Sentences with phrase «viewer interest down»

Viewer interest down in excess of 19 % this year alone]

Not exact matches

In this latest installment, viewers ride full throttle alongside The Most Interesting Man and discover more about his legend, as he races airboats down sand dunes and spars in Samurai armor.
If there is no interest and recognition when a video is first released on a reputed platform it will be difficult to make a mark on the minds of viewers down the line.
Like many contemporary viewers, I was interested in this silly, Russian - made flick purely because I heard the young Francis Ford Coppola had a hand in editing it down to its tighter American counterpart (which is 13 minutes shorter).
While it's not a perfect film by any means — a lack of catchy musical numbers and a questionable shift of focus in the film's latter half knock Megamind down a few pegs — the lively cast and interesting flip on the superhero concept make it a fun time at the movies for viewers of all ages.
past work as a photographer explains the stunning picturesque landscapes (the snowy fields of Sweden and the winding roads of hilly Italy), which keeps the viewer's interest from lagging during the down times when the story stagnates and when there are too many long closeups of a brooding Clooney instead of any action.
Filmmaker Paul Weitz, working from Adam Herz's screenplay, has infused American Pie with a low - key and surprisingly down - to - earth sensibility that proves instrumental at initially capturing the viewer's interest, with the perfectly watchable atmosphere heightened by the affable work from the various performers.
Alas, the ineffective introduction of characters combined with a general lack of visceral energy drag down the show long enough for viewers to lose interest.
This ultimately ensures that Divergent wears down / exhausts the viewer to an increasingly distressing extent, and it does, as a result, become more and more difficult to work up any interest in the protagonist's continuing exploits - which proves especially disastrous once the action - packed third act rolls around (ie it's become awfully difficult to wholeheartedly care about the outcome of any of this).
Alas, Gutierrez's script doesn't do her performance justice, especially the final scenes, which are an excursion into ham - handed inanity, unraveling in the most cliché of ways until even most viewers who may have been reeled in by the thriller elements will lose interest, having traveled down this road enough times to not be surprised.
The movie's problems are exacerbated by a sporadic emphasis on elements that couldn't possibly be less interesting (ie Uncle Andy's less - than - savory extracurricular activities), and although the narrative has been peppered with a handful of undeniably poignant moments (ie Arnold finally breaks down over his unwitting role in his brother's death), The Stone Boy's inability to hold the viewer's interest on a consistent basis ultimately negates its positive attributes.
This is why I am interested in the familiar yet foreign dynamic allowed by certain forms of abstraction: the idea that pared - down and unfamiliar imagery can still create a connection with the viewer by way of subtle visual references.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z