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‘Kite Runner’ prepares for takeoff at Box Office
Steven Zeitchik
LOS ANGELES—The young stars of “The Kite Runner” may have been moved to
a secret location after receiving death threats, but now the tricky part
really begins for the film’s distributor: Packaging a foreign-language
movie with weighty themes and no stars as a mainstream release.
The DreamWorks production, which is being released through Paramount
Vantage, the Afghanistan- and U.S.-set tale opens Friday in limited
release before expanding during the coming weeks. And it poses one of
the most fraught challenges of any movie this fall as Paramount
Pictures’ specialty division tries to turn what was an unlikely
best-seller about friendship and ethnic strife into a big-screen
blockbuster.
Hovering over it is a Vantage release from earlier in the year, “A
Mighty Heart,” which took on a similar part of the world with more
obvious commercial elements (Angelina Jolie and a ubiquitous Mariane
Pearl) but earned just $15 million at the box office.
The result has been to make “Kite Runner” a marketing anomaly, with the
company taking a grassroots approach that has focused on elements most
major rollouts ignore.
It has hosted dozens of screenings for book clubs and in the heartland
(literally, in the case of the Heartland Film Festival in Indianapolis);
has embraced an unusual publicity figure in Khaled Hosseini, who wrote
the book on which the movie is based; and thrown fundraisers with
Afghani expats.
Vantage has embarked on its campaign with a dearth of TV spots and
trailers. “The English-language portions of the film don’t lend
themselves to clips, and the Dari (language) will put some people off,
so word-of-mouth is all you have,” said one executive with knowledge of
the campaign.
Or as an executive at another studio said: “The only thing you can do
with a movie like this is screen the hell out of it.”
In a way, Vantage was put in this position because of circumstances
beyond its control. Eager to avoid the wide release of “Mighty Heart,”
the company planned a slow burn for the Marc Forster picture, with “Kite
Runner” slotted for an early November opening and then carefully rolling
out through year’s end.
But concerns developed that four of the movie’s young Afghani stars
could find themselves in danger from the surrounding community because
of sexually suggestive elements in the film’s plot line. So the company
pushed the release back six weeks in order to move the boys out of
Afghanistan and set them up with new lives somewhere in the United Arab
Emirates.
The result was to put “Kite Runner” into a crowded and awards-crazed
December, which forced the movie to jostle against such big-buzz
releases as “Sweeney Todd,” “Atonement” and even Vantage’s own “There
Will Be Blood.” (The company declined comment for this report.)
The strategy abroad has been almost as tricky, with the company trying a
move that some studios, having seen its stars put in danger, might not
have attempted: a major unveiling the Arab world. The movie will play
the Dubai International Film Festival that begins this weekend.
“Kite Runner” will open in several European and South American countries
every week in January and February, culminating in a major release in
Turkey at the end of February. Out of safety concerns, Vantage will not
release the movie in Afghanistan, though pirated copies will probably
abound. |