And while cinemas running five or six sessions a day have no time for a mid-movie break,Quentin Tarantino still programmed one into the so-called roadshow version ofThe Hateful Eight,which was just over three hours long.
The next epic-length movie:Leonardo DiCaprio in Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon.Credit:Apple
The chief executive of Palace Cinemas,Benjamin Zeccola,likes the idea of an intermission forKillers of the Flower Moon so much that he has approached distributor Paramount to allow it for the Australian release. He thinks it should be optional for all epic-length movies.
“Ideally,a break would be programmed into the[digital file] for an appropriate moment designed to have the least impact on the momentum of the film and story,” he says. “The break should be accompanied by appropriate lights and curtain cues to meet safety and professional projection standards.”
But the sticking point in the past has been that filmmakers don’t make their movies to screen in two parts. They want them to be shown straight through,rather than having a cliffhanger or a poignant moment just over halfway that sets up the rest of the movie.
Adding an intermission – and Zeccola has considered manually pausing the projector – would breach the contract to show the movie.
The general manager of Sydney’s Cremorne Orpheum,Alex Temesvari,says an intermission is still built into the digital versions of such classics as2001:A Space Odyssey andLawrence of Arabia, but he would like to see it for all long movies.
An engrossing three hours:Florence Pugh and Cillian Murphy in Oppenheimer.Credit:AP
“While I don’t see studios agreeing to intermissions coming back,we certainly wouldn’t be against it for longer films likeOppenheimer,Killers of the Flower Moon andNapoleon,” he says. “It would definitely generate more candy bar sales.”
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Napoleon,which has Joaquin Phoenix as the French emperor,is out in November at two hours 38 minutes,though director Ridley Scott has teased thatthere’s a “fantastic” version that runs almost four-and-a-half hours.
The chief executive of Hoyts Cinemas,Damian Keogh,agrees three hours can be a long time in a movie.
“The good thing is that at most of our Hoyts cinemas,we have recliner seats,so it’s a comfortable three hours,” he says. “But a lot of people go to the bathroom in a movie that’s three hours long,so they miss a little bit.”
While Keogh thinksOppenheimer is gripping,he admits that other movies can drag if they are longer than two hours 40 minutes.
“A lot of these directors – Chris Nolan,James Cameron,Martin Scorsese – you’re talking about the top of the pecking order in Hollywood,” he says. “The studios aren’t going to tell them to edit 20 minutes out of their movie.”
Email Garry Maddox atgmaddox@smh.com.au and follow him on Twitter at@gmaddox.
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