Infra-Kid wrote:
I think people have me wrong on the "cheesefest" debate. It's not that films I am advising are cheesy in anyway. Just not on DVD or VHS most them which I thought would make for a good turnout for people to see things not available on DVD(or even VHS) like in the older days of the marathon. As much as I loved the showings of Logan's Run and Battelstar Galactica they are easily watchable on DVD as The Green Slime,Without Warning or TerrorVision are not.
I doubt more than 2 or 3 people could look down a list of films and say "those first 4 are available on dvd but that 5th one isn't". Only the hardest of hardcore sci-fi film buffs, and those guys are likely all coming to the marathon anyways.
MEATFETISH wrote:
I just think too many films like that and you lose more people than you gain. But a couple are always welcome.
Precisely. Obscure films from 1962 that nobody has ever heard of aren't going to make anybody buy a ticket for a marathon. If you want to grow attendance, the best way to do it is with more mainstream fare.
Like I mentioned earlier in this thread, I'm bringing a new person this year, and of the films listed so far, the one he's most interested in is Star Trek, despite just seeing it in the theaters last year.
But like Meatfetish said, a couple are always welcome. "Go for the Star Treks, stay for the King Dinosaurs." (Though I just checked on amazon, and I see that King Dinosaur is indeed available on dvd. You get the point though. Nobody is going to go out of their way to buy a ticket for a showing of King Dinosuar or to buy it on dvd.)
(For the record, I sold my friend on the marathon before any films were announced. The idea of 24 straight hours of sci-fi movies of all varieties really is the selling point for most folks, not specific titles. Though sometimes specific titles help. I remember a group of college students sitting right behind us at the 2006 horror marathon were talking before it started and I overheard them mention that they showed up because they really wanted to see From Dusk Till Dawn. By far the most mainstream of that year's films.)