Word of Mouth: âMiddle Menâsâ advertising takes an adult approach
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If you just happen to have watched adult film clips on the Internet lately â âTeens Love to Experiment,â â2 Glamorous Women and One Lucky Guy,â perhaps? â you might have stumbled across a very unusual advertisement: a trailer for the new movie âMiddle Men.â
Hollywood has cooked up all sorts of unusual marketing buys in recent years â giant billboards that envelop skyscrapers, newspaper ads that look like real stories, logos on taxicab hubcaps and baseball bases. No matter how aggressive or creative the campaigns, though, the major movie studios havenât been spending money on adult-oriented websites. âMiddle Menâ could change that.
âI canât tell you how many friends of mine have said, âI saw your 30-second spot online,â â says William Sherak, one of the producers of the independently financed drama about the launch of the Internet pornography business. âAnd I know thereâs only one place they saw it!â
Opening Friday, âMiddle Menâ is the loosely autobiographical story of Christopher Mallick, who personally financed the $20-million production and also is underwriting the filmâs release. Mallick in the 1990s pioneered the online billing system that connected adult websites with Internet users, as pornography helped usher in the e-commerce boom.
In the film, Jack Harris (as the fictionalized Mallick, played by Luke Wilson, is known) is a straight-arrow businessman whose new enterprise brings him no shortage of money, mobsters, porn starlets and federal investigators. As online pornography takes off, Harris grows estranged from his principles and his family.
âItâs about porn on the Internet as much as âWall Streetâ was about trading stocks. Itâs the backdrop,â Mallick says. âItâs about 80% true. You have to figure out which 20% isnât true.â
âMiddle Men,â which was directed by George Gallo (âDouble Takeâ) and written by Gallo and Andy Weiss (televisionâs âPunkâdâ), also stars Giovanni Ribisi, James Caan and Gabriel Macht and includes cameos from real-life porn superstars such as Jesse Jane. The film is rated R for âstrong sexual content, nudity, language, drug use and violence.â
Unlike most limited releases, âMiddle Menâ is not opening on just two or three screens in each city. Instead, the movie will open in a number of theaters in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Seattle and Dallas-Fort Worth. The hope is that positive word of mouth from those concentrated locations can undergird a wider release on Aug. 20.
Audience tracking surveys indicate that although âMiddle Menâ is not nearly as well-known as the weekendâs other new national premieres, Will Ferrellâs âThe Other Guysâ and the dance sequel âStep-Up 3D,â younger and older men and older women are interested in seeing it.
âMiddle Menâ has been promoted on television, in print ads and with a provocative poster, but the most compelling materials can be found online. Parroting a strategy used by other makers of risquĂ© works, âMiddle Menâ has assembled an R-rated (or red-banded, as such works are called by the Motion Picture Assn. of America) preview filled with nudity and raunchy language.
Released without the filmmakersâ permission, an extended clip of Jack Harris wandering through a home thatâs hosting an orgy made its way to the Internet (rather than being a deleted scene, Sherak and Mallick said itâs just a longer version of a scene thatâs still in the film).
But it is âMiddle Menâsâ embedded trailer on hard-core porn sites that stands apart. The half-minute preview (which has neither nudity nor coarse language) has been playing on sites including Pornhub and Youporn, where programming categories include âBig Butt,â âFetishâ and âEuropean.â Viewers who select âStunning Kayden Kross Knows What You Wantâ canât fast-forward through the âMiddle Menâ ad but can click on the spot, which redirects them to the filmâs official website.
Kevin Blatt, who handles mainstream advertising sales for Pornhub and Youporn parent Manwin, says that the companyâs sites generate more than 3 billion monthly page views and attract a largely male audience, a potentially great match not only for some movies but also sports and liquor advertisers.
âWe have more traffic than God,â says Blatt, who is best known for brokering Paris Hiltonâs sex tape. âThe only people to get more traffic than us are Google and Yahoo. And here, we pretty much have a captive audience.â
About 12% of total websites are pornographic, and about 40 million Americans are regular porn site visitors. In the United States, annual adult-oriented Internet revenues are approaching $3 billion. âBut nobody admits they watch it,â Sherak says. âNone of this is taboo to me anymore.â
âThe studios say, âOh God, we canât market there,ââ Mallick says. âDo they think [the users] are all sitting in a basement and are all pedophiles? They are average Americans. Adult entertainment is becoming much more mainstream.â
In just a few weeks, Mallick says, the âMiddle Menâ trailer has been seen about 30 million times on online porn sites, and some 6 million people have clicked from the adult sites to the âMiddle Menâ website, where 4 million have watched the full trailer.
âItâs much more effective than television commercials,â Mallick says.
âThey went to [the adult sites] to do something else and chose to click offâ to our site, Sherak says. âThatâs commitment.â