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Inverse Cost and Quality Law
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Inverse Cost and Quality Law : ウィキペディア英語版
Inverse Cost and Quality Law

The Inverse Cost and Quality Law attempts to formalize any Hollywood cinema production characterized by a large budget and, by negative correlation, poorly perceived critical attributes. The American writer, David Foster Wallace,〔http://www.davidfosterwallace.com/bio.shtml〕 coined the term and established subject attributes for the law in a 1998 article titled, "F/X Porn"〔http://www.badgerinternet.com/~bobkat/waterstone.html〕 by which Wallace primarily critiques the weaknesses of ''Terminator 2: Judgment Day'' (1991), a blockbuster〔http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=terminator2.htm〕 film directed by James Cameron.
== Overview ==

David Foster Wallace, in a 1998 essay which first appeared in Waterstone's Magazine and was later anthologized in the essay collection Both Flesh and Not, posited that Terminator 2: Judgment Day was the archetype or apotheosis of the Inverse Cost and Quality Law:
"'T2' is thus also the first and best instance of a paradoxical law that appears to hold true for the entire F/X Porn genre. It is called the Inverse Cost and Quality Law, and it states very simply that the larger a movie's budget is, the shittier that movie is going to be. The case of "T2" shows that much of the ICQL's force derives from simple financial logic. A film that would cost hundreds of millions of dollars to make is going to get financial backing if and only if its investors can be maximally -- _maximally_ -- sure that at the very least they will get their hundreds of millions of dollars back () -- i.e. a megabudget movie must not fail (and "failure" here means anything less than a runaway box-office hit) and must thus adhere to certain reliable formulae that have been shown by precedent to maximally ensure a runaway hit."


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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