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f13.net General Forums => Serious Business => Topic started by: murdoc on June 07, 2011, 07:23:21 AM



Title: Slate career-o-matic
Post by: murdoc on June 07, 2011, 07:23:21 AM
Not about a movie, but interesting imo.

http://www.slate.com/id/2296070/pagenum/all/#p2

Slate has basically taken all the data from Rotten Tomatoes from 1985 to present, removed documentaries and allowed you to chart the career progress of anyone listed on the website based on reviews of their movies. They have put together some interesting data such as a director seems to start getting uniformly higher reviews somewhere around their 8th or 9th movie and that actors start out with an average score of 55% and it drops to 50% where it seems to stick.

It's interesting to track directors and actors and see correlations between the reviews they receive in their respective careers and where they cross. (Johnny Depp/Tim Burton for example).


Title: Re: Slate career-o-matic
Post by: K9 on June 07, 2011, 09:36:43 AM
Interesting, the data are really noisy, but there's definitely some fun stuff to be dug out of there I'm sure.


Title: Re: Slate career-o-matic
Post by: Samwise on June 07, 2011, 09:59:28 AM
I think the data could probably be cleaned up a bit by looking at billing order to guess how much influence the person actually might have had on the movie.  If someone had a cameo in a crappy movie it shouldn't get the same weight on the chart as an award-winner that they had top billing on, for example.


Title: Re: Slate career-o-matic
Post by: K9 on June 07, 2011, 11:30:15 AM
If someone had a cameo in a crappy movie it shouldn't get the same weight on the chart as an award-winner that they had top billing on, for example.

Chuck Norris' highest rated film is Dodgeball, so...  :grin:

I agree though, unweighted the data are pretty meaningless. It would be interesting to break it down and look at actor-actor and actor-director interactions; you would expect that there are some actors who manage to bring up those around them, likewise directors.


Title: Re: Slate career-o-matic
Post by: Bunk on June 09, 2011, 06:53:51 AM
Tried to put in Lucas and nothing came up, then noticed the qualifier of having done ten movies in the last 25 years.