or its affiliates), or more typically, at [[general store]]s (such as [[Wal-Mart]] and its affiliates) can also be an indicator. [[Hollywood]] movies are usually considered mainstream and [[Blockbuster (entertainment)|blockbuster]]s are also mainstream films. The boundary is vague. Mainstream suggests middle-of-the-road and implies [[commercialism|commercial]] viability, sometimes implying that the commercial viability is tantamount to a loss of artistic creativity. The opposite of mainstream film may be [[experimental film]], [[art film]] or [[cult film]].
== Bestsellers and the mainstream film industry == == Bestsellers and the mainstream film industry ==
[[Bestseller]]s play a significant role in the [[mainstream]] movie industry. There is a long-standing [[Cinema of the United States|Hollywood]] practice of turning fiction bestsellers into feature films. Many, if not the majority, of modern movie "classics" began as bestsellers. On the ''[[Publisher's Weekly]]'' fiction bestsellers of the year charts, we find: #2. ''[[The Godfather]]'' (1969); #1. ''[[Love Story]]'' (1970); #2. ''[[The Exorcist]]'' (1971); #3. ''[[Jaws]]'' (1974); among many others. Several of each year's fiction bestsellers ultimately are made into high-profile movies. Being a bestseller novel in the U.S. during the last forty years has guaranteed consideration for a big budget, wide-release movie. [[Bestseller]]s play a significant role in the [[mainstream]] movie industry. There is a long-standing [[Cinema of the United States|Hollywood]] practice of turning fiction bestsellers into feature films. Many, if not the majority, of modern movie "classics" began as bestsellers. On the ''[[Publisher's Weekly]]'' fiction bestsellers of the year charts, we find: #2. ''[[The Godfather]]'' (1969); #1. ''[[Love Story]]'' (1970); #2. ''[[The Exorcist]]'' (1971); #3. ''[[Jaws]]'' (1974); among many others. Several of each year's fiction bestsellers ultimately are made into high-profile movies. Being a bestseller novel in the U.S. during the last forty years has guaranteed consideration for a big budget, wide-release movie.
== See also == == See also ==
-*[[Mainstream]] 
-*[[Mainstream erotic movies]] 
-*[[Genre film]] 
*[[Blockbuster]] *[[Blockbuster]]
*[[First-run movie theatre]] *[[First-run movie theatre]]
*[[General audience]] *[[General audience]]
 +*[[Genre film]]
*[[Hollywood]] *[[Hollywood]]
- +*[[Mainstream]]
 +*[[Major film studio]]
 +*[[Popular culture]]
{{GFDL}} {{GFDL}}

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"In 1968, Dennis Hopper, Peter Fonda, Jack Nicholson, Bob Rafelson and Henry Jaglom made Easy Rider, the most successful cult film of all time. It was such a success that it probably isn’t a cult film at all, but a mainstream movie."-- Moviedrome by Alex Cox

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Mainstream films are commercial films that know a wide release and play in first run theatres (A movie theater that runs primarily mainstream film fare from the major film companies and distributors, during the initial release period of each film). Being sold at popular stores (such as Amazon.com or its affiliates), or more typically, at general stores (such as Wal-Mart and its affiliates) can also be an indicator. Hollywood movies are usually considered mainstream and blockbusters are also mainstream films. The boundary is vague. Mainstream suggests middle-of-the-road and implies commercial viability, sometimes implying that the commercial viability is tantamount to a loss of artistic creativity. The opposite of mainstream film may be experimental film, art film or cult film.

Bestsellers and the mainstream film industry

Bestsellers play a significant role in the mainstream movie industry. There is a long-standing Hollywood practice of turning fiction bestsellers into feature films. Many, if not the majority, of modern movie "classics" began as bestsellers. On the Publisher's Weekly fiction bestsellers of the year charts, we find: #2. The Godfather (1969); #1. Love Story (1970); #2. The Exorcist (1971); #3. Jaws (1974); among many others. Several of each year's fiction bestsellers ultimately are made into high-profile movies. Being a bestseller novel in the U.S. during the last forty years has guaranteed consideration for a big budget, wide-release movie.

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Mainstream film" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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