Tag Archives: Kevin Spacey

Don't Get Too Excited About Those Netflix Emmy Nominations

By Dorothy Pomerantz, Forbes Staff

The fact that Netflix scored 14 nods at this morning’s Emmy Awards nominations is the story of the day. Until recently, Netflix was a tech company distributing content that other companies made. Now, suddenly, it’s a player in creating that content. The company’s political thriller, House of Cards, scored nine nominations including Best Actor in a Drama Series for Kevin Spacey and Best Actress in a Drama Series for Robin Wright. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

House Of Cards Parody At White House Correspondents’ Dinner Has Kevin Spacey, Michael Bloomberg

By The Huffington Post News Editors

This year’s White House Correspondents’ Dinner opened with one of D.C.’s most notorious politicians — Rep. Frank Underwood (D-S.C.).

If you don’t know Underwood, it’s because he’s only on Capitol Hill in the Netflix series “House of Cards.” A parody video of the show — including Kevin Spacey, who plays Underwood — kicked off the 2013 correspondents’ dinner.

The parody featured Spacey along with such politicians and media figures as New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, BuzzFeed’s Ben Smith and Fox News’ Ed Henry.

Read More…
More on Barack Obama

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Is Netflix's Newest Show a Bomb?

By Eric Bleeker, CFA, The Motley Fool

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Whether you’re an investor or a consumer, quite a bit has been going right for Netflix  in 2013. The company’s stock is up an impressive 87% so far this year, and its first major original programming, House of Cards, was met with fantastic reviews and quickly became Netflix’s most-watched programming upon its Feb. 1 premiere. 

Netflix’s big bet in the coming year is on original programming, and it hit the ball out of the park with House of Cards, yet big-budget original programming is a risky field. The gold standard of premium original programming, HBO, has had its share of successes, such as The Sopranos and Game of Thrones. Both of those shows have big ratings and nearly universal critical acclaim. However, HBO‘s successes come with misses as well. The network thought so highly of John From Cincinnati that it aired the show’s premiere after the series finale of The Sopranos

The big bet on that program was a spectacular failure; John From Cincinnati was cancelled the day after its first-season finale. Today, HBO thinks so lowly of the show that it’s one of the few original shows not available on HBO Go. 

The point being? Ambitious, big-budget original programming can be a hit-and-miss affair, especially when tackling tricky subjects that network television would never go for. Even the best in the business, HBO, has its share of absolute duds. With Netflix going 1-for-1 with ambitious original programs, will it succumb to the law of averages and release a dud?

If the first review of its newest series, Hemlock Grove, is any indication, while Netflix succeeded spectacularly with House of Cards, it still has some growing pains in becoming an original programming powerhouse. 

A dubious idea from the start
Hemlock Grove 
is the second of three major original programming gambles from Netflix in the first half of 2013. Like House of Cards, it features some high-paid talent. While House of Cards had Kevin Spacey as the main actor and David Fincher as director (he was also behind such films as Seven, Fight Club, and The Social Network), Hemlock Grove has Eli Roth attached to the director role and well-known actors such as Famke Janssen, who was in X-Men and GoldenEye. 

Like House of Cards, which cost a reported $100 million for two seasons, Netflix appears to be sparing no expense on Hemlock Grove. The first season was reportedly budgeted at $4 million per episode, pushing it above budgets for widely viewed broadcast programming. 

The problem with Hemlock Grove is that it’s coming from a niche background, yet angling for more conventional fare at the same time. Director Eli Roth’s background is focused around gore-fest horror fare like Hostel. That’s a genre with very limited commercial appeal compared with something like House of Cards’ genre of political thrillers, a known quantity that’s been a staple of broadcast programming across the past decade and appeals to a wide audience. The horror genre has seen some recent success with FX’s American Horror Story, but the genre remains a big risk with a limited yet very dedicated audience. However, Hemlock

From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/13/is-netflixs-newest-show-a-bomb/

A Frightening Way to Push Netflix Stock to New Highs

By Tim Beyers, The Motley Fool

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Television audiences can’t seem to get enough of bloody murder, and Netflix is more than happy to oblige. The streaming sensation releases all 13 episodes of new horror series Hemlock Grove on April 19, just three days before releasing first-quarter earnings.

Unlike political thriller House of Cards, which earns a remarkable nine out of 10 stars over more than 26,000 ratings at IMDB, Hemlock Grove is a genuine chiller in which a Rust Belt town is paralyzed by an unknown werewolf lurking among them:

Sources: Netflix, YouTube.

Can actor and horror director Eli Roth deliver as Kevin Spacey and David Fincher have? Netflix stock jumped nearly 10% in the week following the Feb. 1 debut of House of Cards, a high bar. In terms of ratings, the show also purportedly rivaled the HBO hit Girls during this debut week.

Roth, meanwhile, is known for playing the “Bear Jew” in Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds and for directing profitable torture flicks Hostel and Hostel II for Lions Gate Entertainment . Hemlock Grove doesn’t appear to be as harsh, but it’s a sure bet Roth’s werewolf will have a sharper and bloodier bite than the shirtless lycanthropes featured in the Twilight films.

Netflix is also airing Hemlock Grove at an interesting time. AMC Networks is coming off yet another record-setting season for apocalyptic drama The Walking Dead, which drew 12.4 million viewers during its Easter Sunday finale. Shares of AMC are up more than 27% year to date.

So get ready to get scared. Especially if you’re among the brave souls shorting Netflix stock right now.

For further analysis of how Netflix is changing entertainment, tune into our newest premium research report, in which we take you inside Netflix’s entertainment empire and tell you what the streaming sensation is really worth, and whether the stock deserves a place in your portfolio. Access your report now by clicking here.

var FoolAnalyticsData = FoolAnalyticsData || []; FoolAnalyticsData.push({ eventType: “TickerReportPitch”, contentByline: “Tim Beyers”, contentId: “cms.29353”, …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Is Netflix's House of Cards Built of Steel?

By Doug Ehrman, The Motley Fool

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In the race for supremacy among streaming video services, original content has emerged as one of the critical differentiators that can allow one company to flourish where others flounder. A number of events, capped off with the release of the new original hit series “House of Cards,” has pushed Netflix  back to the top of the pack. The stock has already doubled this year.

Before you get too excited, though, it is important to remember that the company’s two biggest competitors are not exactly stagnating. While Amazon’s Prime service and Coinstar’s venture with Verizon , Redbox Instant, have different focuses, they are coming hard for Netflix.

Content wars
Perhaps the single largest battleground on which streaming video services clash is on content; the technology side of the business is another differentiator and an area in which Netflix also excels. Because content is so important, and because gaining exclusive rights to content is so expensive, original content has become one of the most direct ways that video services seek to stand out. After a weak showing from its first attempt called “Lilyhammer,” the company has created a significant buzz with “House of Cards.”

The political thriller represents several firsts in programming: It is the first time a series has had an entire season released at once, has ever been developed with the aid of big data, and that completely circumvented traditional television or cable production release. The show, which stars Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright, has been extremely successful for Netflix. While specific user data has not been released, Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos said that nearly everyone who watched the first episode also watched the second and it was one of the most-watched pieces of content on Netflix within a few weeks of its release.

Amazon understands the importance of content as well. Fellow Fool Steve Symington recently explained that CEO Jeff Bezos has explained with usual flair that his company is already spending more than $1 billion per year for content. Its Prime service recently secured exclusive rights to “Downton Abbey,” which is alone anticipated to attract new users. The service is also expected to pilot as many as a dozen of its own original shows in the near term .

The non-content incentives
In an attempt to compete with Netflix, both Amazon Prime and Redbox Instant offer ancillary benefits aimed at making each more competitive. Prime, which costs about $7 per month — less than a standard Netflix subscription — also gives subscribers free two-day shipping on all products offered by Amazon. Subscribers are also given one free book rental per month from the Kindle Owners’ Lending Library. The company’s strategy is constantly evolving to allow it to appeal to core Amazon users.

Redbox Instant offers subscribers four DVD rentals per month at its popular Redbox kiosks. The service costs the same as Netflix ($8 per month), but users who wish to forgo the DVD access can get streaming only for $6 …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Is Your Organization a 'House of Cards' Waiting to Fall?

By Roberta Matuson, Contributor

I’m hooked on  “House of Cards,” a new original Netflix series starring Kevin Spacey. This is more than a Hollywood drama, or in this case a Washington, DC reality television show.  The plot and dialogue in this show so closely resembles real life in the corporate world that one has to wonder if the writers have corporate moles feeding them lines, while hunkering down inside their cubicles. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Fincher’s House of Cards: TV’s New Face

Beginning at midnight February 1, all 13 episodes of House of Cards, the political-drama from executive producers David Fincher and Kevin Spacey, will be available to stream on Netflix. The outlet is pushing hard into original content creation with a fourth season of Arrested Development arriving in May, just after Eli Roth’s horror-series Hemlock Grove in April.

Netflix released Lillyhammer last year in the same manner, but the high-profile nature of the talent attached to House of Cards marks a significant moment in the grand online content experiment. Indeed, these next few months may be the beginning of a new phase in the ever-evolving way that we perceive, consume and produce “television.” (We’ll have to come up with a new way to say “serialized long-form scripted-programming.”)

Continue reading…

Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Movies

With 'House Of Cards', Netflix's Moment Of Truth Arrives This Friday

By Dorothy Pomerantz, Forbes Staff On Friday, Kevin Spacey fans will have the chance to watch all 13 episodes of the actor’s new TV show, House Of Cards, as long as they subscribe to Netflix.. The show premiers on Netflix and instead of doling out the episodes once per week, the streaming service is making the whole series available at once.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest