Not exact matches
Finally in the last place but certainly not least is another Razor scooter, and this one is for the youngest
audiences but still, do have to be above 3 years
old.
Some things that probably factor into the industry's disagreement: Peter Jackson adapted books fifty years
old and respected as great literature, the Potter books were being written alongside the first movies; Lord of the Rings centered on adult characters and played to a wider
audience with PG - 13 ratings, the first Potter movies were PG, skewed younger, and starred kids (though anyone can see the films matured and so did the fans, many already wrote the series off);
finally, where Jackson provided one distinct vision and a cast of respected performers, Potter had a rotating director roster (all of them secondary to Rowling) and limited opportunities for its accomplished actors, giving the brunt of the work to the three kids and spectacle.
Older gamers had rediscovered the means to game again and younger
audiences finally got a Nintendo platform they could
finally be excited about.
Finally, according to the reception (Especially with the American reception) the film has a heart and great connexion with the
audience, so if many AMPAS members (Especially the
olders) love it, I don't see a big problem.
Finally allowed to convey the humour and caring so evident in the books sorely missing from Gambon's previous performances, the
audience understands Harry's devotion to the
old wizard, despite some very questionable manipulation by the
old man.
Our past game, Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory, had a large but predominantly hardcore PC
audience, and just to get to the point where they could play online they had to download the demo, install it, connect to a server, realise they need a patch, get the patch, realise their graphics card isn't up to scratch, go out and get a new graphics card; then they
finally get to play online with the right patch and on the right server and their broadband connection is choppy so they get a better broadband connection and they
finally connect and everything's fine and suddenly some 13 - year -
old racist tells them that their wife is 400 lbs and, you know, it just basically ruins their experience.
Not that it's grown up altogether, but Nintendo
finally seems to be embracing an
older audience than it has in the past.