This new series will
let younger audiences in on the fun without the darker elements of the original.
Not exact matches
Sarah O'Rourke, Autodesk's youth
audience strategist, says that these
young inventors understand what so many adults forget about innovation — not to
let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
Let the target
audience of
young adults make their own judgments, particularly
young women who might identify not necessarily with anorexia but with some other problems they have like too many zits, or whatever.
However, rather than
let the zany humor of Dr. Seuss win over its
young target
audience, the studio opted to
let Mike Meyers infuse a touch of Austin Powers» crude humor and base gags.
The nudity will throw the prudes for a loop, I suppose, and may cut out
younger audience members whose parents
let their kids watch any ol' violence but get nervous around bare skin.
Overall this all seems like a major marketing push for a film which could grab a fair sized
audience, but
let's not forget the box - office disappointments of BEAUTIFUL CREATURES and THE MORTAL INSTRUMENTS: CITY OF BONES, showing that popular female - centric
Young Adult adaptations don't always rake in big cinematic crowds.
It's creepy and titillating and, as it never
lets on to the double - crossing ways of
young girls, manages its fair share of shocks and snares with which to hang its
audience by.
Whilst that I can acknowledge that it did take the film in a slightly different direction, and tried to do something a little different than the original (for example
letting Murphy retain his memory whereas in the original Murphy was wiped or delving more into the family life of Murphy both as a human and as RoboCop), but for me it missed out on having the main villain, it cashed in on using the original them tune (which to be honest I did kinda like), the shoe - horning in of some of the original one liners that really felt out of place, there was tonnes of CGI which unfortunately is to be expected these days and I felt it was considerably toned down to appeal more to the
younger audience, losing the over gratuitous violence and blood that the original had which in my opinion gave it some of the charm that it still has today.
My family own some of his albums and a nice collectors book of his tv episodes.
Let's look at adults who feel compelled to buy junky souvenirs at football games and swill down junk food and beers in front of the eyes of the
younger audiences at these events.Come on...
let» lay blame on the right parties.
Let's begin with the one age group that smartphones and tablets are still a long way from breaking into, and that is the
younger audience under 14 years old.