'Stimulate the eyes, not the brain' is one of the best analogies describing movies these days. It's like Hollywood forgot they're making shows for humans, not juvenile cats with ADHD
I’m reminded of the ‘feelies’ from Brave New World. Advanced projection films that stimulate the brain to elicit sensations like smell, touch, taste, etc…but have zero real plot and are almost entirely contrite pornography. There’s no subject on the human condition, grief, loss, love, meaning, etc. Remove the sexual content and replace it with hip spectacle, and you’d be pretty close to what that experience is like, I’d imagine
there's a flip side to this: the higher the budget, the bigger the flop, and more accelerated is the decline of film companies trying to push THE MESSAGE. smaller budget and indie films might actually earn the spotight out of this mess, if they are genuinely inclined in simply telling a good story.
@@justsomeguywholovesberserk6375barbie earned that much money due to genius marketing and the unexpected barbenheimer phenomenon (or was it the plan all along?) either way, there's nothing about the movie itself that deserved that 1 billion box office success.
Fun Fact: the “using coconuts to make a galloping sound” bit from Monty Python was created because the filmmakers didn’t have the budget for horses. Creative restrictions give birth to creativity.
It’s kinda funny how movies shot on Film are literally cheaper yet better even tho it’s FILM which realistically should be the more expensive way to record stuff. Yet the digitally recorded ones are uber expensive and getting crappier, while being advertised as being the cheaper more "efficient." Alternative. Seems to be a common trend actually amongst digital media were it just is kinda a down grade quality wise than it’s apparently more expensive predecessor, while being advertised as this thing that creates a *quantity* of "good content." Film is a finite thing, You’re less likely to waste time and money with it than you do with digital. Hey maybe digital media promotes worse entertainment because digital media is the pinnacle of consumerism and not great at ensuring quality or creativity especially from Artists 🤷🏻♂️ In other words, when you didnt have a limitless amount of content on a small device you probably, were more likely to think outside the box as an creative person than you were having access to limitless amount of content. Essentially with digital media you’ve essentially removed most filters of bad entertainment. But hey i guess im just a 17 year old "regressive." boomer I mean surely it’s just a coincidence that quantity of digital content downgraded quality of Movies, TV, Music. It’s almost like trying to find a gold coin is almost impossible if it is submerged in a ocean of absolute Shit. Especially with Music on the Internet. Like dude, trying to find an actually great Artist who’s on the same level as bands like Van Halen, Metallica or Black Sabbath, OR Artists like MJ, Madonna, Brittney Spears, Dr.Dre is pretty difficult when they all are overshadowed by a Sea of Mediocre Artists who all make music with a laptop in their room. It’s almost like we make being an Artist too easy right???
@@LordBackuro Why are Blockbusters so bad now... is litrally a videotitle thx to Cody Johnston 0h and his Worker-Video and Striek-Video may also be of relevance
Oppenheimer cost 100M to make. Rated R, 3 Hour biopic, dialogue driven, and already half a billion (and still yet to be released in some markets). Audiences and critics sang it's praises. What an achievement.
Nolan is pound for pound the most successful director of his time if you think about it. Every one of his films have been both commercial and critical successes, and he's consistently topped both those areas for a decade straight with no signs of slowing down
@@krypticunlimited6925 i don't like his work ^^ his movies are too "scholar" to me. Not enough personality and it's very obvious through his characters who don't have any of it, they have a goal, a purpose and thats it. I don't really get all the fame around him
Braveheart - $53 Million Fellowship of the Ring - $93 Million The Two Towers - $94 Million Return of the King - $94 Million Dial of Destiny - $294.7 Million Solo: A Star Wars Story - $275 Million Rise of Skywalker - $416 Million Makes you wonder....
If you look at the history of Hollywood, the situation today is very much like the one in the mid-1960s. Studios were churning out big-budget musicals and Technicolor epics, but they became more and more unrealistic and less and less profitable. Then everything broke down and the early 1970s brought a new golden age with gritty, realistic, diverse stories and films, with young filmmakers getting the means to make many classic movies we still love and enjoy today.
Years ago while deployed with the military, I sat down to watch an old movie "Guns of Navarone", made before I was born. I was 37 at the time and the guys with me were in their early 20s. Though they laughed at the scene near the end that was a ship model in a bathtub, they all loved the movie. This was around 2005 and they had already gotten used to seeing movies with the big budget and special effects, but had gotten away from quality products. The rest of the deployment was me sitting down in the morning and repeating the process. They love them all! It doesn't take a big budget to make a great movie, just looking at Mario Brothers and Indiana Jones will prove that.
@@jrt2792 You're right there. Harrison Ford is one of my favorite actors, but I didn't want to see an 80 year old man run around. Clint Eastwood was a great action star, but he knew better than to do an action role in his 80s.
One of the biggest sources of inspiration an artist has at their disposal, which I think often goes unnoticed, is that having severe restrictions actually helps the creative process. Limiting how much of the medium or funding you have at your disposal and you're then forced to innovate in often surprisingly creative ways.
Yep. Lucas did original Star Wars with his hands tied behind his back and a bunch of help from people that just wanted to be part of something different.
This applies to basically everything, but a big shout out goes to Tim Follin, who is legendary in the retro gaming community for making some of the greatest NES and SNES soundtracks of all time, even if the games they belonged to weren't as good. Just look up Pictionary, Silver Surfer NES, or Plok, and you'll know what I mean. Total unrestricted creativity falls into the problem of infinite paths: you'll end up going down the most common route
Back to the Future was originally set to have an ending in the desert like the start of Indy 4 with the fridge. To save money, the knowledge of a famous lightning strike taking place in the town, to power the Delorean time circuits.
I’ve worked on film sets and I can tell you they just throw money around. It seemed evident to me that there is little to know accounting for all the money changing hands, so how many people were taking advantage? The rate at which these budgets are skyrocketing suggests to me that some people found a way to take advantage big time! I’m talking millions at a time. This is why Kathleen Kennedy staffing so many productions with “her people” is so suspicious and seems to coincide with ballooning of budgets and seemingly getting so much less for so much more money.
Agree entirely, The money isn't going on the screen, therefore I suspect it is going into someone's pocket. I bet if you 'follow the money' you'll discover the money goes to a third party firm, and then vanishes, only to re-appear as a new car/yacht/house for someone closely involved int he production. What else could possibly explain the Rings of Power?
If your goal is to siphon off money for corruption wouldn't people like Kathleen actually be working hard to ensure these movies are well received by EVERYONE to keep the cash flow going and avoid questions? It seems like she has only ever cared for half of the population or even less. So if the goal was to siphon money from Disney this whole time then she really does just absolutely suck at her job. A Russian prostitute would of done better in this position.
As a guy that works in finance, it’s pretty odd to me that instead of “diversifying their portfolio” with medium budget films that appeal to different audiences; Hollywood would rather take on huge risk by putting all of their eggs into one basket with a stupidly expensive blockbuster film that may or may not flop.
Yup. It's because your focused on profits and those making the top level decisions over there simply are not. It sounds insane (and it is) but that is clearly the reality over there. Logically, a solid selection of low budget, medium budget, and a few high budget 'sure thing' productions would be what one could expect. The low budget films let newer staff cut their teeth and if they prove talented, you move them up. They can test ideas your not sure on with low losses when most of them fail, and you can potentially refine them to try again. The mid budget works would be more focused on smaller target audiences, bringing in notable cash at minimal expenses and risk. Those few big productions could then rely on proven appeal to justify the expense. So to give an example: Of the thirty or so low budget films made in a year, one of them proves a smash hit. So the sequel gets pushed up to medium budget range. When that turns out to make bank and potentially lead into a new tent pole franchise, then either a remake of the first or a sequel/spinoff film is made as one of the big ones for that year. Anime makes so many light novel adaptations and manga adaptations _because_ they know the product (story/characters) has an audience. The proven track record then gets a single season or OVA. If that succeeds, then you do more. It's simply a superior business model to work with.
@@Sorain1i thought about this the other day and I thought it must have some flaw since they are doing it. Maybe the head managers want to be included in every film and it's very hard to focus on 3 movies at the same time. But they can get more managers
It used to work untill last year. Disney had what 10 billion movies and even DC were doing great at box office Wonder Women, Aquaman etc but their movies turned to shite and they became way too woke and it backfired
@@toshev1988 It's not just 'wokeness.' There are plenty of woke movies that are successful. The problem is bland, cookie-cutter films that everybody has seen before. Nobody wants to watch epic super hero movie number 5,705.
Something similar happened in the 70’s. Movies became too bloated and expensive, every director wanted to be an auteur like Kubrick, and studios lost all faith in them. So, in the 80’s they gave a bunch of unknowns a chance with low budgets, and that’s how you get awesomeness like the first two Terminator movies. Then James Cameron became what he was made to destroy, but that’s just the cycle of life.
As a lorry driver, I spoke to a driver who worked in the film industry. He said that whilst he was one of the lowest paid jobs on set, he still got a far better rate of pay than regular driving. I imagine that the salaries become exponentially ridiculous.
_"How much money do we need to make to break even?"_ _"At least a billion."_ _"And how much of our audience have we alienated?"_ _"No idea people won't respond to our polls anymore."_ _"I like those odds let's do it!"_
We leaked that we're turning this character black and this one transgender, all while denigrating this legacy hero. The responses on Twitter were very favourable. Clearly, this is what the people want.
This is what I liked in Netflix some years ago: they were making movies on low-ish budget. They had to compromise on visuals, hire less known actors, have an actual story to tell and, most importantly, use classic artistic creativity. Ten years ago, these direct-to-streaming sometimes felt more 'true' movies than what was in cinemas.
I forget what they made but I enjoyed some redbox originals as well. I miss syfy channel Saturday cheese movies not even sure they show them anymore because no cable.
Remember the 60's. We had giant blockbusters bombing, writers and actors striking, and all that jazz. And that lead to a decade of "New Hollywood", where creative young directors, made cheaper, yet good movies. And once blockbusters were ready to return with Jaws and Star wars, we got a few decades of solid blockbusters. Let's hope this happens again.
this is why the drinker is approaching 2M subscribers. He actually thinks about what he wants to say and then-shockingly!-crafts how he wants to say it. Clearly there is still an audience out there game for cogent, well-reasoned thought.
My Big Fat Greek Wedding had a budget of $5 million. It had basically no advertising. It grossed $370 million. Why? It was funny, uplifting, relatable, and in the right place at the right time. Indiana Jokes and the Dial of Dysentery had a budget of $300 million (not counting advertising). It has grossed $370 million. Why? It's depressing.
It’s probably why Puss in Boots: The Last Wish is so liked. It has great writing, treats its audience with respect, isn’t afraid to go into serious topics and doesn’t crack any smart ass jokes while doing so. Like you asked in your review, where DID this movie come from and where can we get more?
Same for Top Gun Maverick. It just wanted to entertain with a simple but emotionally effective story and nothing else. Felt like such a breath of fresh air.
I was talking to a guy at work about movies and we realized every movie we've gone to see and actually liked in the last few years was put out by A24. Varying quality but tons of variety, lots to dig into, lots to think about, lots to just enjoy and appreciate. It's hard to know what to expect but almost always worth the try with those flicks. They are definitely at least trying to break the modern mold.
@uzzivlogsu.v2697 Me too, I don't have high expectations for the movie but I'll still watch it and like it just for the concept and the kid who directs it, he made something really good out of nothing and his talents are praised rightfully.
I worked on the first movie that had a budget over $100 million, "Disclosure." It blows my mind how fast we've not only doubled that number, but TRIPLED it. We were complaining back then that Hollywood had no new ideas. That problem has only become worse in intervening years.
Hollywood has tons of ideas. "No new ideas" is absolutely false. You just don't see those ideas realized on screen because of the corporate studios, and their aversion to risk-taking. Reboots and sequels have been financially profitable in the past, so their idea is to take advantage of the pre-built fanbase these IPs have. Also, if you look at financial trends, the audience also doesn't have a good track record when it comes to supporting films outside of reboots and sequels.
My first year of college was 2009 and there were two outstanding movies I saw with my buddies. I am of course referring to District 9 and Zombieland. The combined budget of those two movies was $54 million and their total box office was $313 million . You could make six Zombieland/District 9 double features for the cost of one Indiana Jones and the Snooty British Woman Who Won't Stop Yapping. It's not rocket science guys.
@@MASTEROFEVILummm, what's your point? Indie stands for independent, and that can mean pretty much anything. The fact that that it wasn't a huge studio production qualifies it as an "indie" film, but it was produced by Peter Jackson and had a professional VFX studio behind it.... The original comment basically says District 9 was a good film made on a tight budget. Did you think you were saying something different? 😂
"12 Angry Men" (1957) would cost $3.7M today, and it's a better movie than anything in the last few years. The acting, script, direction, and cinematography are all perfect, and that's where all the expense is, with not even more than one set or costume changes to eat the money. The film was intentionally minimalist, and it's beautiful because of it. An important part of art is how the artist limits themselves. Modern unlimited budgets can't produce better.
The recent movie Nefarious was like that. It was completely filmed at one location, small budget and 90 percent of it was shot in one room with two actors. It was one of the most powerful movies I've seen in decades.
My gosh. Having served on a jury before, I thought this movie would bore the everloving snot out of me. But I once took the opportunity to watch it and _I regret nothing._ Never disappointed for a moment. A film so charged and full of character and life, where stakes that might seem so mundane come into glaring focus and reality. Great movie. Big recommend.
I recently read Carrie Fisher's memoir about making the first star wars movie and it was incredible to hear about all the creative ideas that were put into what they thought was going to be this tiny film with a bunch of no name actors. I blame the rise of CGI for a lot of it, if you look at early Marvel movies like Captain America or Iron Man- while they did use special effects most of the movie didn't, they weren't all standing around a green screen with a green suit on. It was focused more on the story and the characters. Brb, I now have to go watch Pirates of the Caribbean, The Fugitive, and Mrs Doubtfire Edit: spelling mistake
Definitely. CGI was used only to display what couldn't be done with practical effects. Even Cap's shield in the First Avenger was 90% practical, only using CGI when it bounced off walls.
Pete Jackson is a good example of "the more CGI the better syndrome." One can see he relies more and more on CGI during the making of LotR from a little in Fellowship to quite a bit in Return to way too much in Hobbit.
I watched HEAT again over the weekend and all the way through it was striking how that could never be made now, the long pauses, the character development and a heart wrenching scene in the bath that served nothing other than building the struggle of a mans pain. The final scene of just two guys hiding amongst the loud sound of planes and landing lights. Ended with a couple of gunshots and the main protagonists holding hands. No backflips, no gunfu, they didn’t even get the girl. Cinematic classic
In some ways HEAT feels like it was ripped straight from the headlines today. Like the scene where Al Pacino tells his wife the reason why he doesn't tell her about his day when she asks why is because he knows that she couldn't handle hearing about his day. Than he proceeds to prove his point by talking about how a mother put her baby in the microwave and cooked it because she was HAF on Meth and she was planning to eat her baby. But she passed out the baby still died because she cooked it in the microwave. His wife than proceeds to cry and BARF. I know that HEAT was released in 1995. But that SHIT is just as relevant now as it was than.
Another thing that is not discussed in this video, is that these blockbusters are structured in a way, so that you can easily take out parts or add something later with several rounds of reshooting. These reshoots are now just standard practise and not just to save a film in trouble. This affects the way the story is written. There is no intricate plotline with themes, characters arcs or setups to get a payoff later. A lot of the times the plot is the following: The characters need to get from A to B, then B to C, then C to D and finally D to E, roll credits. This makes some movies like Rise of Skywalker feel like 3 hours of those boring video game fetch quests, but it is great for the studio, because they can easily take out parts and insert new ones. Add a scene to apease the LGPT+ community in America - no problem Delete the same scene for screenings in other countries - no problem Add a scene in which Chinese people saves the day for the important Chinese market - no problem Remove entire sequence that didn't test well and replace with a new one - no problem The stories does not feel like a complete story, but rather a sequence of events that happens
And how many times have you heard about filming beginning before the script was finished? They want these big elaborate expensive sequences and then try to scrape together some kind of plot to justify it. That puts actors in a position where they can't give genuine performances and where writers are hamstrung by the fact the climactic points of the film are already set in stone. There's no actual storytelling going on so obviously the writing is going to be awful.
This still kind of goes back into the cost issue. They're structure that way so that they can have the maximum appeal to lots of demographics. That's kind of what you have to do when the movie costs 300 million dollars to make. But that stuff is like network TV. Sure it's palatable, but it's never really what you want. If you think about it, what's the last show on network TV people really loved? Maybe something in the late 90s or early 200s? For the last 15 years, the shows people loved have been on cable or streaming. Where they can take more risks and cater to a smaller niche. The movie industry is the prime example of what happens when you try to be all things to all people.
I just recently re-watched Lilo and Sitch. While it may not be a cinematic masterpiece, it was overall a very enjoyable lighthearted movie. I kept thinking while watching "why doesn't Disney make fun movies anymore?"
I recently watched Enchanted again and it felt like sunbathing with a beer in hand. The writing is also quite creative, the special way of mixing traits from different realms. That movie reminded me why I love MLPFiM so much. Uncynical work of love with a cheerful base theme. - Feelgood movies seem underappreciated recently, dunno. Everybody gets obsessed with survival themes.
@@blisterbill8477 Ideology is neutral. The word is referring to ideals, which are high states of being to aspire to, so it has value. You could say that Greek philosophers were idealists. The antithesis is pragmatists, which are perfectly happy only using what is already there and considered useful, thereby affirming the status quo that the takers are exploiting in a way that makes things worse.
This has been on the top of my tongue forever when I try and think of whats wrong with movies. You just described it perfectly, they have just became too expensive! When things cost that much, less risks are taken, more sequels, more studios interfering with directors visions ruining movies… omg you hit the nail on the head!
Something thats also hurt the industry is the death of the Blockbuster movie star like Arnold and Stallone. Nobody gives AF about movies involving Tom Holland, Simu Liu, Daisy Ridley unless they're playing the characters from Star Wars/MCU. Tom Cruise is the only guy who studios can bank on to get people into theaters with just his name attached to the movie and he's 60. Hollywood is unable to create stars like they used to.
All the more reason to go with more cheaper movies. If you no longer have big name actors that can draw a huge audience, you just make a bit of everything instead
I don't think that is true, there are couple people from the younger-than-Tom generations, who are superstar material. They are either curbed by overbearing PR pressure; pushed aside by the industry; or simply couldn't care more about being some gigacelebrity (Hemsworth comes to mind). Another problem also is, that GenZ isn't simply that interested in movies anymore. They either still fawn over music stars (Harry Styles or Taylor Swift like), or moved now to celebrate internet personalities in their smaller Twitch / RUclips / TikTok / whatever comes next bubbles. Hollywood is only partially to blame
Agreed Take Chris Evans for instance. He can make money as Captain America, and his social media posts can earn hundreds of thousands of likes. But outside of Cap, he's not a big star, and he can't help but run his mouth about politics, a common problem with so many other stars these days.
Who would the crazy kids look up to? Media is all over the place. There are no music superstars. It's all slivers of a small segment. Kids can't even listen to radio, cause "everything" sucks.
I think another problem worth mentioning is how these big-budget issues create environments of distrust and constant conflict, which result in movies struggling to maintain consistency, ESPECIALLY across sequels. When every single movie project is a massive basket with 300 million dollars worth of eggs in it, people aren’t concerned about working together to form a fully functional, coherent movie/chain of movies, they’re concerned about hitting their “checkboxes” to avoid getting ass-blasted if the movie completely bombs. The studio bigwigs, directors AND writers are just trying to check their own personal checkboxes to avoid retaliation if (and usually when) caca hits the fan, because whoever doesn’t check enough of their boxes is primed to be the scapegoat in the fallout. I feel like that’s why movies today have these weird writing issues where political correctness or rehashing overshadows decent character writing or decent plot. It’s not about working together to make a movie, it’s about working on YOUR PART of a movie whilst simultaneously covering yourself so that no one can point a finger at you in the case of a failure.
This is why is well known that movies as an industry won't age well especially when you know it's not about the art itself but rather than corporate mishmash to fill up a political quota.
CGI and Producer indecisiveness are hand-in-hand problems that exacerbate the problems we're seeing. The behind the scenes stills of Secret Invasion (which had a reported budget of $212M) are basically the actors sitting against greenscreen backdrops holding greenscreen props, because Marvel wanted total creative control about what's in a scene, what a gun looks like, whether a character holds a gun at all, and more chopping and changing. It's expensive, puts strain on the animators, makes the animation look terrible because you have to make changes but can't start from scratch, and the actors can't creatively engage because there's no set to bounce off. It's like how studios opt for CGI blood even though squibs look way better, studios will have blood/no blood depending on what market they're releasing into. The best films are ones where there's either a singular or collaborative creative vision, backed by the studio, using practical effects where the story is clearly defined and reshoots are minimal.
I'd like to think that Hollywood is about to be the last victim of streaming content. Because, regardless of how the product was delivered, Hollywood was always a constant. They have centralized the entire process, which ranges from movie sets and props, all the way to actors, directors, producers, as well as everything in between. They have contracts with the writers and FILM Actors Guild, as well as grips, and construction companies. I think the whole process has been tainted and film-makers are starting to look for alternative ways to create content. Even a great movie concept can't survive a writers room and casting office that is based on DEI mandates. We may have to deal a short-term drought in content, but I really hope that some of the more talented writers and actors focus on doing some small to mid-size Indie films. Good Stories, with limited special effects and absolutely no pandering or virtue signaling bullsh1t. But, this may just be a naive fantasy of mine.
Disney: “We promise we’re making lots of money on these films!” Me selling my house to myself every month: “Honey, I’ve started making $150,000 extra every month!”
This entire video essay actually applies so well to the video game industry as of late. Too much focus on innovating graphics, technology, accessibility, diversity/inclusion, etc. and making what are essentially just interactive movies instead of actually making compelling games with a focus on gameplay.
I feel like with even the best of games, you kinda sacrifice for one for another. Even when the industry was at its prime, it was rare to have both a good game and good story with both elements balancing out. I think most new games are way too safe and barely try anything new.
Sadly, you are wrong, but the sentiment is still correct. If you look at the most expensive AAA games of today, they are made with hundreds of millions of dollars, the problem is that hundreds of millions actually goes to predatory marketing, because the psychologists working for these corporate shills found out that shoving a game down your throat in the form of ads and having sheer probability over billions of people doing the work for you and hooking a few, not many, just a few hundred whales who will not be able to resist and then buy all of their skins and stuff makes so much more money than the average customer buying and praising an actually good game, that for them it's basically laughable if someone invests a good amunt of creative passion into a project ( look at the baldur's gate 3 drama, if you know, you know ). What happens next is of course a budget wise restricted studio with a marketing 20, 30, 40, 50 times the size of the actual project, and THEN they demand that from the little resources they have left, just from a couple million dollars, make a next gen visually appealing game and innovate on graphics, and then there is no money left to make good games. As odd as it sounds, the game industry has the opposite problem from the same source. Games are too big, yet too underfunded at the same time. If you were giving more time and money for the developers they COULD deliver visually stunning awesome gameplay experiences without compromises and make the AAA standard what it should be, but that's simply not what happens. Instead we have a marketing budget that's worth hundreds of millions, and an overworked, time troubled, technically and visually forced, creatively limited, underfunded, underpaid studio, who are expected to make the game. Of course they won't deliver. They can't. No one can. If you want good games then give developers more time, then market less and fund development more. That's when you get good games.
Yeaaaa when they do that this channel fines tiny flaws and calls it woke....his 14yr old anime shut in fans send him money to do it again for the next film....these channels are making money
You should talk about how Marvel movies are bankrupting studios that do CGI. How companies are undercutting eachother to get the contracts for a Marvel movie and then after the movies changed 20 times and they have to keep redoing effects they've bankrupted their company.
I think it's also noteworthy that many iconic visuals and story elements in film were created specifically because there wasn't enough money for "plan A." A budget that accommodates virtually any cost removes a lot of the effort normally needed to bring creators' visions to the big screen. Creativity tends to flourish best when faced with some degree of limitation rather than infinite resources
This is the assessment of Lucas. When there was somebody to tell him, "No", he made great films. When he was one dude, and got whatever he wanted? He made crap. You need talented producers, and editors!, to refine his vision.
I think also the problem is that Hollywood had a twofold issue that became a begative feedback loop: 1. Bigger has to be better: every subsequent film must be bigger than the last. An audience won't voluntarily see a film that is subdued compared to what came before, so what comes next has to be bigger and flashier. 2. Streaming services ike Netflix and Amazon Prime were making crazy money, so they were happily throwing around huge sums spend on vanity projects and especially trying to poach star power away from Hollywood. Hollywood had to respond in kind by upping their expenditure. There is potentially light at the end of the tunnel. A lot of these decisions were driven by audience predicition models which don't seem to be matching reality. They were correct at first, but how can you predict audience apathy? Downward trends need to be understood, but an algorithm can't tell you until the trend actually begins, but by this point it's too late. Hopefully cool indie flicks will resirge in response.
Anything that relies on marketing, where they tell you "better taste", more "filling", by offering you less, with more chemicals, or other brainwashing is never going to be normal. The media's income is solely based on lying to its customers. After 30 years of this, you are so far offside, that this is what you get. No one normal in charge, with no brains to relate to normal folks.
Netflix & Amazon aren't making money on their shows, or movies. They make money through subs, like Airlines do through Rewards. Fact: Game of Thrones generated $0, while Fast & Furious generated $7 Billion.
One of the best movies I've seen in the last 15 years is Gran Torino. It starred and was directed by Clint Eastwood, AND THAT'S IT. I can't name another actor or actress, it wasn't a big budget flashy experience with explosions and super special effects. It was a movie that told a great story. The Mule, also by Clint was more of the same, and it was good(not as great as Gran Torino, but I'm a Michigander who's white dad grew up in Detroit and my Grandpa was designated too important to the war effort because he was an engineer to serve, so he quit his job and enlisted, so the whole Detroit back in the 40's and 50's and 60's thing till it went to shit really hits home for me). You don't need a huge budget to tell a good story, all you need is a good story and a director and cast willing to tell it. Good luck finding that in most modern big budget movies, because they want to make sure that they don't piss off certain groups, while at the same time not caring if they piss off others like straight(not cis, straight) white men.
Absolutely loved Gran Torino, and I'm with you on the rest of what you say too. I would add in Django Unchained, but then Tarantino always delivers, and although the budget is probably quite high for his stuff, they're not filled with unconvincing greenscreen. Look at Reservoir Dogs, it was mostly shot in a garage. It's all in the writing for sure!
@paulwilson6357 Tarantino is a hack. Every one of his movies follows a very tight, unwavering formula. Not to mention he's one of the biggest Hollywood asshole hypocrites, calling for the abolishing of gun rights while making his movies exclusively about huge gun fights and glorifying hyperviolence.
Ultimately, a film is supposed to be a work of art at a certain level. The current Hollywood approach of script writing by committee and screentesting every single thing is the biggest problem. They are going to have to learn how to let go of control and allow a talented filmmaker to have singular control over a project. They need to find the next Spielberg, Lucas, or Kubrik who is in his 20s and just empower them to make a film without interference. It is a stifling of artistic freedom combined with a corporate obsession with pushing "The Message" that is killing Hollywood.
What’s crazy is that so many movies keep getting bigger and bigger production budgets, but yet it seems like they look more artificial every year just because of the over reliance on CGI
*Poor quality CGI. If the mountains of CGI were of good quality we would be a lot more tolerant of it but with the increasingly rushed work done by inexperienced artists in 3rd world countries we the audience can not only tell but are distracted by bad quality of the visuals.
1) You'd be shocked to see how much of the movie is CGI. Even the shit you think they just went outside and filmed... Nope CG. 2) During 09-10 western CGI companies were collapsing left and right. They were all relocating to China and India chasing massive tax subsidies and actual profit since their business model is garbage... It was at the point, western Leads were training overseas employees to replace people. You might have noticed CGI in films seemed to have taken a step back during after this... That's partially why.
@@Hybris51129 Well most cgi artists are very experienced, but they gain way to little, set time to complete scenes which ultimately end up extremely rushed and the digital artists working massive overtime for little pay to finish the project.
It's interesting because the same thing happens in gaming. AAA titles are trash and indie games are the only thing worth spending money on these days. Great video as always!!
Capitalism is and always be a bad thing. AAA companies like Xbox, EA, Konami, Ubisoft, Bethesda, Activision-Blizzard, Square Enix and so on clearly forgot why they were so famous 10-15 years ago. For me, only 2 companies and 2 studios at other companies are left whom I still trust in the AAA sector: Sony, Capcom, From Software and Rockstar. That is all!!! The truth is I believe less and less that they still have that level of dedication, intention and creativity, which would allow them to make such a spectecular resurrection as the one we saw in Capcom's Case in the past 6 or 7 years.
I just need one word to prove You wrong: FromSoft. Yeah, MOST big budget productions are trash, but frankly so are most indie games. I would know, 90 % if my gaming purchases are indies. They're just cheaper and less hyped so it doesn't hurt as much when they end up being mediocre.
@@w12266 But indie gaming is planted in the same capitalist system, so it's morel ike a partial soft reboot. Now you got many small creative competitors engaging in a brutal elbowing game for marketing, complete with highly corrupt media.
@@w12266video games would not exist past tennis for 2 without capitalism dawg. Even the best indie games, assuming they ain’t free, are to make their designers a profit. It just so happens that at that level making a genuinely good product is the best way to make money.
@@w12266 I wouldn't write capitalism off. I'm no apologist; capitalism has definitely contributed to exploitation at the ground level, but I think the fact that these AAA companies have been allowed to peddle garbage for so long at ridiculous prices is almost the opposite of capitalism. Capitalism invites competition and innovation because it's measured on consumerism. These big game companies (and Hollywood for that matter) became complacent in thinking that they control the market, so they'll do what they want-- shitty movies, buggy games-- because you have no other alternatives. The indie market exists because brave souls decided to use their capital to create an alternative, and in turn a parallel market, and we as consumers buy into it as the better purchase to Hollywood's/the game companies' detriment. Capitalism can save these industries, but not the big ones anymore; they're too big and too distant from the consumer.
I’m rewatching the XFiles, half way through season two now, and the writing is so good. The characters are SO good (such strong, distinct personalities and quips). All those small, vulnerability-showing scenes between Mulder and Scully bring back every emotion. So much of this show is so simple (by today’s standards), and yet I feel more for the XFiles than I do any superhero film. Watching this show takes you back to this glorious time when two decent people built trust and respect and learnt to work together; it’s like a long, cool drink for the mind.
Clint Eastwood liked Don Siegel's work on Invasion of the Body Snatchers because Siegel shot a great movie on a low budget. So Eastwood began an association with him. Eastwood was not a fan of blowing a lot of money to shoot a movie.
My points exactly. Speaking of another Gillian Anderson adjacent movie, I watched House of Mirth instead of The Flash and Blue Beetle and that movie genuinely broke my heart because I cared about Lily Bart and her struggles. Going back to X-Files, I felt so bad for Scully in the "Irresistible" episode. He father died the previous year and she almost died after being kidnapped by a mad man (this applies to both Duane Barry and Donnie Pfaster) and being experimented on by aliens. She's dealing with a lot of PTSD, and yet she powers through it like a badass.
I like the Jason Blum model: low budgets, big back-end participation. He says this combo incentivizes the creation of better movies, because there's less studio interference (they don't care as much about the movie because the budget is low) and because the talent is motivated to make a great movie because their compensation depends on the box office.
@@josephmayfield945 Yeah, it only occasionally works but hey at the end of it, we can still have a good laugh at all the bad movies put out by Blumhouse too.
I have so much respect for the Back To The Future crew not greenlighting a cash - grab movie. I think with the quality of home entertainment systems and streaming services there must be a massive pressure to produce a big-screen experience. Low budget risky movies are done (well) on streaming services. The Fugitive The Firm Mrs Doubtfire and Sleepless in Seattle would all probably be made by streaming services today.
A present day Back to the Future would send Marty McFly back to 1993. And frankly if I wanted to see a movie about high school in the mid 90s, I'd just watch Clueless which managed to be racially diverse, anti-wealthy, and extremely feminist while also being, you know, good.
I think Sounds of Freedom proves your point. No super effects, so shaking cameras and edgy cameral angles, just a straight shot movie, and because of that it had to survive on a good plot. I liked that I could actually see what was going on in the fight scenes that were taken at - one angle.
You can certainly have an expensive movie, but it needs to be grounded in characters we can care about and identify with. Look at T2. Back in '91, its budget was near $100 million (well over $200 million in 2023 dollars). The special effects were cutting-edge for its time, but the movie had heart in developing and exploring the relationships of John and Sarah Connor, along with Schwarzenegger's terminator character. Those elements put together made T2 one of the greatest box office action films ever made. This seems to be lost on Hollywood nowadays.
I would genuinely be on board for a Drinker "recommends" one hour special of low budget high success film study. Start somewhere in the 1960s and bring us to modern day with 40-50 films with low budgets but high value and great entertainment. MadMax, Rocky, Pulp fiction, The Terminator, Taxi, American graffiti, Monty Python, Eastwood westerns.... this list could on . All made 10x their budgets and are still seen today as great productions.
Yeah. would be happy to see him get into titles that aren't mainstream or have massive marketing behind it. Unfortunately, hate watching/reviewing is the real money maker. Saw a channel that got a huge spike of viewers when High Guardian Spice was the hot shit, then just died out when they started doing something more positive.
@@ItsJustTeddington I'm not sure he really knows much about movies outside of mainstream movies. Like the stuff he upholds as the greatest movies ever made are just blockbusters from his childhood for the most part. I'd be glad to be proven wrong on this, but it seems like he knows very little about "the canon" of great cinema.
We need more original, and thought provoking films again. Soft reboots, and pointless sequels, and superhero franchises ran their course, but it's safe to say that the time has come to move on from them and get back to stand alone movies that stick with you. "Thelma and Louise", and "The breakfast club" are prime examples of timeless IPS on a tight budget that stick with you decades after their releases. Hopefully soon, we can get back to those days. Great video drinker. 🎉
*Thelma and Louise* would be improved if the car they drove off the cliff was Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Either way, that movie was when the second wave of feminism degenerated into the third wave. That’s when we really started to see the shit hit the fan. I’m just glad my age was almost in double digits by that point so I could have a few good years of childhood under my belt before boys and men became public enemy number one.
It's an escalating energy vampirism reaching its end of possible growth. That's when the stripmining phase begins, with massively diminishing returns and eventual gridlock.
There was a little clip there of Akira Kurosawa's Ran. I was reading recently that its budget was $20million dollars (mostly raised by Spielberg and Lucas). Adjusted for inflation, thats around $60million. This, for a huge epic that featured huge samurai armies slaughtering each other on the side of a volcano, and an entire replica castle which was burnt down just to provide a cool framing shot and zero CGI, everything was built from scratch. And it still cost around one fifth of the latest Indiana Jones. There is something very broken about the industry.
You used to be able to see where the money was going on the screen. Not anymore. Everything is the same computerized crap. There is no more magic to it, no more wonder. No more sense of “how did they do it?“ Just “which software did they use and which button did they push?“ There is no artistry to any of this.
You’re leaving out A LOT of variables here. First, this movie was not filmed in the US, where you have strict health and safety regulations. On top of that, each state has varying fees for movie productions. Perhaps this isn’t the case where Ran was filmed. Perhaps the size of the film crew was small on this production. Perhaps the government gave the production a huge tax break for filming a movie promoting Japanese culture. The point is, you’re trying to compare apples and oranges and blaming one particular store because oranges don’t taste like apples
@@eyespy3001 yeah I was gonna say, its very hard to compare movie budgets across countries, and especially across countries. Like Jackie Chan's movie Police Story cost $2 million but there's no way you could've made anything like it for $2 million in the US in 1985. $2 million goes a lot further in a place like Hong Kong
@@artirony410 Precisely. I was actually going to use Hong Kong movie productions- specifically Jackie Chan’s run-and-gun style of filmmaking back in the day- as an example of different standards, but it would’ve made an already long response even longer. Thank you for adding it to the conversation.
One factor you didn't mention is streaming. There is no reason to spend 50$ on gas, parking tickets and popcorn to watch "Mrs. Doubtfire" or "The Firm" in the cinema when you can stream it 3 month later at home. So studios try to make big, expensive spectacles. Movies so massive, that you simply have to watch them on a big IMAX screen. Those movies then cost enormous ammounts of money .
There still IS a market for lower budget theatrical release movies and the industry "experts" don't or won't comprehend this. The "date night" movie is a good example. Going to some big loud spectacle does not make for a good movie experience on "date night", especially with married couples. These movies can be made on low budgets and have enough appeal to make real profits, especially when many of them can be made by the same company in a year.
Sure- Those movies exist. But why would couples go to the theaters for them? They can watch them at home on their couch. The term "Netflix & Chill" exists for a reason.
i have never had a streaming service i watch all my stuff on physical media because i dont want to leave it up to the streaming to edit and alter my entertainment
I actually don't really like that idea as much. I mean that's just me. I think theatres are a very iconic part of film and have rightful use with cinema.
Another thing to consider, the ballooning of budgets requires international audiences. That means scripts and dialogue need to be simple so that they aren’t lost in translation.
hmm, if that would be truth anime wouldn't be popular, and nobody would have interest in subtitled movies over dubbed with regional voice actors. If anything watching other cultures, including from my corner, U.S. culture, is stimulating. Believe me, the Death Note adaptation by Netflix, made simpler, is taken as a writing made by simpletons, to simpletons, instead of the story narrated in the manga. I guess movies like Master and Commander wouldn't exist either with this approach to be "open" to the world.
I think the bigger problem would be, that you start to have to take into account the politics of all the other big markets. Like, say, not doing anything that the censors in china finds to offensive to them.
@@ReinoldFZgranted anime is popular but rarely does an anime movie get a wide theatrical release in the us it’s usually just select theaters so although it’s popular it’s kinda niche too
@@ReinoldFZ I agree this is the reality for anime consumers. The problem is American studios BELIEVE others can't understand our culture. They also don't want to cut out things that get censored elsewhere. The difference between theses two industries is that Japan is making stuff for Japanese people but it happens to appeal to international audiences, whereas Americans are making movies to please a strawman "international" movie goer. They seem to think movies need to represent America instead of just entertaining Americans.
There can be a lot of reasons why Hollywood has been failing: - The general lack of new original content. - Relying on past IPs or rewriting them, which can promote lazy writing and degraded content. - There are a plethora of movies more than ever, forcing companies to rely more and more on advertising to pass a product. - Pushing agendas more importantly than telling a story (Not every movie, obviously). - Criticizing the audience when the shows fail or do poorly, which is an absolutely dumb move in trying to sell future products. - Less and fewer people to watch movies, forcing companies to rely even more on trying to promote their product.
Lack of talent from top to bottom. From producers all the way down to writers. In the case of the recent Star Wars movies how unlikable was the main actress? The one person that absolutely had to win the audience over stunk. Take away Robin Williams salary, how much do you think a movie like Dead Poets Society cost to make? Dirt cheap I imagine and better than anything Hollywood is currently able to make. How much do you think Good Will Hunting cost, Shawshank Redemption, etc? these are movies with good writing and good acting, not wiz bang boom. With big budgets you get no story, stifled dialogue, and mostly lots of wiz bang boom. Mostly the script writers in Hollywood today are just awful, they're currently striking, but they should be replaced. You know when Game of Thrones went downhill? you guessed it its when the show got ahead of George R Martin, the Hollywood writers screwed it up. The most horrific recent script writer was Patty Jenkins for Wonder Woman 1984.
Nepotism as well. When you hire someone based on their name or family rather than talents, you get someone lazy who doesn't know how to effectively tell stories. They're also set on telling their own story because it's all about them.
Wow! You must have been working on this one pretty long to get all those clips together. You covered nearly every big movie in the last 50 years. Well done Mate!
Halfway through the video, I stopped listening and started pondering this question. How did he do that? Did you go into each of those movies and cut it out and splice it together? Or is there some AI generation engine that can do this? Because if this was all done by hand, then his editor deserves a big fat raise.
One thing I didn't hear you specifically call out, but really adds to the main point being made here is that until streaming services have completely taken over the landscape, movies used to make a lot of money back with VHS/DVD sales. It would be that even if the movie doesn't do well during it's theater release, it still had the chance to turn a decent profit when it was released on VHS/DVD/Blue Ray. But this is no longer a thing and as mentioned, Hollywood studios just aren't taking any chances on anything.
Is this true though? They still get those streaming fees and save all production costs. And they still have all the merchandise rights which can be true game-changer for kids-friendly franchises. Do you think the studios would've gone all streaming when it wasn't profitable?
I could see big studio producers jumping ship when things get worse and moving to A24, and they'd most likely try to clamp down on them like the other studios they ruined.
They need to go back to practical effects. They need to do 50% practical and 50 % CGI. Fire a lot of actors _and_ writers. Get rid of The Message, and stop erasing European history and stories! Aw Hell, get rid of the entirety of Hollywood. We’ll be better off. Great critique as always Drinker! 👍
The early 2000s was a good time for effects, even if a lot of movies at the time didn't have great CGI. There was plenty of practical effects still being used, while CGI was used to compliment them or for things that practical effects couldn't really pull off. We need to go back to that approach.
Hollywood is slowly eating itself, media is being democratized by the internet, why exactly do these people all stay in Los Angeles? There is no reason to stay there anymore. You can do so much remotely, and there are plenty of places that are more romanitc and interesting for creative people.
It's not an accident, it's called gatekeeping. Price out genuine talent and/or dissenting opinions, monopolize on propaganda. Same thing has happened with video games
The mainstream videogame scene is even worse than mainstream TV over the past few years, I dare say. Once upon a time videogames were essentially the one media outlet, the one sanctuary, largely untouched/unsubverted by progressive cartel that dominates just about every other industry today. Then BioWare happened, dialogue-intensive roleplaying games with a focus on romance became the next frontier, and now it's all but required for every game to have LGBTLMNOP++++ 'romance' options. Even in AC:Valhalla they made half the vikings homosexual, which is absurd given it was a capital crime in viking society.
To add onto the above, it's hard to miss how upset people get if every society in every video game isn't this perfect mix of global representation. People got upset at Final Fantasy XVI because the predominantly western European inspired world of swords, sorcery, and kingdoms wasn't a bastion of representation. It's getting exhausting to engage with AAA gaming because either the developers put revisionist history nonsense into their games to try to be as non-controversial as possible, or they don't cater to that crowd and get crucified for having a game vision and bringing it to life without compromise.
@@vladivanov5500AC went woke since Unity. Stop playing their games since. Anime is the only entertainment that's safe that's because The people in power (which by that I mean the Dems/lefts) have no power over what Japan does. That's why the left been going after Anime and Manga for years but can't really touch them. Sure their been a few force stuff. Like MHA had a T person in it. But they were quickly killed off because people in Japan know that crap don't sell. They only put it in the show to please the lefts.
@@Necrofitz Preach. Indie games or older games are virtually the only avenues for good ass shit without worrying about problems. Sometimes, even if they have problems, they’re still better because they’re still fundamentally good games. You’re also not having to spend $60+ for over 100 gb’s of game
Yep, monopolies develop due to the driving force of capitalism pushing for competitive self-interest, profit maximization and infinite growth - and they we wonder why we don't have as many nice Mom and Pop shops in town, or unique indie films or video games or music being offered to us? Corporate capture is late stage capitalism and that's where we will be until we start creating a better system. WE can do that, but only if we recognize the root problem and start taking steps, using a shared strategy to make it better. One Small Town is trying, other groups like it are developing something. We can all at least share good thought-provoking media and connect that way.
I am convinced this era of film making (if you can even call most of this drab shite "film") is the equivilant to the music industry's "loudness war" era. Spectacle and bombastic face-slapping in place of anything with artistic merit. It will pass, but not without leaving a terrible stain on cinematic history.
Well said, and the watering down of creativity for ever more predicability is comparable too. Music gets less and less creative, involves more and more producers, costs more and more money....risk and creativity is out the window and things get generic to the point of everything being basically the same thing wearing a slightly different hat.
Or the early Tarantino movies or anything by Kevin Smith. God, Kevin Smith's career started when he maxed out his credit card to make a black and white art house film. Or really, any of the franchises that they are killing into the ground -- Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Star Trek, Terminator and many others started out as fairly low budget endeavors. Or best example of all, Mad Max, budget of beer and pocket lint, made 100 million in 1979. All on good story.
Horror movies are still pretty good with this. They're more niche than your typical blockbuster but it doesn't matter because they're financially viable.
@@supermax64 Exactly. Smile had a budget of "just" 17 million USD, had relatively few characters which I only really just considered now because I was invested in the characters and the story. It made $217 million back. Hollywood could make 15 movies at those budgets and get more back overall instead of chancing it on a single 300 million USD "bet".
Yesterday I watched "The Straight Story". An older film and arguably it wasn't expensive at all to make. No fancy special effects or anything. But damn it was so good. The visual storytelling and the overall tone and mood of the film struck a chord within me.
This is a problem my partner and I were complaining about after watching the original Aladdin, the Aladdin remake, and Lilo and Stich baick-to-back. These three films revealed a bit of a paradox. You would think that having a bigger budget would mean that the film would be able to do more large-scale things, but it actually means the opposite. For example, compare the original Aladdin's climax to the remake's climax. The original featured a sinister looking Genie ripping the palace out of its foundations and placing it on a large secluded hill while Aladdin is flying around desperately to get him to stop, Jafar using magic in a variety of fiendishly evil ways to try and slow the protagonists down, and it all culminates in the iconic cobra fight. The remake meanwhile just has a boring CGI chase with a giant Iago. The fun scenes we see in the original could not happen because it would be too expensive to make those scenes look good. Hell, they couldn't even make the boring alternatives look good. Then we both watched Lilo and Stitch. And the only thought we had looking at all the amazing alien designs, beautiful watercolor backgrounds, and that fun chase scene at the end with Stitch driving an 18-wheeler into a volcano, was "How the fuck does Disney think they can do any of this justice using CGI?!"
A lot of people in Hollywood have made complaints about the disappearance of low budget movies that were often produced in the 1970's to the early 2000's. Those were the years where studios could give to newbies the opportunity to show their talents without spending too much money on marketing for instance. All the greatest directors like Spielberg, Scorsese and so on had their chances in Hollywood because of this kind of production. If it failed it was no big deal but if it worked even a little it was a bonus for the studio and a great step for the young director. Even for writers too. You could have unknown writers getting known. There was always a risk but it was part of the success of Hollywood for years. To dare bringing new talents that can express themselves freely. That's the whole point of arts. The producers has the knowledge of the industry and funds while the director has the skills and the creativity. Now it's so expensive that they can't even take the risk of making arts. Producers make the movie from A to Z by making sure they won't lose any dollar or at least the less possible. Therefore it's at best mid and a little entertaining, at worst dull and ugly. There are no legend no more. Nothing is classic and thought to last for years.
When I used to be involved in projects at a major media company I noticed that the more budget you had the less free you where to do what you want. Once you have budget you have a committee of people second guessing every decision.
I’m actually pretty depressed about this. My young children will never have the same experience from contemporary movies that I had as a teenager working in the local movie theater back in the day. From Jurassic Park to Forrest Gump, from Independence Day to The Green Mile, from Armageddon to Schindler’s List, from Braveheart to Gladiator, and you name it - we had it all. I’m reliving it all right now and they’re watching along. But they’ll never experience this level of quality in their own lifetime. Hollywood destroyed it all.
I feel like 1990's and early 2000's were the last Golden Age of movies. All movies you listed are still on my watchlist, I rewatch theam often and they never ever get boring. Meanwhile, I can't remember the last contemporary movie I felt like watching again
@@kria9119that's actually a great question what is the most recent movie that you actually want to watch more then once. Most of mine are from the late 70s to the early 80s.
I mean, this seems to be a pretty blackpilled mindset. Aside from the fact that no one said that level of quality can't return, they'll probably just grow up with their own movies to relive.
Your comments on scope and stakes in modern movies gelled with a half-formed thought that's been kicking around in the back of my mind for a while. I just recently watched the original Blade Runner for the first time on Max (yea I know, I'm _very_ late to that party...) and I was shocked that such a beloved and talked about movie had such a small scope and limited plot. I'm definitely not saying that's at all a bad thing, just the opposite as the small and limited scope of the plot left plenty of room for character development and meaningful ideas to be explored fully. But for a movie that's praised for it's ground breaking visuals and narrative structure I was honestly expecting a story that was quite a bit bigger than what I got, mostly because of the glut of huge stakes, big budget blockbusters that have been all too common lately, and if I'm being completely honest, it was somewhat refreshing that Blade Runner was such a smaller, simpler story - no end of the world shenanigans, no society shattering conspiracies or hidden global agendas being uncovered, just a regular dude doing his job and working a single case just like hundreds of other cases he and his colleagues have worked before. And even with the (still to this day) impressive sets and visual effects shots, that movie only cost 30 million to make in 1982 dollars, which today would have been just a hair under 95 million, which is still a hefty chunk of change but less than a third of the shallow, empty eye candy blockbusters of today.
@@scottslotterbeck3796 For sure, they're still damn impressive today and the fact that they're backed up with well developed characters and a well written story is even better.
For similar reasons it's why I love Dredd with Karl Urban. He's not saving the city, it's just another day dealing with the worst of Mega city 1and tomorrow will be more of the same.
Another point that should be made on this topic is the reliance on overseas markets. Because these movies are increasingly more and more expensive, Hollywood needs to rely further and further on international markets to make up the difference. A side effect of this practice is that the stories being told need to be modified. A very specific story about Greenvile, NC with a complicated plot doesn't translate well, so the risk-averse decision-makers prefer to make Transformers instead.
Yep. You can see that with the relative disappearance of the sports movie, and the change in the nature of them too. The overseas market dosn't much buy movies about baseball or gridiron. But a soccer movie appeals more widely.
If a huge movie 'flops' at the BO, that can still be a win for the studio, depending on just how much engagement their property has received online. This seems to have been Disney's strategy over the past few years. Manufacture as much controversy as possible, spend as much money as possible, create the no.1 conversation piece in the world at any given moment. They don't seem to give a fuck about asses on seats in cinemas anymore. It's only now really starting to backfire on them. Hence why we've got content leaving Disney+ in order to cut losses. I predict 2024 onwards will see a shift in strategy. Either that or fall upon their own sword, and can you honestly imagine Disney doing that?? They shouldn't be happy carrying on as a hate figure.
Though I get why their debt's finally breaking their wallets, I don't get what positive effect that expensive box office flops did for their bottom line. Only gain I can see is staying in the ESG good graces so they didn't lose their credit lines.
No, Disney has toys, theme parks, ad revenue/streaming to fall back on. They could afford to flop, and when it was slowly happening, they thought nothing of it, but now they're flopping so hard, it's going to affect, one, if not all of their other sources of income.
Also, Netflix's drop in popularity propelled Disney+ to a new height, which boosted their ego even more, but then Netflix stabilized and Marvel phase 3 ended, and we all know what happened after that
My favorite rebuttal of ADHD-bait, bright-lights and big explosion fetish modern movies is simply The Empath. As in, Star Trek TOS S03E12 "The Empath." The writer of the episode, Joyce Muskat, was working at a local theater at the time, and wanted her story to be shot on a bare, surreal set, like a stage play that focused on the characters. And that's all you got! A bare stage with nothing but a black curtain backdrop for the entire episode! Oh and of course the actors, doing actual acting and engaging in interesting and compelling dialog! And the bare-bones premise works! The episode is gripping and memorable and holds your attention from start to finish. What could flashy special effects and a multi-million dollar budget possibly add? IMO take any modern movie and imagine it stripped down to nothing but a real life stage production. If you can imagine the story and acting as still compelling even as a stage-play, then it's probably a great movie where the special effects are just bonus. But if you can only imagine the stage play version with inane dialog, nonsense plot and terrible acting, then likely the movie itself is just bad regardless of its pretty effects.
"What could flashy special effects and a multi-million dollar budget possibly add?" Variety. If every movie and episode of a TV show was shot the same way, then even if the acting and writing could hold up, it would get bland and boring very fast; Going from a special artistic choice to pretentious and overused schlock.
@@OzixiThrill I think that question was both A. rhetorical and B. slightly hyberbolic, in order to prove a larger point. That being being that special effects are supposed to enhance the script, not replace it, and a good enough script might not even need big effects in the first place. Obviously you shouldn't actually make every product that way, but you should also try to imagine sometimes as a quick way to gauge how compelling the script actually is. I'd say that rather than a stage play, go even further: Imagine the book version of it. Or just literally reading the script. Or your friend saw the movie first and is talking about their favorite scene, explaining some of the stuff they love about it. Not even any actors, just a situation where you have to imagine everything yourself. Does it still feel like something that would make you go "I would love to see that (as a) movie!" or is it just... Bland and boring because the flashy effects were all there really was to it? If the script is strong enough to work even when the movie is stripped down to "just" a stage play or even a book, the special effects can elevate it to true greatness. But if the script is inane garbage, it's more than likely it's probably only used to hide how there's actually nothing there.
Not the entire episode, but most of it was for the Vian lab/torture chamber scenes. And the black background worked because the set pieces that were used for those scenes now stood out in sharp, harsh contrast, like Linke and Ozaba's tubes with their bodies twisted in their death agony in it or the torture chamber itself. It helped focus the audience on those things, and the actors, just like in a theatrical play. It also helped in keeping the budget down for the episode, since other than the science station set, there wasn't much new in terms of props. It was all action on the Enterprise (standing sets), the planet's surface (again, existing standing sets), and then minimal sets for the Vian lab and torture equipment.
Yup. Also, science fiction shows back then tended to be worked on by actual science-fiction writers and not by dude-bros who didn't care about the franchise.
It’s interesting how this contrasts with the market for horror films. We get a ton of variety in the horror genre, both in terms of quality and subject matter, because horror films demand a much lower budget and turn a profit much more reliably than other movies. I think this is because we have different expectations for horror movies than other genres that makes it easier to take risks as well.
A lot of horror movies work well in confined spaces, making many of them fall into the "bottle film" category. Smaller sets, fewer actors, and since it needs to be scary and realistic, theres a good reason to implement as many practical effects as possible. Horror can be expensive, but its clearly also flexible enough for low budget productions to thrive.
Well onown to; ndie filmmakers. Dramas are a tougher gig. Unless you have a bankable star, forget it! One neglected genre is soft-core porn, like 'Desert Heart' or the Emanuelle films. Beautiful scenery, wonderful locals, beautiful people, just titilatting enough. I guess raw, hardcore porn everywhere that leaves nothing to the imagination has ruined that Go check out those older masterpieces.
@@fritzthecat8158 I included quality in variety for a reason. The horror genre has higher highs, but also lower lows. I was also only comparing the current horror market to the current rest of the film market. Not current horror to past horror. Even then, Society and Basket case are certainly creative, but I wouldn’t call them good. There are better examples of 80’s horror. Imo current horror and 80s horror are too different to compare. There are tons of great movies from the 80s and tons from recent years. We don’t have to pick one or the other.
I watched it years ago in it's short run. Re-watching DVDs thru the public library. Still funny and acerbic in its mockery of Hollywood bullshit. I cut off cable 5 years ago, own a cache of classic well-written movies, and get the fewer recent good movies from my public library. People are suckers if they're still paying for cable and streaming....and still continually being pissed off at most of what Hollywood studios offer and being manipulated by rage-baiting... PLUS I still believe there's a lotta money laundering involved. I worked for a film distribution company in the 1980s, and the booking orders listed how Disney/Paramount/Fox got just 50% of the gross or whatever....when the studios brag about about "how much this movie made....", it's not mentioned about the theater's/distributors' cut.." Hollywood " is full of liars. It's all about "creative" bookkeeping....
One movie I saw recently which I loved as a kid but never saw as an adult was the mummy with Brendan Fraser, seeing that movie made me realize just how shit most movies have become, it was all action comedy and romance and didn’t have a single beat about politics or views, just a guy beating a mummy and getting the girl in the end and the story, practical effects and scenes still hold up, what the fu~k happened to movies nowadays
It also had a budget of $80 million. But while most of the CGI effects don't hold up well, the fact that most of the action and explosions were practical really does say something.
I was surprised that Oppenheimer was only at 100 million in its budget. It certainly used its budget well and it therefore was a hit even with another film making more money than it week to week.
Nolan knows what he is doing. He is one of the few directors who will get me to watch his work sight unseen. He does not always hit, but he is always original and competent.
Thanks for another insightful video, Drinker. Please keep them coming. For some reason, when you mentioned the tendency of studio bigwigs to meddle in (and ultimately diminish) the films they produce, I couldn’t help but remember the story about how studio execs INSISTED that the American version of Ridley Scott’s “Blade Runner” just HAD TO have a voiceover narration, despite the fact that both Scott and Harrison Ford were vehemently opposed to adding it - and most retrospective reviews maintain that the voiceover was basically a crap idea. On the other hand, when “Rocky” was released in 1976, the studio thought it was a big risk and that it possibly wouldn’t do very well at the box office. However they decided they were willing to risk making “Rocky” because they had another film called “New York, New York” that was coming out the same year, and that “NY, NY” would hopefully be successful enough to cover “Rocky”’s expected losses. Ironically, the exact opposite is what actually happened. “Rocky” ended up covering for “NY, NY,” which did poorly at the box office. As a final example, when George Lucas screened a preliminary cut of the original “Star Wars” for his colleagues and close friends back in 1976-77, they all thought it was bizarre. In fact, quite famously, Brian De Palma sarcastically asked Lucas the question, “Hey George, what’s a wookie?” and laughed. (To his credit, Steven Spielberg liked “SW,” though. But he was in the minority at the time.) With all these examples of studio execs being wrong about what works and what doesn’t, you’d think they’d be more humble about weighing in so much… but nah.
To add to that some more recent examples from animation, Jeffrey Katzenberg at Disney thought that "Pocahontas" was going to knock everything out of the park and it was considered the A movie while the B movie project the rest of Disney was working on in the interim just to kill time turned out to be "The Lion King". That same man also wanted to cut the song "Part of Your World" from "The Little Mermaid" because ONE kid got squirmy during a test screening and Howard Ashman, and a bunch of the creative staff fought tooth and nail to keep that song in because they knew how important it was to the story and Ariel's character.
This is something I've been saying for a few years now and I'm so happy someone else is saying it too. I know it "flopped" but a $50m film like Dredd could be easily compensated by a $50m film like Deadpool while putting out a wider variety of movies that people want to actually see rather than one big one people might see once.
A lot of great points here. It's also absurd how many shows there are on streaming services, and maybe 1% of them is even worth watching. I hope something drastic happens to the industry that makes them focus on quality over quantity again.
@@scottslotterbeck3796 Using a story generating AI, I've read better stories (Or at least snippets of stories) than most of the stuff published, and especially self-published stuff today.
Exactly. Two weeks ago, I watched Avatar 2 and Fall. The former left me with a yawn and vague feeling of distaste, the latter had me amazed how two relatively unknown actresses managed to carry a film that played out almost exclusively on a tiny platform. That was skill!
Nay, Former refers to something that is first in the order of two or more things. Latter refers to something that is either second in a group of two things or last in a group of several.@@90viper90
Man, I love your analyses!!! It's amazing how many other critics are keeping to the politicly correct reviews, god forbid they should come out as "misogynistic" by giving an honest thorough analysis... There's only one other critic that has a similar style/depth as you, which is "Smack talk." Would love to see a crossover... 😊
I think the death of DVD's (and physical medias) also played a big role in the killing of that part of the industry, since they don't have that "second wind" of cash, which in the past helped alot of movies to gain fame even thou they werent a hit in the cinemas
True plus the fall of DVDs was further exasperated by Covid with folks not going to the Cinema and instead choosing to use streaming services at home, although the Cinema experience has slowly recovered to an extent with the removal of restrictions there's very little incentive to buy DVDs these days now that folks have realised they can just wait until a popular movie is available on Disney+, Prime, HBO, etc (sometimes not even bothering with the Cinema in the first place). It kinda goes hand in hand with the destruction of physical media and the attempts to preserve entertainment/art in its original state (E.g; the unedited original SW trilogy).
You know, you showed extremely short clips of movies made in the 90s and 80s and I instantly named and remembered the entire plot of them. I honestly don't remember most movies released in the past 10 or 15 years. Even when shown clips of them. It's a struggle to just remember the name. It's not that they are bad, it's worse. They're bland.
I’m starting to believe the massive production costs are to offset something sinister behind the scenes… money laundering? I’m not sure… but it’s insane how so many movies can be so bad and so expensive
Universal appears to be the only studio honestly reporting box office statistics. Otherwise they would be claiming *Bros* grossed a billion and *The Super Mario Bros. Movie* flopped. #ReReleaseMario
Also the balloning budgets are from companies wanting to get their cut before it releases. Breaking even already covers what they earned/were paid while it was being developed. By minimizing profits you reduce residuals you need to pay.
Because they’re like universities/colleges- required to have DEI reps, equity managers, diversity hires that require another hire to fix the many fuckups of the diversity hire, script writers and script rewriters because said script just isn’t woke enough, on-locations therapists, therapists for the therapist, all the different food requirements, the God-forsaken CGI needs, etc., and suddenly you’re into multibillion dollar territory with not much hope of even breaking even.
Hollywood accounting is a real thing, that happens for a variety of reasons: taxes, not paying percentage of profit, etc. Look it up, it's an open secret that they setup a shell company per movie, and do a lot of shenanigans with the costs and profits.
I remember Andre from Midnights Edge pointing out how studio meddling isn't always bad. Sometimes it is justified. Like imagine if you're a film studio and you've managed to raise $10 million for a low budget, but good quality action film. The plot is simple, but engaging, and it's stylish with a lot of effort put into the fight choreography in the vein of John Wick. It's intended to be a crowd-pleaser that'll hopefully make about $80 million in the theatres and maybe $20 million in Blu-Ray sales. Over-all, a very solid investment that'll put your little studio on the map and help you raise funds for more projects. However, you made the mistake of hiring a director who has a few good movies under his belt and looked great on paper for a hire. But during production, it turns out he's one of those artistic douchebags that's hard to work with, inconsistent and demanding with the production crew and he constantly insists on adding in these long and, frankly, boring scenes that'll throw the whole pacing and tone of the movie off when you just want a stylish, crowd pleasing action film. You have to intervene to save the project and the future of your studio. In these instances, studio meddling is completely justified.
They hired the wrong person then, a mindless movie deserves a mindless director. In one scenario a director might be an "artistic douchebag" and in another, a master. If Disney hired Judorowsky to do the next star wars (I would love that tbh), who is to blame when things don't go as planned?
I watched quigley down under again yesterday. I think it's my favorite movie of all time. The attention to detail with the weapons and clothing is awesome. The narrative has perfect focus and scope. The acting is amazing. It's a film that could have spawned three more films, but it didn't...and it's perfect that way.
True, movies are soulless these days they look good but dead inside you don't care about the characters becouse they are unrelatable becouse = Politics.
This is an extension of what's wrong with the videogames industry. Shit like Destiny 2 amd Cyberpunk 2077 and Halo 6. Good visuals are NOT a novelty anymore. There's people in basements that render AAA studio level visuals and footage. Cinema used to be an experience like Reservoir Dogs and The Bourne Supremacy and Batman Begins, not sensory overload like Thor Love and Blunder. After a point, good visuals without a good story starts to induce boredom and sleep.
The way movies are marketed these days is a major contributor to the problems you described. Way back when "ET" was on the screens, a movie was released at a few hundred to a thousand theaters at first. Profits were churned into making more "prints" of the movie and released through a few more theaters. If it failed, it failed only at a few theaters, and losses were more manageable. The market was driven by word-of-mouth. Nowadays, distributors blew their full wad on massive releases in thousands of theaters, and losses were more massive. Nowadays, the market is driven by expensive ad campaigns; they have to turn a profit before audiences can find out how terrible the movie is. By comparison, "ET" was in the theaters for a year; "Avengers: End Game" was in the theaters three weeks.
Movies used to open small, in a few big cities. Not more than few hundred prints. From there it was hoped that movie critics in major magazines and newspapers and word of mouth would fan the flames a bit before opening in smaller markets.
@@Jonathan-A.C. According to International Movie Data Base (IMDB), both our sources are incorrect. Endgame's official theatrical release dates were from April 26 through September 12, 2019. That's twenty (not three or thirty) weeks.
That doesn't make losses manageable. The cost of the prints wasn't zero but that was hardly the bottleneck. The cost is in making a movie and flopping in a few hundred theaters just means you make back even less of your investment. Saying that it was mostly word of mouth is also blatantly false. TV, radio, Billboard and newspaper adds were used for as long as there were movies.
Something similar is happening with the video game industry: Ubisoft recently canned a sequel to one of its smaller, original IPs to bring those developers over to another Assassin's Creed. In theory, 40% more developers = higher quality game, but also bigger teams = bigger budget and experience shows that large budgets = huge financial pressure to turn a big profit. What does this equal? Safe, generic, "little bit of everything", creatively compromised blobs of games that might look pretty and be liked by everyone for a while, but end up being loved by no one. Products from those kinds of producers end up being confused, bland, unfocused, undercooked, and ultimately dispassionate. To think, all that man-power and money could be put into projects that are smaller, more creative, and more profitable in the long run.
Consider this. I watched an MST3K movie this weekend called Robot Monster, made in 1953. It's considered to be one of the worst movies ever, BUT, it only cost $16,000 to make and took in $1,000,000 at the box office. Also consider, how many great movies, were also done with low budgets. Clerks, Blair Witch, Pulp Fiction, Mad Max, the Original Halloween. These movies were all done on the cheap, are now iconic, and turned a huge profit.
All those movies were character-driven, not effects driven. That's why they could be made cheap. Acting and story had to keep the viewer's attention when effects were too expensive. "Halloween" is an outstanding example. As cheaply as that movie was made it could have been made even CHEAPER if necessary. The whole thing could have been shot on a good camcorder.
@@davestang5454 The Terminator was low budget too, yes the film is carried by the characters but also by the sfx of the terminator and Arnie pulling off the performance of a machine. Lower budgets due to being "character driven" matters little to the majority of the audience and box office, it factors in to the budget but not at the box office. The point being made is that movies can be made with low budgets and still be big hits. Regardless of being character driven or spectacle driven.
@itsakindamagik5891 $11 Million would translate to about $46 Million in 2019. Compare that to the $275 Million that was spent in 2019 on The Rise of Skywalker.
This series continues to be fantastic because you really hammer home why some modern movies tend to feel lifeless while others stand out for going against the norm and audiences seem to be more aware of this thus more big BO bombs while giving their attention and money to movies that deserve it.
Back in the day even though the internet existed I wasn't tech savvy enough to find any movie reviews. If you wanted movie reviews you had to watch Siskel and Ebert babble about why horrible movies are great to prop up their hollywood friends. Maybe a newspaper review from someone equally as stuffy. People have such better word of mouth and ability to find reviews now and the reviews are so much better. I never have to watch Velma when I can just watch funny people dunk on it instead.
@@Drak976 It's gonna be more entertaining at least and the reviews are more informative. It also helps you discover something you never would have thought you'd be interested in until someone really breaks it down like when I found Shape of Water through a review from Chris Stuckmann.
I live in Japan and overall the quality is much better than Hollywood. There are far more small budget and no budget movies here which leads to more risk-taking and also allows the filmmakers of tomorrow to cut their teeth. They also have better master/apprentice-type relationships here with senior directors helping mentor younger filmmakers.
I thought Legend and Butterfly was great because of how it portrayed the transformation of Nobunaga. It did not insult the viewer’s intelligence with a lot of explanation. Also, the action was quite good and how the interaction between Nobunaga and his wife But it’s not just Legend and Butterfly. Blue Giant was also great. Monster was also great. Shin Kamen Rider was really good.
I so love you Critical Drinker! You clarify so accurately what is wrong with Hollywood these days. You've obviously studied the structural aspects of storytelling and scriptwriting, character creation and development, acting, production, direction, and the process of financial backing and marketing of films. I mean for Christ's sake! Just give us a good story with characters we care about, and villains we love to hate, or, even love. (Darth Vader comes to mind, with the love/hate thing on villains.)
The underlying problem isn't new but I agree that it has gotten worse. Several hit movies were initially turned down by studios who didn't think they would make money including American Graffiti, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, and the original Star Wars. I recently heard a story that Peter Jackson lied to get Lord of the Rings made. They turned him down when he said he wanted to do them all at once so he agreed to make one film and let the studio decide if the sequels would be worth it. He took the money and filmed a little bit of all three movies but not enough to make anything, ultimately telling the studio that if they wanted a finished product they had to fund the whole trilogy up front. They took the risk rather then write off the millions already spent.
The story I heard was that Jackson had gone to nearly every studio with a plan to make TWO LOTR movies, (and had been turned down) but when he went to New Line the Executive said "I'm confused...there are THREE books, so why don't you want to make three movies?" Jackson said "Yeah, I think that would probably work." and history was made.
The version I heard was that the folks running New Line Cinema knew the place was almost certainly about to get shut down thanks to it recently being acquired, so they figured they were gonna lose their jobs whether _LoTR_ did well or not, and putting down for the full set would keep the company around for longer before the new owners could unwind everything. Then the movies performed superbly, and New Line looked like geniuses.
@@boobah5643 To be fair it was quite a risk not 1 year before the D&D movie came out and it was just so incredibly horrible. The fact that LOTR was so good really is a testament.
@@martindixon54 That's where I heard it. Also read it in a magazine. I suppose that's the story Jackson wants people to believe, whether it's true or not.
I was re-watching the old Bond movies with my family, and found it really quite interesting to note the difference in scale of the 'big' finale/fight scenes there compared to modern movies. The Bond films were *famous* (for their era) for massive, over-the-top fight scenes, with hundreds of ninjas rappelling into a volcano-rocket-base, space marines brawling in orbit, scuba-gunmen fighting underwater, and the like. But compared to modern films? You see 'bigger' (in terms of raw numbers of actors, cgi or not, and effects) fights in almost every scene in a modern film. Just watching the clips here from this Drinker video made me feel almost exhausted, trying to follow the massive complexity of what was on-screen. And it's all so meaningless - for all that scale, the fight scenes mean nothing more (at best) than any of the much-smaller battle scenes in the finale of a Bond film. I know several channels have covered the whole 'scale =/= quality' of a fight scene in a movie, but this really illustrated the comparison for me.
What a good movie needs is not ever bigger action scenes. It needs what the drinker often refers to as "stakes", on a proportionate level. Because the stakes have gone up as well: with Bond it's sometimes about the fate of the world, but often about something smaller, like a critical piece of military tech, or even just money. But now? When it's not just the world at stake but all other worlds, the universe, or even the multiverse... we stop caring. Just as we the audience need to be able to relate to the characters, we need to be able to relate to the stakes as well. Do that on the right scale, and a gunfight between 20 guys can become more poignant and interesting than any given MCU mega-battle.
@@kaasmeester5903For example: Tombstone, Kill Bill, and possibly the best of all; the final confrontation in the original Infernal Affairs, though the diner scene in Heat is an all-time classic too in terms of tension vs stakes. I mean, which is better: The Ultron 'battle' in Age of Ultron, or the cliff fight in Last of the Mohicans? "Nobody" just has a guy getting the crap beaten out of him in (mostly..) a bus.
@@kaasmeester5903 I don't need men butchered by the million by machine-guns or death rays - we have enough of that in real life. Give me two men, pistols at dawn, and make me care about them, make me understand why each hates the other and believes himself to be in the right. Make me uncertain of the outcome, and make me uncertain as to what outcome I should desire. Modern film is the same as modern warfare: indiscriminate destruction. At least two men sizing each other up at twenty paces have the human capacity to hate.
Movies dont need to actually be expensive, they just need to look expensive. The best filmmakers are able to utilize special techniques and tricks to make their films look relatively more expensive than they actually are, and this helps to satisfy the best of both worlds. Audiences are drawn in by the seemingly high level of polish and professionalism, and film studios have a much better chance of achieving a higher profit margin, since their expenses are significantly lower.
check the movie "upgrade"(2018) if you want to see an example of good writing and directing with low budget, in modern times. If that movie had a little chance to advertise itself more, it would be a great hit at least. But nope, big studios tended to shoot hollow sequels..
I remember that film - great low budget sci-fi horror that's on par with "Vivarium" and "Await Further Instructions." We need more films like those today...
to me, a lot of movies have long seemed more like showcases for special effects studios, than movies telling an interesting story. Now I watch films from the 50s and 60s that are much simpler but tell stories that I like. Thanks to modern cinema, I was able to discover the old!
The problem is, when you say a movie cost 100 million and it's 100 million in distribution and 100 million in marketing, you think executives, distributors and marketers as separate people, and that is what they do to justify movies losing money.
I found Elemental fascinating, that they had the assembled minds of the best comedy writers in the industry and couldn’t write a single joke or humorous reference in 90 minutes of cartoon.
@@helion_ut Except there is. The man is a pussy and the woman is a badass who gives up on her dream of owning her dad's restaurant because why not. It's point about racism makes no sense because the fire people can KILL THE OTHER RACES.
@@helion_ut What you're saying is true, but on a much broader scale he's right, nowadays thanks to woke culture most comedy must remain completely inoffensive in every conceivable way. Not that clean humor is inherently bad, but when it's so clean and especially bland that a G-rated film could be considered a Hard R, you start to notice a decline. Look at stand up routines of old and compare them to today's, comedy is trash now because God fucking forbid someone somewhere will take offense to it.
If they are expensive enough to really hurt some of these corrupted companies that bastardize the things we love, I'm all for that.
Barbie at a BILLION in 2 weeks!!🎉
@@sthubbins4038 well sh1t
@@sthubbins4038 that is fucking horrific
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist1 already have, brother.
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist1Keep that religious stuff out of a conversation that doesn't involve religion in any way
'Stimulate the eyes, not the brain' is one of the best analogies describing movies these days. It's like Hollywood forgot they're making shows for humans, not juvenile cats with ADHD
I’m reminded of the ‘feelies’ from Brave New World.
Advanced projection films that stimulate the brain to elicit sensations like smell, touch, taste, etc…but have zero real plot and are almost entirely contrite pornography. There’s no subject on the human condition, grief, loss, love, meaning, etc.
Remove the sexual content and replace it with hip spectacle, and you’d be pretty close to what that experience is like, I’d imagine
What do you expect with the rise of 30 second tiktoks?
TOO EXPERIENCE MOVIES OUT OF CONTROL,
Humans are dumber than they used to be, especially in Hollywood.
Yeah it's like movies now days are for people with ADHD, flash but no soul.
there's a flip side to this: the higher the budget, the bigger the flop, and more accelerated is the decline of film companies trying to push THE MESSAGE. smaller budget and indie films might actually earn the spotight out of this mess, if they are genuinely inclined in simply telling a good story.
the only exception is Barbie who was a Box office wonder, but other than that you are right, Movies with less money put are being the bigger pay off
Silver linings everywhere.
@@justsomeguywholovesberserk6375barbie earned that much money due to genius marketing and the unexpected barbenheimer phenomenon (or was it the plan all along?) either way, there's nothing about the movie itself that deserved that 1 billion box office success.
@@XeniaChowI mean there was also the memes, and the interent boosting it and the music too, the marketing was absolute genius
The audience has spoken! We need more films like Barbie! Entertaining, with intelligence, skill, and artistry. One billion in two weeks!!
Fun Fact: the “using coconuts to make a galloping sound” bit from Monty Python was created because the filmmakers didn’t have the budget for horses. Creative restrictions give birth to creativity.
Oh no, boy. Hahaha this is just a fan fic. Did u believe?
@@Zanollo5huh?
@@jurassicthunder huh
It’s kinda funny how movies shot on Film are literally cheaper yet better even tho it’s FILM which realistically should be the more expensive way to record stuff.
Yet the digitally recorded ones are uber expensive and getting crappier, while being advertised as being the cheaper more "efficient." Alternative.
Seems to be a common trend actually amongst digital media were it just is kinda a down grade quality wise than it’s apparently more expensive predecessor, while being advertised as this thing that creates a *quantity* of "good content."
Film is a finite thing, You’re less likely to waste time and money with it than you do with digital.
Hey maybe digital media promotes worse entertainment because digital media is the pinnacle of consumerism and not great at ensuring quality or creativity especially from Artists 🤷🏻♂️
In other words, when you didnt have a limitless amount of content on a small device you probably, were more likely to think outside the box as an creative person than you were having access to limitless amount of content. Essentially with digital media you’ve essentially removed most filters of bad entertainment.
But hey i guess im just a 17 year old "regressive." boomer
I mean surely it’s just a coincidence that quantity of digital content downgraded quality of Movies, TV, Music.
It’s almost like trying to find a gold coin is almost impossible if it is submerged in a ocean of absolute Shit. Especially with Music on the Internet.
Like dude, trying to find an actually great Artist who’s on the same level as bands like Van Halen, Metallica or Black Sabbath, OR Artists like MJ, Madonna, Brittney Spears, Dr.Dre is pretty difficult when they all are overshadowed by a Sea of Mediocre Artists who all make music with a laptop in their room.
It’s almost like we make being an Artist too easy right???
@@LordBackuro Why are Blockbusters so bad now... is litrally a videotitle thx to Cody Johnston
0h and his Worker-Video and Striek-Video may also be of relevance
Oppenheimer cost 100M to make. Rated R, 3 Hour biopic, dialogue driven, and already half a billion (and still yet to be released in some markets). Audiences and critics sang it's praises. What an achievement.
Nolan is pound for pound the most successful director of his time if you think about it. Every one of his films have been both commercial and critical successes, and he's consistently topped both those areas for a decade straight with no signs of slowing down
@@krypticunlimited6925 except Memento,Insomnia and the Prestige of course, his level or reached exploded after Batman Begins.
@@deniss.6205prestige and memento are his two best movies
Overrated soapie
@@krypticunlimited6925 i don't like his work ^^ his movies are too "scholar" to me. Not enough personality and it's very obvious through his characters who don't have any of it, they have a goal, a purpose and thats it. I don't really get all the fame around him
Braveheart - $53 Million
Fellowship of the Ring - $93 Million
The Two Towers - $94 Million
Return of the King - $94 Million
Dial of Destiny - $294.7 Million
Solo: A Star Wars Story - $275 Million
Rise of Skywalker - $416 Million
Makes you wonder....
Inflation
Why are bad movies so damn overpriced
Even adjusted for inflation, that's ridiculous.
You are being too nice with those examples...
Terminator 1 $6.4 Million ($18 million ish now)
Robocop $13 million ($39 Million now)
Either money laundering or incompetence. Or both.
If you look at the history of Hollywood, the situation today is very much like the one in the mid-1960s. Studios were churning out big-budget musicals and Technicolor epics, but they became more and more unrealistic and less and less profitable. Then everything broke down and the early 1970s brought a new golden age with gritty, realistic, diverse stories and films, with young filmmakers getting the means to make many classic movies we still love and enjoy today.
so let's hope this will change in the 2030s
@@PySnek maybe the Hollywood will die, the reborn with much better managers and much fresher content.
But what if we make the dance scenes EVEN FANCIER?!!!
But then the 80s happened and were back to studio conformity
@@pheunithpsychic-watertype9881What? The 80s and 90s were the golden age of Hollywood.
Years ago while deployed with the military, I sat down to watch an old movie "Guns of Navarone", made before I was born. I was 37 at the time and the guys with me were in their early 20s. Though they laughed at the scene near the end that was a ship model in a bathtub, they all loved the movie. This was around 2005 and they had already gotten used to seeing movies with the big budget and special effects, but had gotten away from quality products. The rest of the deployment was me sitting down in the morning and repeating the process. They love them all! It doesn't take a big budget to make a great movie, just looking at Mario Brothers and Indiana Jones will prove that.
You mean the new one or the old one? Because the new one is $300 million.
@@Nae_ex New one. The Mario movie had a $100m budget and made $1.3B. The Indiana movie had over $400M and didn't even make that back.
@@stub4958Thing is... People WANTED a Mario Movie, Indy Jones got a half-assed sequel that left people disappointed.
The Mario Brothers movie was not all that good. It just wasn't as terrible as everything else out there today.
@@jrt2792 You're right there. Harrison Ford is one of my favorite actors, but I didn't want to see an 80 year old man run around. Clint Eastwood was a great action star, but he knew better than to do an action role in his 80s.
One of the biggest sources of inspiration an artist has at their disposal, which I think often goes unnoticed, is that having severe restrictions actually helps the creative process. Limiting how much of the medium or funding you have at your disposal and you're then forced to innovate in often surprisingly creative ways.
Yep. Lucas did original Star Wars with his hands tied behind his back and a bunch of help from people that just wanted to be part of something different.
This applies to basically everything, but a big shout out goes to Tim Follin, who is legendary in the retro gaming community for making some of the greatest NES and SNES soundtracks of all time, even if the games they belonged to weren't as good. Just look up Pictionary, Silver Surfer NES, or Plok, and you'll know what I mean.
Total unrestricted creativity falls into the problem of infinite paths: you'll end up going down the most common route
Back to the Future was originally set to have an ending in the desert like the start of Indy 4 with the fridge.
To save money, the knowledge of a famous lightning strike taking place in the town, to power the Delorean time circuits.
@@Knightmessenger good! that dessert ending would've been completely out of place in a BTTF I that's otherwise entirely confined to Hill Valley.
agreed, I think this whenever old minecraft vs new minecraft comes up.
I’ve worked on film sets and I can tell you they just throw money around. It seemed evident to me that there is little to know accounting for all the money changing hands, so how many people were taking advantage?
The rate at which these budgets are skyrocketing suggests to me that some people found a way to take advantage big time! I’m talking millions at a time. This is why Kathleen Kennedy staffing so many productions with “her people” is so suspicious and seems to coincide with ballooning of budgets and seemingly getting so much less for so much more money.
Agree entirely, The money isn't going on the screen, therefore I suspect it is going into someone's pocket. I bet if you 'follow the money' you'll discover the money goes to a third party firm, and then vanishes, only to re-appear as a new car/yacht/house for someone closely involved int he production. What else could possibly explain the Rings of Power?
If your goal is to siphon off money for corruption wouldn't people like Kathleen actually be working hard to ensure these movies are well received by EVERYONE to keep the cash flow going and avoid questions? It seems like she has only ever cared for half of the population or even less. So if the goal was to siphon money from Disney this whole time then she really does just absolutely suck at her job. A Russian prostitute would of done better in this position.
You guys might actually be on to something.
Hollywood's a big club and everyone needs their cut.
Most likely money laundering
As a guy that works in finance, it’s pretty odd to me that instead of “diversifying their portfolio” with medium budget films that appeal to different audiences; Hollywood would rather take on huge risk by putting all of their eggs into one basket with a stupidly expensive blockbuster film that may or may not flop.
Yup. It's because your focused on profits and those making the top level decisions over there simply are not. It sounds insane (and it is) but that is clearly the reality over there. Logically, a solid selection of low budget, medium budget, and a few high budget 'sure thing' productions would be what one could expect. The low budget films let newer staff cut their teeth and if they prove talented, you move them up. They can test ideas your not sure on with low losses when most of them fail, and you can potentially refine them to try again. The mid budget works would be more focused on smaller target audiences, bringing in notable cash at minimal expenses and risk. Those few big productions could then rely on proven appeal to justify the expense.
So to give an example: Of the thirty or so low budget films made in a year, one of them proves a smash hit. So the sequel gets pushed up to medium budget range. When that turns out to make bank and potentially lead into a new tent pole franchise, then either a remake of the first or a sequel/spinoff film is made as one of the big ones for that year.
Anime makes so many light novel adaptations and manga adaptations _because_ they know the product (story/characters) has an audience. The proven track record then gets a single season or OVA. If that succeeds, then you do more. It's simply a superior business model to work with.
@@Sorain1i thought about this the other day and I thought it must have some flaw since they are doing it. Maybe the head managers want to be included in every film and it's very hard to focus on 3 movies at the same time. But they can get more managers
Ai.
It used to work untill last year. Disney had what 10 billion movies and even DC were doing great at box office Wonder Women, Aquaman etc but their movies turned to shite and they became way too woke and it backfired
@@toshev1988 It's not just 'wokeness.' There are plenty of woke movies that are successful. The problem is bland, cookie-cutter films that everybody has seen before. Nobody wants to watch epic super hero movie number 5,705.
Something similar happened in the 70’s. Movies became too bloated and expensive, every director wanted to be an auteur like Kubrick, and studios lost all faith in them. So, in the 80’s they gave a bunch of unknowns a chance with low budgets, and that’s how you get awesomeness like the first two Terminator movies. Then James Cameron became what he was made to destroy, but that’s just the cycle of life.
Ridley Scott has been a disappointment too
@@sabir1208 Yes, yes he has.
Cameron’s movies make money. He’s the wrong guy to use for this example.
You can’t use James Cameron as an example of what not to do, his movies have been good to great, and he has 3 films over 2 Billion
Terminator is not 70s. Weird example
As a lorry driver, I spoke to a driver who worked in the film industry. He said that whilst he was one of the lowest paid jobs on set, he still got a far better rate of pay than regular driving. I imagine that the salaries become exponentially ridiculous.
What's a lorry?
@@catandrobbyfloresit's the English way of saying what the Americans call semi trucks
They are. In the US, in IATSE as of 2019, I believe the lowest a union "propmaker" could be paid was 32/hr, and they might just be sweeping floors.
@@catandrobbyflores Truck.
@@cabbageboiothank you. not all americans are savvy on british english. 😊
_"How much money do we need to make to break even?"_
_"At least a billion."_
_"And how much of our audience have we alienated?"_
_"No idea people won't respond to our polls anymore."_
_"I like those odds let's do it!"_
Basically: Modern Hollywood
Hollywood how much money do you want to lose?
Hollywood: *YES*
Genius!!
We leaked that we're turning this character black and this one transgender, all while denigrating this legacy hero. The responses on Twitter were very favourable. Clearly, this is what the people want.
Barbie over a billion in TWO WEEKS!! 🎉
This is what I liked in Netflix some years ago: they were making movies on low-ish budget. They had to compromise on visuals, hire less known actors, have an actual story to tell and, most importantly, use classic artistic creativity. Ten years ago, these direct-to-streaming sometimes felt more 'true' movies than what was in cinemas.
Yes except for (((Cuties ))) and making movies with less white main characters.
Just how true
@@josephsade3423check lockwood and co. They're still making those.
I forget what they made but I enjoyed some redbox originals as well. I miss syfy channel Saturday cheese movies not even sure they show them anymore because no cable.
@@Drak976 I miss SciFi Channel.
Remember the 60's. We had giant blockbusters bombing, writers and actors striking, and all that jazz. And that lead to a decade of "New Hollywood", where creative young directors, made cheaper, yet good movies. And once blockbusters were ready to return with Jaws and Star wars, we got a few decades of solid blockbusters. Let's hope this happens again.
So, in other words, we failed to learn from history, and thus, it repeated.
And now we have a decade of films unfit to be shown in the local public restroom.
You have better writing in your videos than the average script for the movies offered in theaters.
He's a successful author, which is more than most guild writers are.
this is why the drinker is approaching 2M subscribers. He actually thinks about what he wants to say and then-shockingly!-crafts how he wants to say it. Clearly there is still an audience out there game for cogent, well-reasoned thought.
@@JoshuaKevinPerrynot at all
Joss Whedon ruined a generation.
Sad, but true.
My Big Fat Greek Wedding had a budget of $5 million. It had basically no advertising. It grossed $370 million. Why? It was funny, uplifting, relatable, and in the right place at the right time.
Indiana Jokes and the Dial of Dysentery had a budget of $300 million (not counting advertising). It has grossed $370 million. Why? It's depressing.
Well maybe if they put some Windex on it...
@@vigglarodz Give me any word...
Wow.
Also, $370 mil in 2002 (MBFGW's release year) is equivalent to about $526 mil in 2023 with inflation. So... *snicker*
Lost 240m
Only the Balkans can make great weddings despite being on the poorer side
It’s probably why Puss in Boots: The Last Wish is so liked. It has great writing, treats its audience with respect, isn’t afraid to go into serious topics and doesn’t crack any smart ass jokes while doing so. Like you asked in your review, where DID this movie come from and where can we get more?
Same for Top Gun Maverick. It just wanted to entertain with a simple but emotionally effective story and nothing else. Felt like such a breath of fresh air.
Not as recent, but Rango (2011) was great for the same reason.
A film that talks about an important and serious message that isn’t not for kids
Same for across the spiderverse
Puss was still the hero and he wasn’t made weak
I was talking to a guy at work about movies and we realized every movie we've gone to see and actually liked in the last few years was put out by A24. Varying quality but tons of variety, lots to dig into, lots to think about, lots to just enjoy and appreciate. It's hard to know what to expect but almost always worth the try with those flicks. They are definitely at least trying to break the modern mold.
I like a24 for being original..but there movie is so fucking boring...
A24 are great, they're giving a chance to the kid who made the Backrooms popular video in youtube
@uzzivlogsu.v2697 Me too, I don't have high expectations for the movie but I'll still watch it and like it just for the concept and the kid who directs it, he made something really good out of nothing and his talents are praised rightfully.
I worked on the first movie that had a budget over $100 million, "Disclosure." It blows my mind how fast we've not only doubled that number, but TRIPLED it. We were complaining back then that Hollywood had no new ideas. That problem has only become worse in intervening years.
Of all the Michael Crichton books which were turned into film, one would think that one would have been one of the cheapest, lol.
Inflation is a hell of a drug.
Hollywood has tons of ideas. "No new ideas" is absolutely false. You just don't see those ideas realized on screen because of the corporate studios, and their aversion to risk-taking. Reboots and sequels have been financially profitable in the past, so their idea is to take advantage of the pre-built fanbase these IPs have. Also, if you look at financial trends, the audience also doesn't have a good track record when it comes to supporting films outside of reboots and sequels.
Disclosure had a budget of $55 million, according to its Wikipedia page
@@dezznutz3743 It was only $55 million, its Wikipedia page says
My first year of college was 2009 and there were two outstanding movies I saw with my buddies. I am of course referring to District 9 and Zombieland. The combined budget of those two movies was $54 million and their total box office was $313 million . You could make six Zombieland/District 9 double features for the cost of one Indiana Jones and the Snooty British Woman Who Won't Stop Yapping. It's not rocket science guys.
District 9 was actually and indie film too
Those films are shit
@@MASTEROFEVILummm, what's your point? Indie stands for independent, and that can mean pretty much anything. The fact that that it wasn't a huge studio production qualifies it as an "indie" film, but it was produced by Peter Jackson and had a professional VFX studio behind it.... The original comment basically says District 9 was a good film made on a tight budget. Did you think you were saying something different?
😂
District 9 not only was an indie movie but it literally changed the way movies are filmed.
@@HumanityisEmbarrassingyou must be fun at parties
"12 Angry Men" (1957) would cost $3.7M today, and it's a better movie than anything in the last few years. The acting, script, direction, and cinematography are all perfect, and that's where all the expense is, with not even more than one set or costume changes to eat the money. The film was intentionally minimalist, and it's beautiful because of it. An important part of art is how the artist limits themselves.
Modern unlimited budgets can't produce better.
The recent movie Nefarious was like that. It was completely filmed at one location, small budget and 90 percent of it was shot in one room with two actors. It was one of the most powerful movies I've seen in decades.
True art doesn’t need excessive money.
12 Angry Men was a TV movie, they are usually made on the cheap.
My gosh. Having served on a jury before, I thought this movie would bore the everloving snot out of me. But I once took the opportunity to watch it and _I regret nothing._ Never disappointed for a moment. A film so charged and full of character and life, where stakes that might seem so mundane come into glaring focus and reality. Great movie. Big recommend.
@@dezznutz3743Actually, it’s based on a play before the 1957 film by Sidney Lumet.
I recently read Carrie Fisher's memoir about making the first star wars movie and it was incredible to hear about all the creative ideas that were put into what they thought was going to be this tiny film with a bunch of no name actors. I blame the rise of CGI for a lot of it, if you look at early Marvel movies like Captain America or Iron Man- while they did use special effects most of the movie didn't, they weren't all standing around a green screen with a green suit on. It was focused more on the story and the characters.
Brb, I now have to go watch Pirates of the Caribbean, The Fugitive, and Mrs Doubtfire
Edit: spelling mistake
Definitely. CGI was used only to display what couldn't be done with practical effects. Even Cap's shield in the First Avenger was 90% practical, only using CGI when it bounced off walls.
You can never replace shooting on set. In my opinion, if making the movie was an adventure then the final product is going to feel like an adventure.
Pete Jackson is a good example of "the more CGI the better syndrome." One can see he relies more and more on CGI during the making of LotR from a little in Fellowship to quite a bit in Return to way too much in Hobbit.
Autocorrect - doesn’t.
@@dan1216 whoops autocorrect, thanks for letting me know! :)
I watched HEAT again over the weekend and all the way through it was striking how that could never be made now, the long pauses, the character development and a heart wrenching scene in the bath that served nothing other than building the struggle of a mans pain. The final scene of just two guys hiding amongst the loud sound of planes and landing lights. Ended with a couple of gunshots and the main protagonists holding hands. No backflips, no gunfu, they didn’t even get the girl. Cinematic classic
The bank shootout scene is absolutely incredible. Holy god, the sounddesign.
@@WH250398 Michael Mann >>> ChristoBWAAAAMMMMMMMM Nolan.
One of my favourites of all time…alongside The French Connection, Taxi Driver, Bullitt and the list goes on
In some ways HEAT feels like it was ripped straight from the headlines today. Like the scene where Al Pacino tells his wife the reason why he doesn't tell her about his day when she asks why is because he knows that she couldn't handle hearing about his day. Than he proceeds to prove his point by talking about how a mother put her baby in the microwave and cooked it because she was HAF on Meth and she was planning to eat her baby. But she passed out the baby still died because she cooked it in the microwave. His wife than proceeds to cry and BARF. I know that HEAT was released in 1995. But that SHIT is just as relevant now as it was than.
Such a good movie
Another thing that is not discussed in this video, is that these blockbusters are structured in a way, so that you can easily take out parts or add something later with several rounds of reshooting. These reshoots are now just standard practise and not just to save a film in trouble. This affects the way the story is written. There is no intricate plotline with themes, characters arcs or setups to get a payoff later.
A lot of the times the plot is the following: The characters need to get from A to B, then B to C, then C to D and finally D to E, roll credits. This makes some movies like Rise of Skywalker feel like 3 hours of those boring video game fetch quests, but it is great for the studio, because they can easily take out parts and insert new ones.
Add a scene to apease the LGPT+ community in America - no problem
Delete the same scene for screenings in other countries - no problem
Add a scene in which Chinese people saves the day for the important Chinese market - no problem
Remove entire sequence that didn't test well and replace with a new one - no problem
The stories does not feel like a complete story, but rather a sequence of events that happens
Great point! I think this is definitely true.
And how many times have you heard about filming beginning before the script was finished? They want these big elaborate expensive sequences and then try to scrape together some kind of plot to justify it. That puts actors in a position where they can't give genuine performances and where writers are hamstrung by the fact the climactic points of the film are already set in stone. There's no actual storytelling going on so obviously the writing is going to be awful.
you are all making the monumental blunder of thinking this industry exists for money or for your pleasure.
This still kind of goes back into the cost issue. They're structure that way so that they can have the maximum appeal to lots of demographics. That's kind of what you have to do when the movie costs 300 million dollars to make. But that stuff is like network TV. Sure it's palatable, but it's never really what you want. If you think about it, what's the last show on network TV people really loved? Maybe something in the late 90s or early 200s? For the last 15 years, the shows people loved have been on cable or streaming. Where they can take more risks and cater to a smaller niche. The movie industry is the prime example of what happens when you try to be all things to all people.
You've hit it right on the head!
I just recently re-watched Lilo and Sitch. While it may not be a cinematic masterpiece, it was overall a very enjoyable lighthearted movie. I kept thinking while watching "why doesn't Disney make fun movies anymore?"
They fired everybody who knew what one looked like.
I recently watched Enchanted again and it felt like sunbathing with a beer in hand. The writing is also quite creative, the special way of mixing traits from different realms.
That movie reminded me why I love MLPFiM so much. Uncynical work of love with a cheerful base theme. - Feelgood movies seem underappreciated recently, dunno. Everybody gets obsessed with survival themes.
Because leftists don't believe in fun, it's a bougie trait. Never forget that ultimately socialism is a death cult.
Ideology precludes fun.
Happy people are evil in woke world.
@@blisterbill8477 Ideology is neutral. The word is referring to ideals, which are high states of being to aspire to, so it has value.
You could say that Greek philosophers were idealists.
The antithesis is pragmatists, which are perfectly happy only using what is already there and considered useful, thereby affirming the status quo that the takers are exploiting in a way that makes things worse.
This has been on the top of my tongue forever when I try and think of whats wrong with movies. You just described it perfectly, they have just became too expensive! When things cost that much, less risks are taken, more sequels, more studios interfering with directors visions ruining movies… omg you hit the nail on the head!
Something thats also hurt the industry is the death of the Blockbuster movie star like Arnold and Stallone. Nobody gives AF about movies involving Tom Holland, Simu Liu, Daisy Ridley unless they're playing the characters from Star Wars/MCU. Tom Cruise is the only guy who studios can bank on to get people into theaters with just his name attached to the movie and he's 60. Hollywood is unable to create stars like they used to.
All the more reason to go with more cheaper movies. If you no longer have big name actors that can draw a huge audience, you just make a bit of everything instead
I don't think that is true, there are couple people from the younger-than-Tom generations, who are superstar material. They are either curbed by overbearing PR pressure; pushed aside by the industry; or simply couldn't care more about being some gigacelebrity (Hemsworth comes to mind). Another problem also is, that GenZ isn't simply that interested in movies anymore. They either still fawn over music stars (Harry Styles or Taylor Swift like), or moved now to celebrate internet personalities in their smaller Twitch / RUclips / TikTok / whatever comes next bubbles. Hollywood is only partially to blame
And nobody cares about any actor that was starring the Fast and Furious movies anymore. So they decide to just make more in order to stay relevant.
Agreed
Take Chris Evans for instance. He can make money as Captain America, and his social media posts can earn hundreds of thousands of likes. But outside of Cap, he's not a big star, and he can't help but run his mouth about politics, a common problem with so many other stars these days.
Who would the crazy kids look up to? Media is all over the place. There are no music superstars. It's all slivers of a small segment. Kids can't even listen to radio, cause "everything" sucks.
I think another problem worth mentioning is how these big-budget issues create environments of distrust and constant conflict, which result in movies struggling to maintain consistency, ESPECIALLY across sequels. When every single movie project is a massive basket with 300 million dollars worth of eggs in it, people aren’t concerned about working together to form a fully functional, coherent movie/chain of movies, they’re concerned about hitting their “checkboxes” to avoid getting ass-blasted if the movie completely bombs. The studio bigwigs, directors AND writers are just trying to check their own personal checkboxes to avoid retaliation if (and usually when) caca hits the fan, because whoever doesn’t check enough of their boxes is primed to be the scapegoat in the fallout. I feel like that’s why movies today have these weird writing issues where political correctness or rehashing overshadows decent character writing or decent plot. It’s not about working together to make a movie, it’s about working on YOUR PART of a movie whilst simultaneously covering yourself so that no one can point a finger at you in the case of a failure.
This is why is well known that movies as an industry won't age well especially when you know it's not about the art itself but rather than corporate mishmash to fill up a political quota.
CGI and Producer indecisiveness are hand-in-hand problems that exacerbate the problems we're seeing. The behind the scenes stills of Secret Invasion (which had a reported budget of $212M) are basically the actors sitting against greenscreen backdrops holding greenscreen props, because Marvel wanted total creative control about what's in a scene, what a gun looks like, whether a character holds a gun at all, and more chopping and changing. It's expensive, puts strain on the animators, makes the animation look terrible because you have to make changes but can't start from scratch, and the actors can't creatively engage because there's no set to bounce off. It's like how studios opt for CGI blood even though squibs look way better, studios will have blood/no blood depending on what market they're releasing into.
The best films are ones where there's either a singular or collaborative creative vision, backed by the studio, using practical effects where the story is clearly defined and reshoots are minimal.
“It’s not about money; it’s about sending…THE MESSAGE!”
I'd like to think that Hollywood is about to be the last victim of streaming content. Because, regardless of how the product was delivered, Hollywood was always a constant. They have centralized the entire process, which ranges from movie sets and props, all the way to actors, directors, producers, as well as everything in between. They have contracts with the writers and FILM Actors Guild, as well as grips, and construction companies.
I think the whole process has been tainted and film-makers are starting to look for alternative ways to create content. Even a great movie concept can't survive a writers room and casting office that is based on DEI mandates. We may have to deal a short-term drought in content, but I really hope that some of the more talented writers and actors focus on doing some small to mid-size Indie films. Good Stories, with limited special effects and absolutely no pandering or virtue signaling bullsh1t. But, this may just be a naive fantasy of mine.
Disney: “We promise we’re making lots of money on these films!”
Me selling my house to myself every month: “Honey, I’ve started making $150,000 extra every month!”
Man if the studios buying up their own tickets to inflate revenue is actually true, then I do hope the IRS would love to hear that.
This entire video essay actually applies so well to the video game industry as of late. Too much focus on innovating graphics, technology, accessibility, diversity/inclusion, etc. and making what are essentially just interactive movies instead of actually making compelling games with a focus on gameplay.
I feel like with even the best of games, you kinda sacrifice for one for another. Even when the industry was at its prime, it was rare to have both a good game and good story with both elements balancing out. I think most new games are way too safe and barely try anything new.
It's times like this I like to remember that the entirety of the FNAF franchise was born from one guy with a pretty simple idea done well.
Atlas Fallen. Worth the look!
Sadly, you are wrong, but the sentiment is still correct. If you look at the most expensive AAA games of today, they are made with hundreds of millions of dollars, the problem is that hundreds of millions actually goes to predatory marketing, because the psychologists working for these corporate shills found out that shoving a game down your throat in the form of ads and having sheer probability over billions of people doing the work for you and hooking a few, not many, just a few hundred whales who will not be able to resist and then buy all of their skins and stuff makes so much more money than the average customer buying and praising an actually good game, that for them it's basically laughable if someone invests a good amunt of creative passion into a project ( look at the baldur's gate 3 drama, if you know, you know ).
What happens next is of course a budget wise restricted studio with a marketing 20, 30, 40, 50 times the size of the actual project, and THEN they demand that from the little resources they have left, just from a couple million dollars, make a next gen visually appealing game and innovate on graphics, and then there is no money left to make good games. As odd as it sounds, the game industry has the opposite problem from the same source. Games are too big, yet too underfunded at the same time. If you were giving more time and money for the developers they COULD deliver visually stunning awesome gameplay experiences without compromises and make the AAA standard what it should be, but that's simply not what happens. Instead we have a marketing budget that's worth hundreds of millions, and an overworked, time troubled, technically and visually forced, creatively limited, underfunded, underpaid studio, who are expected to make the game. Of course they won't deliver. They can't. No one can.
If you want good games then give developers more time, then market less and fund development more. That's when you get good games.
Cough cough Halo
Only a minute in and the amount of editing for this one is unreal. Excellent job, bro. You had like 300 million movie shots in here.
Filmmaker: *"I would like to make a small budget movie"*
Hollywood: *"We'll double the budget and must cater to... M0dern Audiencezzzzzzzz"*
Pretty much
And fill the studio executive's bank accounts..
Yeaaaa when they do that this channel fines tiny flaws and calls it woke....his 14yr old anime shut in fans send him money to do it again for the next film....these channels are making money
My reaction: "Fine, I will take my business to Angel Studios."
@@Shawn6751you've never heard of them besides one movie
You should talk about how Marvel movies are bankrupting studios that do CGI. How companies are undercutting eachother to get the contracts for a Marvel movie and then after the movies changed 20 times and they have to keep redoing effects they've bankrupted their company.
That is bad business management. Not marvels fault.
I think it's also noteworthy that many iconic visuals and story elements in film were created specifically because there wasn't enough money for "plan A." A budget that accommodates virtually any cost removes a lot of the effort normally needed to bring creators' visions to the big screen. Creativity tends to flourish best when faced with some degree of limitation rather than infinite resources
This is the assessment of Lucas. When there was somebody to tell him, "No", he made great films. When he was one dude, and got whatever he wanted? He made crap. You need talented producers, and editors!, to refine his vision.
I think also the problem is that Hollywood had a twofold issue that became a begative feedback loop:
1. Bigger has to be better: every subsequent film must be bigger than the last. An audience won't voluntarily see a film that is subdued compared to what came before, so what comes next has to be bigger and flashier.
2. Streaming services ike Netflix and Amazon Prime were making crazy money, so they were happily throwing around huge sums spend on vanity projects and especially trying to poach star power away from Hollywood. Hollywood had to respond in kind by upping their expenditure.
There is potentially light at the end of the tunnel. A lot of these decisions were driven by audience predicition models which don't seem to be matching reality. They were correct at first, but how can you predict audience apathy? Downward trends need to be understood, but an algorithm can't tell you until the trend actually begins, but by this point it's too late. Hopefully cool indie flicks will resirge in response.
Anything that relies on marketing, where they tell you "better taste", more "filling", by offering you less, with more chemicals, or other brainwashing is never going to be normal. The media's income is solely based on lying to its customers. After 30 years of this, you are so far offside, that this is what you get. No one normal in charge, with no brains to relate to normal folks.
They THINK audiences won't come and see a less spectacular film. At best that's unproven.
Engineer's note: Negative feedback loop is stable/self-correcting. Positive feedback loop is what you meant
Netflix & Amazon aren't making money on their shows, or movies. They make money through subs, like Airlines do through Rewards.
Fact: Game of Thrones generated $0, while Fast & Furious generated $7 Billion.
@@eitantal726Think of it as NEGATIVE...Feedback loop, not "negative feedback loop."
Oppenheimer is a great movie. Nice to see a movie that isn't a reboot, remake, re-imaging, prequel, sequel and the like.
I wanted to like it more than I did, but I still take it's success as a good sign
Not totally new, however, there were already productions on the same story with the same title.
I mean it's a biopic, not exactly the pinnacle of creativity either
It's a very good movie. The massive fuss being made over it is a sign of how bad all the rest of the contemporary movies are.
One of the best movies I've seen in the last 15 years is Gran Torino. It starred and was directed by Clint Eastwood, AND THAT'S IT. I can't name another actor or actress, it wasn't a big budget flashy experience with explosions and super special effects. It was a movie that told a great story. The Mule, also by Clint was more of the same, and it was good(not as great as Gran Torino, but I'm a Michigander who's white dad grew up in Detroit and my Grandpa was designated too important to the war effort because he was an engineer to serve, so he quit his job and enlisted, so the whole Detroit back in the 40's and 50's and 60's thing till it went to shit really hits home for me). You don't need a huge budget to tell a good story, all you need is a good story and a director and cast willing to tell it. Good luck finding that in most modern big budget movies, because they want to make sure that they don't piss off certain groups, while at the same time not caring if they piss off others like straight(not cis, straight) white men.
Absolutely loved Gran Torino, and I'm with you on the rest of what you say too. I would add in Django Unchained, but then Tarantino always delivers, and although the budget is probably quite high for his stuff, they're not filled with unconvincing greenscreen. Look at Reservoir Dogs, it was mostly shot in a garage. It's all in the writing for sure!
(Not straight, normal)
@paulwilson6357 Tarantino is a hack. Every one of his movies follows a very tight, unwavering formula. Not to mention he's one of the biggest Hollywood asshole hypocrites, calling for the abolishing of gun rights while making his movies exclusively about huge gun fights and glorifying hyperviolence.
Gran Torino is such a heartfelt movie. It has an elegance in its simplicity, and it teaches an incredible lesson about humanity.
@@paulwilson6357 bruh, Django is a hatefest just like Barbie
Ultimately, a film is supposed to be a work of art at a certain level. The current Hollywood approach of script writing by committee and screentesting every single thing is the biggest problem. They are going to have to learn how to let go of control and allow a talented filmmaker to have singular control over a project. They need to find the next Spielberg, Lucas, or Kubrik who is in his 20s and just empower them to make a film without interference. It is a stifling of artistic freedom combined with a corporate obsession with pushing "The Message" that is killing Hollywood.
What’s crazy is that so many movies keep getting bigger and bigger production budgets, but yet it seems like they look more artificial every year just because of the over reliance on CGI
*Poor quality CGI.
If the mountains of CGI were of good quality we would be a lot more tolerant of it but with the increasingly rushed work done by inexperienced artists in 3rd world countries we the audience can not only tell but are distracted by bad quality of the visuals.
1) You'd be shocked to see how much of the movie is CGI. Even the shit you think they just went outside and filmed... Nope CG.
2) During 09-10 western CGI companies were collapsing left and right. They were all relocating to China and India chasing massive tax subsidies and actual profit since their business model is garbage... It was at the point, western Leads were training overseas employees to replace people.
You might have noticed CGI in films seemed to have taken a step back during after this... That's partially why.
@@Hybris51129 Well most cgi artists are very experienced, but they gain way to little, set time to complete scenes which ultimately end up extremely rushed and the digital artists working massive overtime for little pay to finish the project.
The horror genre may be the one remaining area where studios still keep costs down and take chances on 'new' filmmakers.
It's interesting because the same thing happens in gaming. AAA titles are trash and indie games are the only thing worth spending money on these days. Great video as always!!
Capitalism is and always be a bad thing. AAA companies like Xbox, EA, Konami, Ubisoft, Bethesda, Activision-Blizzard, Square Enix and so on clearly forgot why they were so famous 10-15 years ago. For me, only 2 companies and 2 studios at other companies are left whom I still trust in the AAA sector: Sony, Capcom, From Software and Rockstar. That is all!!!
The truth is I believe less and less that they still have that level of dedication, intention and creativity, which would allow them to make such a spectecular resurrection as the one we saw in Capcom's Case in the past 6 or 7 years.
I just need one word to prove You wrong:
FromSoft.
Yeah, MOST big budget productions are trash, but frankly so are most indie games. I would know, 90 % if my gaming purchases are indies.
They're just cheaper and less hyped so it doesn't hurt as much when they end up being mediocre.
@@w12266 But indie gaming is planted in the same capitalist system, so it's morel ike a partial soft reboot. Now you got many small creative competitors engaging in a brutal elbowing game for marketing, complete with highly corrupt media.
@@w12266video games would not exist past tennis for 2 without capitalism dawg. Even the best indie games, assuming they ain’t free, are to make their designers a profit. It just so happens that at that level making a genuinely good product is the best way to make money.
@@w12266 I wouldn't write capitalism off. I'm no apologist; capitalism has definitely contributed to exploitation at the ground level, but I think the fact that these AAA companies have been allowed to peddle garbage for so long at ridiculous prices is almost the opposite of capitalism.
Capitalism invites competition and innovation because it's measured on consumerism. These big game companies (and Hollywood for that matter) became complacent in thinking that they control the market, so they'll do what they want-- shitty movies, buggy games-- because you have no other alternatives. The indie market exists because brave souls decided to use their capital to create an alternative, and in turn a parallel market, and we as consumers buy into it as the better purchase to Hollywood's/the game companies' detriment. Capitalism can save these industries, but not the big ones anymore; they're too big and too distant from the consumer.
I’m rewatching the XFiles, half way through season two now, and the writing is so good. The characters are SO good (such strong, distinct personalities and quips). All those small, vulnerability-showing scenes between Mulder and Scully bring back every emotion. So much of this show is so simple (by today’s standards), and yet I feel more for the XFiles than I do any superhero film. Watching this show takes you back to this glorious time when two decent people built trust and respect and learnt to work together; it’s like a long, cool drink for the mind.
Clint Eastwood liked Don Siegel's work on Invasion of the Body Snatchers because Siegel shot a great movie on a low budget. So Eastwood began an association with him. Eastwood was not a fan of blowing a lot of money to shoot a movie.
My points exactly. Speaking of another Gillian Anderson adjacent movie, I watched House of Mirth instead of The Flash and Blue Beetle and that movie genuinely broke my heart because I cared about Lily Bart and her struggles.
Going back to X-Files, I felt so bad for Scully in the "Irresistible" episode. He father died the previous year and she almost died after being kidnapped by a mad man (this applies to both Duane Barry and Donnie Pfaster) and being experimented on by aliens. She's dealing with a lot of PTSD, and yet she powers through it like a badass.
I like the Jason Blum model: low budgets, big back-end participation. He says this combo incentivizes the creation of better movies, because there's less studio interference (they don't care as much about the movie because the budget is low) and because the talent is motivated to make a great movie because their compensation depends on the box office.
I agree with the idea in practice, but let’s be honest Blum house makes trash.
@@josephmayfield945 Yeah, it only occasionally works but hey at the end of it, we can still have a good laugh at all the bad movies put out by Blumhouse too.
I have so much respect for the Back To The Future crew not greenlighting a cash - grab movie.
I think with the quality of home entertainment systems and streaming services there must be a massive pressure to produce a big-screen experience. Low budget risky movies are done (well) on streaming services. The Fugitive The Firm Mrs Doubtfire and Sleepless in Seattle would all probably be made by streaming services today.
Heck, The Sound of Freedom was acquired by a streaming service.
The Fugitive was based on an old TV show. A "remake".
@@chasejones8302 , I was going to say... a remake, but a good remake. Same with the current Mission Impossible flicks.
Home Alone is another good example.
A present day Back to the Future would send Marty McFly back to 1993. And frankly if I wanted to see a movie about high school in the mid 90s, I'd just watch Clueless which managed to be racially diverse, anti-wealthy, and extremely feminist while also being, you know, good.
I think Sounds of Freedom proves your point. No super effects, so shaking cameras and edgy cameral angles, just a straight shot movie, and because of that it had to survive on a good plot. I liked that I could actually see what was going on in the fight scenes that were taken at - one angle.
It also wasn’t woke
but edgy camera angles are one of the highlights of Sam Raimi's The Evil Dead movie and that was made very cheap
@BuetifullPersun it was activly antiwoke
You can certainly have an expensive movie, but it needs to be grounded in characters we can care about and identify with. Look at T2. Back in '91, its budget was near $100 million (well over $200 million in 2023 dollars). The special effects were cutting-edge for its time, but the movie had heart in developing and exploring the relationships of John and Sarah Connor, along with Schwarzenegger's terminator character. Those elements put together made T2 one of the greatest box office action films ever made. This seems to be lost on Hollywood nowadays.
I would genuinely be on board for a Drinker "recommends" one hour special of low budget high success film study. Start somewhere in the 1960s and bring us to modern day with 40-50 films with low budgets but high value and great entertainment. MadMax, Rocky, Pulp fiction, The Terminator, Taxi, American graffiti, Monty Python, Eastwood westerns.... this list could on . All made 10x their budgets and are still seen today as great productions.
Evil Dead, Clerks...
Yeah. would be happy to see him get into titles that aren't mainstream or have massive marketing behind it. Unfortunately, hate watching/reviewing is the real money maker. Saw a channel that got a huge spike of viewers when High Guardian Spice was the hot shit, then just died out when they started doing something more positive.
@@ItsJustTeddington I'm not sure he really knows much about movies outside of mainstream movies. Like the stuff he upholds as the greatest movies ever made are just blockbusters from his childhood for the most part. I'd be glad to be proven wrong on this, but it seems like he knows very little about "the canon" of great cinema.
@@artirony410this is very true
Sprung to my mind just now to add to the list: The Babadook.
We need more original, and thought provoking films again. Soft reboots, and pointless sequels, and superhero franchises ran their course, but it's safe to say that the time has come to move on from them and get back to stand alone movies that stick with you. "Thelma and Louise", and "The breakfast club" are prime examples of timeless IPS on a tight budget that stick with you decades after their releases. Hopefully soon, we can get back to those days. Great video drinker. 🎉
*Thelma and Louise* would be improved if the car they drove off the cliff was Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Either way, that movie was when the second wave of feminism degenerated into the third wave. That’s when we really started to see the shit hit the fan. I’m just glad my age was almost in double digits by that point so I could have a few good years of childhood under my belt before boys and men became public enemy number one.
It's an escalating energy vampirism reaching its end of possible growth. That's when the stripmining phase begins, with massively diminishing returns and eventual gridlock.
Barbie is thought provoking, it’s why Critical Drinker hated it!
@@sthubbins4038 But it provoked lots of thoughts from him and he voiced them which is what he loves.
UK films and TV Dramas are good, check them out.
There was a little clip there of Akira Kurosawa's Ran. I was reading recently that its budget was $20million dollars (mostly raised by Spielberg and Lucas). Adjusted for inflation, thats around $60million. This, for a huge epic that featured huge samurai armies slaughtering each other on the side of a volcano, and an entire replica castle which was burnt down just to provide a cool framing shot and zero CGI, everything was built from scratch. And it still cost around one fifth of the latest Indiana Jones. There is something very broken about the industry.
You used to be able to see where the money was going on the screen. Not anymore. Everything is the same computerized crap. There is no more magic to it, no more wonder. No more sense of “how did they do it?“ Just “which software did they use and which button did they push?“ There is no artistry to any of this.
You’re leaving out A LOT of variables here. First, this movie was not filmed in the US, where you have strict health and safety regulations. On top of that, each state has varying fees for movie productions. Perhaps this isn’t the case where Ran was filmed. Perhaps the size of the film crew was small on this production. Perhaps the government gave the production a huge tax break for filming a movie promoting Japanese culture. The point is, you’re trying to compare apples and oranges and blaming one particular store because oranges don’t taste like apples
@@eyespy3001 yeah I was gonna say, its very hard to compare movie budgets across countries, and especially across countries. Like Jackie Chan's movie Police Story cost $2 million but there's no way you could've made anything like it for $2 million in the US in 1985. $2 million goes a lot further in a place like Hong Kong
@@artirony410 Precisely. I was actually going to use Hong Kong movie productions- specifically Jackie Chan’s run-and-gun style of filmmaking back in the day- as an example of different standards, but it would’ve made an already long response even longer. Thank you for adding it to the conversation.
One factor you didn't mention is streaming. There is no reason to spend 50$ on gas, parking tickets and popcorn to watch "Mrs. Doubtfire" or "The Firm" in the cinema when you can stream it 3 month later at home. So studios try to make big, expensive spectacles. Movies so massive, that you simply have to watch them on a big IMAX screen. Those movies then cost enormous ammounts of money .
There still IS a market for lower budget theatrical release movies and the industry "experts" don't or won't comprehend this. The "date night" movie is a good example. Going to some big loud spectacle does not make for a good movie experience on "date night", especially with married couples. These movies can be made on low budgets and have enough appeal to make real profits, especially when many of them can be made by the same company in a year.
Sure- Those movies exist. But why would couples go to the theaters for them? They can watch them at home on their couch. The term "Netflix & Chill" exists for a reason.
@@DrunkenPadawanDo you want to stay at home all the time? That's your preference. People have preferences you know.
i have never had a streaming service
i watch all my stuff on physical media
because i dont want to leave it up to the streaming to edit and alter my entertainment
I actually don't really like that idea as much. I mean that's just me. I think theatres are a very iconic part of film and have rightful use with cinema.
Another thing to consider, the ballooning of budgets requires international audiences. That means scripts and dialogue need to be simple so that they aren’t lost in translation.
hmm, if that would be truth anime wouldn't be popular, and nobody would have interest in subtitled movies over dubbed with regional voice actors. If anything watching other cultures, including from my corner, U.S. culture, is stimulating. Believe me, the Death Note adaptation by Netflix, made simpler, is taken as a writing made by simpletons, to simpletons, instead of the story narrated in the manga. I guess movies like Master and Commander wouldn't exist either with this approach to be "open" to the world.
I think the bigger problem would be, that you start to have to take into account the politics of all the other big markets. Like, say, not doing anything that the censors in china finds to offensive to them.
@@ReinoldFZgranted anime is popular but rarely does an anime movie get a wide theatrical release in the us it’s usually just select theaters so although it’s popular it’s kinda niche too
@@ReinoldFZ I agree this is the reality for anime consumers. The problem is American studios BELIEVE others can't understand our culture. They also don't want to cut out things that get censored elsewhere. The difference between theses two industries is that Japan is making stuff for Japanese people but it happens to appeal to international audiences, whereas Americans are making movies to please a strawman "international" movie goer. They seem to think movies need to represent America instead of just entertaining Americans.
@@taln0reichShame they didn't learn anything with Maverick.
There can be a lot of reasons why Hollywood has been failing:
- The general lack of new original content.
- Relying on past IPs or rewriting them, which can promote lazy writing and degraded content.
- There are a plethora of movies more than ever, forcing companies to rely more and more on advertising to pass a product.
- Pushing agendas more importantly than telling a story (Not every movie, obviously).
- Criticizing the audience when the shows fail or do poorly, which is an absolutely dumb move in trying to sell future products.
- Less and fewer people to watch movies, forcing companies to rely even more on trying to promote their product.
There's a whole drinker series of these videos. This is just the latest installment.
You left out terrible writing
Lack of talent from top to bottom. From producers all the way down to writers. In the case of the recent Star Wars movies how unlikable was the main actress? The one person that absolutely had to win the audience over stunk. Take away Robin Williams salary, how much do you think a movie like Dead Poets Society cost to make? Dirt cheap I imagine and better than anything Hollywood is currently able to make. How much do you think Good Will Hunting cost, Shawshank Redemption, etc? these are movies with good writing and good acting, not wiz bang boom. With big budgets you get no story, stifled dialogue, and mostly lots of wiz bang boom. Mostly the script writers in Hollywood today are just awful, they're currently striking, but they should be replaced. You know when Game of Thrones went downhill? you guessed it its when the show got ahead of George R Martin, the Hollywood writers screwed it up. The most horrific recent script writer was Patty Jenkins for Wonder Woman 1984.
Nepotism as well. When you hire someone based on their name or family rather than talents, you get someone lazy who doesn't know how to effectively tell stories. They're also set on telling their own story because it's all about them.
@@destinyhntr Uhm, the armorer on Alec Baldwin's movie comes to mind.
Wow! You must have been working on this one pretty long to get all those clips together. You covered nearly every big movie in the last 50 years. Well done Mate!
Halfway through the video, I stopped listening and started pondering this question. How did he do that? Did you go into each of those movies and cut it out and splice it together? Or is there some AI generation engine that can do this? Because if this was all done by hand, then his editor deserves a big fat raise.
It’s not difficult nor timely to do this y’know.
Yeah I was curious why there were so many random movies shown for a split second nonstop
@@maxthedoomer how do you do it? what's the secret sauce?
One thing I didn't hear you specifically call out, but really adds to the main point being made here is that until streaming services have completely taken over the landscape, movies used to make a lot of money back with VHS/DVD sales. It would be that even if the movie doesn't do well during it's theater release, it still had the chance to turn a decent profit when it was released on VHS/DVD/Blue Ray. But this is no longer a thing and as mentioned, Hollywood studios just aren't taking any chances on anything.
Is this true though? They still get those streaming fees and save all production costs. And they still have all the merchandise rights which can be true game-changer for kids-friendly franchises. Do you think the studios would've gone all streaming when it wasn't profitable?
I'm terrified of A24 getting too big and no longer being afforded the creative freedom that has caused them to become one of my favorite studios
Legit concerns but foreign studios can always make great films too
I could see big studio producers jumping ship when things get worse and moving to A24, and they'd most likely try to clamp down on them like the other studios they ruined.
lol, A24 is one of the most overrated studios ever.
@@fernandofaria2872 eh that’s your opinion they’re not big enough to be overrated but to each their own
@@GringoXalapenoI would say more so certain film are overrated, cause there are some good a24 films and some bad, not the studio overall
They need to go back to practical effects. They need to do 50% practical and 50 % CGI. Fire a lot of actors _and_ writers. Get rid of The Message, and stop erasing European history and stories! Aw Hell, get rid of the entirety of Hollywood. We’ll be better off. Great critique as always Drinker! 👍
Nobody is erasing European history, yt ppl are so dramatic. Imagine how everyone else has felt for like 50 years
@@sabir1208 they are not erasing history, but they are certainly replacing it and distorting it.
The early 2000s was a good time for effects, even if a lot of movies at the time didn't have great CGI. There was plenty of practical effects still being used, while CGI was used to compliment them or for things that practical effects couldn't really pull off. We need to go back to that approach.
Hollywood is slowly eating itself, media is being democratized by the internet, why exactly do these people all stay in Los Angeles? There is no reason to stay there anymore. You can do so much remotely, and there are plenty of places that are more romanitc and interesting for creative people.
It's not an accident, it's called gatekeeping. Price out genuine talent and/or dissenting opinions, monopolize on propaganda. Same thing has happened with video games
The mainstream videogame scene is even worse than mainstream TV over the past few years, I dare say. Once upon a time videogames were essentially the one media outlet, the one sanctuary, largely untouched/unsubverted by progressive cartel that dominates just about every other industry today. Then BioWare happened, dialogue-intensive roleplaying games with a focus on romance became the next frontier, and now it's all but required for every game to have LGBTLMNOP++++ 'romance' options. Even in AC:Valhalla they made half the vikings homosexual, which is absurd given it was a capital crime in viking society.
To add onto the above, it's hard to miss how upset people get if every society in every video game isn't this perfect mix of global representation. People got upset at Final Fantasy XVI because the predominantly western European inspired world of swords, sorcery, and kingdoms wasn't a bastion of representation. It's getting exhausting to engage with AAA gaming because either the developers put revisionist history nonsense into their games to try to be as non-controversial as possible, or they don't cater to that crowd and get crucified for having a game vision and bringing it to life without compromise.
@@vladivanov5500AC went woke since Unity. Stop playing their games since. Anime is the only entertainment that's safe that's because The people in power (which by that I mean the Dems/lefts) have no power over what Japan does. That's why the left been going after Anime and Manga for years but can't really touch them. Sure their been a few force stuff. Like MHA had a T person in it. But they were quickly killed off because people in Japan know that crap don't sell. They only put it in the show to please the lefts.
@@Necrofitz
Preach.
Indie games or older games are virtually the only avenues for good ass shit without worrying about problems. Sometimes, even if they have problems, they’re still better because they’re still fundamentally good games. You’re also not having to spend $60+ for over 100 gb’s of game
Yep, monopolies develop due to the driving force of capitalism pushing for competitive self-interest, profit maximization and infinite growth - and they we wonder why we don't have as many nice Mom and Pop shops in town, or unique indie films or video games or music being offered to us? Corporate capture is late stage capitalism and that's where we will be until we start creating a better system.
WE can do that, but only if we recognize the root problem and start taking steps, using a shared strategy to make it better. One Small Town is trying, other groups like it are developing something. We can all at least share good thought-provoking media and connect that way.
I am convinced this era of film making (if you can even call most of this drab shite "film") is the equivilant to the music industry's "loudness war" era. Spectacle and bombastic face-slapping in place of anything with artistic merit. It will pass, but not without leaving a terrible stain on cinematic history.
Well said, and the watering down of creativity for ever more predicability is comparable too. Music gets less and less creative, involves more and more producers, costs more and more money....risk and creativity is out the window and things get generic to the point of everything being basically the same thing wearing a slightly different hat.
Slightly looking at my Eurodance and Nu Metal CDs far in the back of my CD collection... urgh the stains hurt to this day. xD
Unfortunately, the end of the loudness war has been followed by the pandemic of auto-tune.
It’s the modern example of doing more with less. Some examples that come to mind are “The Blair Witch Project” and “Saw”.
Or the early Tarantino movies or anything by Kevin Smith. God, Kevin Smith's career started when he maxed out his credit card to make a black and white art house film. Or really, any of the franchises that they are killing into the ground -- Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Star Trek, Terminator and many others started out as fairly low budget endeavors. Or best example of all, Mad Max, budget of beer and pocket lint, made 100 million in 1979. All on good story.
Horror movies are still pretty good with this. They're more niche than your typical blockbuster but it doesn't matter because they're financially viable.
@@supermax64 Only good recent horror is Megan.
@@supermax64 Exactly. Smile had a budget of "just" 17 million USD, had relatively few characters which I only really just considered now because I was invested in the characters and the story. It made $217 million back.
Hollywood could make 15 movies at those budgets and get more back overall instead of chancing it on a single 300 million USD "bet".
Yesterday I watched "The Straight Story". An older film and arguably it wasn't expensive at all to make. No fancy special effects or anything. But damn it was so good. The visual storytelling and the overall tone and mood of the film struck a chord within me.
David Lynch FTW!
David Lynch hit another home run with this Richard Farnsworth-headed film. Beautiful!
Also, 'Tender Mercies' with the incomparable Robert Duvall. Free if you look for it!
This is a problem my partner and I were complaining about after watching the original Aladdin, the Aladdin remake, and Lilo and Stich baick-to-back.
These three films revealed a bit of a paradox. You would think that having a bigger budget would mean that the film would be able to do more large-scale things, but it actually means the opposite. For example, compare the original Aladdin's climax to the remake's climax. The original featured a sinister looking Genie ripping the palace out of its foundations and placing it on a large secluded hill while Aladdin is flying around desperately to get him to stop, Jafar using magic in a variety of fiendishly evil ways to try and slow the protagonists down, and it all culminates in the iconic cobra fight. The remake meanwhile just has a boring CGI chase with a giant Iago. The fun scenes we see in the original could not happen because it would be too expensive to make those scenes look good. Hell, they couldn't even make the boring alternatives look good.
Then we both watched Lilo and Stitch. And the only thought we had looking at all the amazing alien designs, beautiful watercolor backgrounds, and that fun chase scene at the end with Stitch driving an 18-wheeler into a volcano, was "How the fuck does Disney think they can do any of this justice using CGI?!"
A lot of people in Hollywood have made complaints about the disappearance of low budget movies that were often produced in the 1970's to the early 2000's. Those were the years where studios could give to newbies the opportunity to show their talents without spending too much money on marketing for instance.
All the greatest directors like Spielberg, Scorsese and so on had their chances in Hollywood because of this kind of production. If it failed it was no big deal but if it worked even a little it was a bonus for the studio and a great step for the young director.
Even for writers too. You could have unknown writers getting known. There was always a risk but it was part of the success of Hollywood for years. To dare bringing new talents that can express themselves freely. That's the whole point of arts. The producers has the knowledge of the industry and funds while the director has the skills and the creativity.
Now it's so expensive that they can't even take the risk of making arts. Producers make the movie from A to Z by making sure they won't lose any dollar or at least the less possible. Therefore it's at best mid and a little entertaining, at worst dull and ugly.
There are no legend no more. Nothing is classic and thought to last for years.
When I used to be involved in projects at a major media company I noticed that the more budget you had the less free you where to do what you want. Once you have budget you have a committee of people second guessing every decision.
The only thing worse than a movie ruled/created by a committee is a tv series ruled/created by commitee( "Earth: Final Conflict" as an example).
Art by committee can't end well.
I’m actually pretty depressed about this. My young children will never have the same experience from contemporary movies that I had as a teenager working in the local movie theater back in the day. From Jurassic Park to Forrest Gump, from Independence Day to The Green Mile, from Armageddon to Schindler’s List, from Braveheart to Gladiator, and you name it - we had it all. I’m reliving it all right now and they’re watching along. But they’ll never experience this level of quality in their own lifetime. Hollywood destroyed it all.
Yeah but they’ll have onlyfans 😂
Nah you’re right society is fucked. Home school your kids
I feel like 1990's and early 2000's were the last Golden Age of movies. All movies you listed are still on my watchlist, I rewatch theam often and they never ever get boring. Meanwhile, I can't remember the last contemporary movie I felt like watching again
@@kria9119that's actually a great question what is the most recent movie that you actually want to watch more then once. Most of mine are from the late 70s to the early 80s.
I mean, this seems to be a pretty blackpilled mindset. Aside from the fact that no one said that level of quality can't return, they'll probably just grow up with their own movies to relive.
@@RambleOn07 For me, it's all stuff within the last 10 years.
Your comments on scope and stakes in modern movies gelled with a half-formed thought that's been kicking around in the back of my mind for a while.
I just recently watched the original Blade Runner for the first time on Max (yea I know, I'm _very_ late to that party...) and I was shocked that such a beloved and talked about movie had such a small scope and limited plot. I'm definitely not saying that's at all a bad thing, just the opposite as the small and limited scope of the plot left plenty of room for character development and meaningful ideas to be explored fully. But for a movie that's praised for it's ground breaking visuals and narrative structure I was honestly expecting a story that was quite a bit bigger than what I got, mostly because of the glut of huge stakes, big budget blockbusters that have been all too common lately, and if I'm being completely honest, it was somewhat refreshing that Blade Runner was such a smaller, simpler story - no end of the world shenanigans, no society shattering conspiracies or hidden global agendas being uncovered, just a regular dude doing his job and working a single case just like hundreds of other cases he and his colleagues have worked before.
And even with the (still to this day) impressive sets and visual effects shots, that movie only cost 30 million to make in 1982 dollars, which today would have been just a hair under 95 million, which is still a hefty chunk of change but less than a third of the shallow, empty eye candy blockbusters of today.
One of my favorite films.
The visuals were stunning to an audience that had seen nothing like it before.
@@scottslotterbeck3796 For sure, they're still damn impressive today and the fact that they're backed up with well developed characters and a well written story is even better.
For similar reasons it's why I love Dredd with Karl Urban.
He's not saving the city, it's just another day dealing with the worst of Mega city 1and tomorrow will be more of the same.
Another point that should be made on this topic is the reliance on overseas markets. Because these movies are increasingly more and more expensive, Hollywood needs to rely further and further on international markets to make up the difference. A side effect of this practice is that the stories being told need to be modified. A very specific story about Greenvile, NC with a complicated plot doesn't translate well, so the risk-averse decision-makers prefer to make Transformers instead.
Yep. You can see that with the relative disappearance of the sports movie, and the change in the nature of them too. The overseas market dosn't much buy movies about baseball or gridiron. But a soccer movie appeals more widely.
If a huge movie 'flops' at the BO, that can still be a win for the studio, depending on just how much engagement their property has received online. This seems to have been Disney's strategy over the past few years. Manufacture as much controversy as possible, spend as much money as possible, create the no.1 conversation piece in the world at any given moment. They don't seem to give a fuck about asses on seats in cinemas anymore.
It's only now really starting to backfire on them. Hence why we've got content leaving Disney+ in order to cut losses. I predict 2024 onwards will see a shift in strategy. Either that or fall upon their own sword, and can you honestly imagine Disney doing that?? They shouldn't be happy carrying on as a hate figure.
Though I get why their debt's finally breaking their wallets, I don't get what positive effect that expensive box office flops did for their bottom line. Only gain I can see is staying in the ESG good graces so they didn't lose their credit lines.
No, Disney has toys, theme parks, ad revenue/streaming to fall back on. They could afford to flop, and when it was slowly happening, they thought nothing of it, but now they're flopping so hard, it's going to affect, one, if not all of their other sources of income.
Also, Netflix's drop in popularity propelled Disney+ to a new height, which boosted their ego even more, but then Netflix stabilized and Marvel phase 3 ended, and we all know what happened after that
My favorite rebuttal of ADHD-bait, bright-lights and big explosion fetish modern movies is simply The Empath. As in, Star Trek TOS S03E12 "The Empath." The writer of the episode, Joyce Muskat, was working at a local theater at the time, and wanted her story to be shot on a bare, surreal set, like a stage play that focused on the characters. And that's all you got! A bare stage with nothing but a black curtain backdrop for the entire episode! Oh and of course the actors, doing actual acting and engaging in interesting and compelling dialog! And the bare-bones premise works! The episode is gripping and memorable and holds your attention from start to finish. What could flashy special effects and a multi-million dollar budget possibly add?
IMO take any modern movie and imagine it stripped down to nothing but a real life stage production. If you can imagine the story and acting as still compelling even as a stage-play, then it's probably a great movie where the special effects are just bonus. But if you can only imagine the stage play version with inane dialog, nonsense plot and terrible acting, then likely the movie itself is just bad regardless of its pretty effects.
Not to mention that episode was DeForest Kelley's (Bones) personal favorite.
"What could flashy special effects and a multi-million dollar budget possibly add?"
Variety.
If every movie and episode of a TV show was shot the same way, then even if the acting and writing could hold up, it would get bland and boring very fast; Going from a special artistic choice to pretentious and overused schlock.
@@OzixiThrill I think that question was both A. rhetorical and B. slightly hyberbolic, in order to prove a larger point. That being being that special effects are supposed to enhance the script, not replace it, and a good enough script might not even need big effects in the first place. Obviously you shouldn't actually make every product that way, but you should also try to imagine sometimes as a quick way to gauge how compelling the script actually is.
I'd say that rather than a stage play, go even further: Imagine the book version of it. Or just literally reading the script. Or your friend saw the movie first and is talking about their favorite scene, explaining some of the stuff they love about it. Not even any actors, just a situation where you have to imagine everything yourself.
Does it still feel like something that would make you go "I would love to see that (as a) movie!" or is it just... Bland and boring because the flashy effects were all there really was to it?
If the script is strong enough to work even when the movie is stripped down to "just" a stage play or even a book, the special effects can elevate it to true greatness. But if the script is inane garbage, it's more than likely it's probably only used to hide how there's actually nothing there.
Not the entire episode, but most of it was for the Vian lab/torture chamber scenes. And the black background worked because the set pieces that were used for those scenes now stood out in sharp, harsh contrast, like Linke and Ozaba's tubes with their bodies twisted in their death agony in it or the torture chamber itself. It helped focus the audience on those things, and the actors, just like in a theatrical play.
It also helped in keeping the budget down for the episode, since other than the science station set, there wasn't much new in terms of props. It was all action on the Enterprise (standing sets), the planet's surface (again, existing standing sets), and then minimal sets for the Vian lab and torture equipment.
Yup. Also, science fiction shows back then tended to be worked on by actual science-fiction writers and not by dude-bros who didn't care about the franchise.
It’s interesting how this contrasts with the market for horror films. We get a ton of variety in the horror genre, both in terms of quality and subject matter, because horror films demand a much lower budget and turn a profit much more reliably than other movies. I think this is because we have different expectations for horror movies than other genres that makes it easier to take risks as well.
A lot of horror movies work well in confined spaces, making many of them fall into the "bottle film" category. Smaller sets, fewer actors, and since it needs to be scary and realistic, theres a good reason to implement as many practical effects as possible.
Horror can be expensive, but its clearly also flexible enough for low budget productions to thrive.
Well onown to; ndie filmmakers.
Dramas are a tougher gig. Unless you have a bankable star, forget it!
One neglected genre is soft-core porn, like 'Desert Heart' or the Emanuelle films. Beautiful scenery, wonderful locals, beautiful people, just titilatting enough.
I guess raw, hardcore porn everywhere that leaves nothing to the imagination has ruined that
Go check out those older masterpieces.
@@deadturret4049horror films use cgi
@@fritzthecat8158 I included quality in variety for a reason. The horror genre has higher highs, but also lower lows. I was also only comparing the current horror market to the current rest of the film market. Not current horror to past horror.
Even then, Society and Basket case are certainly creative, but I wouldn’t call them good. There are better examples of 80’s horror. Imo current horror and 80s horror are too different to compare. There are tons of great movies from the 80s and tons from recent years. We don’t have to pick one or the other.
@@deadturret4049 Exactly.
"If the movie stinks. Just don't go."
Jay Sherman, The Critic.
I watched it years ago in it's short run. Re-watching DVDs thru the public library. Still funny and acerbic in its mockery of Hollywood bullshit. I cut off cable 5 years ago, own a cache of classic well-written movies, and get the fewer recent good movies from my public library. People are suckers if they're still paying for cable and streaming....and still continually being pissed off at most of what Hollywood studios offer and being manipulated by rage-baiting... PLUS I still believe there's a lotta money laundering involved. I worked for a film distribution company in the 1980s, and the booking orders listed how Disney/Paramount/Fox got just 50% of the gross or whatever....when the studios brag about about "how much this movie made....", it's not mentioned about the theater's/distributors' cut.." Hollywood " is full of liars. It's all about "creative" bookkeeping....
One movie I saw recently which I loved as a kid but never saw as an adult was the mummy with Brendan Fraser, seeing that movie made me realize just how shit most movies have become, it was all action comedy and romance and didn’t have a single beat about politics or views, just a guy beating a mummy and getting the girl in the end and the story, practical effects and scenes still hold up, what the fu~k happened to movies nowadays
Rachel Weisz was gorgeous in that movie!!
That's what I liked about the movie, no politics. There's enough of that blasted everywhere else we look.
It also had a budget of $80 million. But while most of the CGI effects don't hold up well, the fact that most of the action and explosions were practical really does say something.
I love this movie and Brendan Fraser
They proved the point of cash grabbing though with 3 absolute garbage sequels.
I was surprised that Oppenheimer was only at 100 million in its budget. It certainly used its budget well and it therefore was a hit even with another film making more money than it week to week.
Because it wasn't laundering money disguised as a woke shit production.
Nolan knows what he is doing. He is one of the few directors who will get me to watch his work sight unseen. He does not always hit, but he is always original and competent.
@@chuckhoyle1211 I even liked Tenet for trying something new and for some of its action set pieces. Not my favorite film of his but I had fun with it.
This video is extremely well said. It could probably be used as a landmark for future reference to when the movie industry was at its all time low.
Thanks for another insightful video, Drinker. Please keep them coming. For some reason, when you mentioned the tendency of studio bigwigs to meddle in (and ultimately diminish) the films they produce, I couldn’t help but remember the story about how studio execs INSISTED that the American version of Ridley Scott’s “Blade Runner” just HAD TO have a voiceover narration, despite the fact that both Scott and Harrison Ford were vehemently opposed to adding it - and most retrospective reviews maintain that the voiceover was basically a crap idea.
On the other hand, when “Rocky” was released in 1976, the studio thought it was a big risk and that it possibly wouldn’t do very well at the box office. However they decided they were willing to risk making “Rocky” because they had another film called “New York, New York” that was coming out the same year, and that “NY, NY” would hopefully be successful enough to cover “Rocky”’s expected losses. Ironically, the exact opposite is what actually happened. “Rocky” ended up covering for “NY, NY,” which did poorly at the box office.
As a final example, when George Lucas screened a preliminary cut of the original “Star Wars” for his colleagues and close friends back in 1976-77, they all thought it was bizarre. In fact, quite famously, Brian De Palma sarcastically asked Lucas the question, “Hey George, what’s a wookie?” and laughed. (To his credit, Steven Spielberg liked “SW,” though. But he was in the minority at the time.)
With all these examples of studio execs being wrong about what works and what doesn’t, you’d think they’d be more humble about weighing in so much… but nah.
To add to that some more recent examples from animation, Jeffrey Katzenberg at Disney thought that "Pocahontas" was going to knock everything out of the park and it was considered the A movie while the B movie project the rest of Disney was working on in the interim just to kill time turned out to be "The Lion King". That same man also wanted to cut the song "Part of Your World" from "The Little Mermaid" because ONE kid got squirmy during a test screening and Howard Ashman, and a bunch of the creative staff fought tooth and nail to keep that song in because they knew how important it was to the story and Ariel's character.
To be fair, Brian De Palma was certainly not the target audience of Star Wars, especially considering people didn't take sci-fi seriously at that time
This is something I've been saying for a few years now and I'm so happy someone else is saying it too. I know it "flopped" but a $50m film like Dredd could be easily compensated by a $50m film like Deadpool while putting out a wider variety of movies that people want to actually see rather than one big one people might see once.
Now is the time for a Dredd sequel.
A lot of great points here. It's also absurd how many shows there are on streaming services, and maybe 1% of them is even worth watching. I hope something drastic happens to the industry that makes them focus on quality over quantity again.
AI will write dreary, un-watchable films that we turn off halfway through.
Just like today.
@@scottslotterbeck3796 Using a story generating AI, I've read better stories (Or at least snippets of stories) than most of the stuff published, and especially self-published stuff today.
It needs to crash
Exactly. Two weeks ago, I watched Avatar 2 and Fall. The former left me with a yawn and vague feeling of distaste, the latter had me amazed how two relatively unknown actresses managed to carry a film that played out almost exclusively on a tiny platform. That was skill!
*latter then former
Nay, Former refers to something that is first in the order of two or more things. Latter refers to something that is either second in a group of two things or last in a group of several.@@90viper90
Man, I love your analyses!!! It's amazing how many other critics are keeping to the politicly correct reviews, god forbid they should come out as "misogynistic" by giving an honest thorough analysis...
There's only one other critic that has a similar style/depth as you, which is "Smack talk."
Would love to see a crossover... 😊
I think the death of DVD's (and physical medias) also played a big role in the killing of that part of the industry, since they don't have that "second wind" of cash, which in the past helped alot of movies to gain fame even thou they werent a hit in the cinemas
Streaming was supposed to make that easier not harder. Well, not the first lie told about the potential of streaming services.
True plus the fall of DVDs was further exasperated by Covid with folks not going to the Cinema and instead choosing to use streaming services at home, although the Cinema experience has slowly recovered to an extent with the removal of restrictions there's very little incentive to buy DVDs these days now that folks have realised they can just wait until a popular movie is available on Disney+, Prime, HBO, etc (sometimes not even bothering with the Cinema in the first place).
It kinda goes hand in hand with the destruction of physical media and the attempts to preserve entertainment/art in its original state (E.g; the unedited original SW trilogy).
It was all about what was more convenient for the studios, not what was more enjoyable for viewers.
The only incentive to buy a DVD is when that’s the only format something is available in.
@@lynxfresh5214but arent they making some good money of the streaming services like they used to from dvds?
You know, you showed extremely short clips of movies made in the 90s and 80s and I instantly named and remembered the entire plot of them. I honestly don't remember most movies released in the past 10 or 15 years. Even when shown clips of them. It's a struggle to just remember the name. It's not that they are bad, it's worse. They're bland.
I’m starting to believe the massive production costs are to offset something sinister behind the scenes… money laundering? I’m not sure… but it’s insane how so many movies can be so bad and so expensive
Universal appears to be the only studio honestly reporting box office statistics. Otherwise they would be claiming *Bros* grossed a billion and *The Super Mario Bros. Movie* flopped.
#ReReleaseMario
Also the balloning budgets are from companies wanting to get their cut before it releases. Breaking even already covers what they earned/were paid while it was being developed. By minimizing profits you reduce residuals you need to pay.
Child trafficking, most likely....
Because they’re like universities/colleges- required to have DEI reps, equity managers, diversity hires that require another hire to fix the many fuckups of the diversity hire, script writers and script rewriters because said script just isn’t woke enough, on-locations therapists, therapists for the therapist, all the different food requirements, the God-forsaken CGI needs, etc., and suddenly you’re into multibillion dollar territory with not much hope of even breaking even.
Hollywood accounting is a real thing, that happens for a variety of reasons: taxes, not paying percentage of profit, etc. Look it up, it's an open secret that they setup a shell company per movie, and do a lot of shenanigans with the costs and profits.
I remember Andre from Midnights Edge pointing out how studio meddling isn't always bad. Sometimes it is justified. Like imagine if you're a film studio and you've managed to raise $10 million for a low budget, but good quality action film. The plot is simple, but engaging, and it's stylish with a lot of effort put into the fight choreography in the vein of John Wick. It's intended to be a crowd-pleaser that'll hopefully make about $80 million in the theatres and maybe $20 million in Blu-Ray sales. Over-all, a very solid investment that'll put your little studio on the map and help you raise funds for more projects.
However, you made the mistake of hiring a director who has a few good movies under his belt and looked great on paper for a hire. But during production, it turns out he's one of those artistic douchebags that's hard to work with, inconsistent and demanding with the production crew and he constantly insists on adding in these long and, frankly, boring scenes that'll throw the whole pacing and tone of the movie off when you just want a stylish, crowd pleasing action film. You have to intervene to save the project and the future of your studio. In these instances, studio meddling is completely justified.
They hired the wrong person then, a mindless movie deserves a mindless director. In one scenario a director might be an "artistic douchebag" and in another, a master. If Disney hired Judorowsky to do the next star wars (I would love that tbh), who is to blame when things don't go as planned?
I watched quigley down under again yesterday. I think it's my favorite movie of all time. The attention to detail with the weapons and clothing is awesome. The narrative has perfect focus and scope. The acting is amazing. It's a film that could have spawned three more films, but it didn't...and it's perfect that way.
I love that film. It has such personality.
I said I didn't have much use for revolvers. Never said I couldn't use one.
@@Laneous14 - 🤣
I love that movie.
That's a great movie!
This man speak the truth. One of the many reasons movies fail is that invest too much into the budget and not the film itself.
They spend way to much money on bad writing and bad character development
True, movies are soulless these days they look good but dead inside you don't care about the characters becouse they are unrelatable becouse = Politics.
This is an extension of what's wrong with the videogames industry.
Shit like Destiny 2 amd Cyberpunk 2077 and Halo 6. Good visuals are NOT a novelty anymore. There's people in basements that render AAA studio level visuals and footage.
Cinema used to be an experience like Reservoir Dogs and The Bourne Supremacy and Batman Begins, not sensory overload like Thor Love and Blunder.
After a point, good visuals without a good story starts to induce boredom and sleep.
The way movies are marketed these days is a major contributor to the problems you described. Way back when "ET" was on the screens, a movie was released at a few hundred to a thousand theaters at first. Profits were churned into making more "prints" of the movie and released through a few more theaters. If it failed, it failed only at a few theaters, and losses were more manageable. The market was driven by word-of-mouth. Nowadays, distributors blew their full wad on massive releases in thousands of theaters, and losses were more massive. Nowadays, the market is driven by expensive ad campaigns; they have to turn a profit before audiences can find out how terrible the movie is. By comparison, "ET" was in the theaters for a year; "Avengers: End Game" was in the theaters three weeks.
Bro Endgame was in theaters for over 30 weeks
Movies used to open small, in a few big cities. Not more than few hundred prints. From there it was hoped that movie critics in major magazines and newspapers and word of mouth would fan the flames a bit before opening in smaller markets.
@@Jonathan-A.C. According to International Movie Data Base (IMDB), both our sources are incorrect. Endgame's official theatrical release dates were from April 26 through September 12, 2019. That's twenty (not three or thirty) weeks.
That doesn't make losses manageable. The cost of the prints wasn't zero but that was hardly the bottleneck. The cost is in making a movie and flopping in a few hundred theaters just means you make back even less of your investment.
Saying that it was mostly word of mouth is also blatantly false. TV, radio, Billboard and newspaper adds were used for as long as there were movies.
@@AmericanActionReport
You’re correct. I had that confused with a number for Avatar
Something similar is happening with the video game industry: Ubisoft recently canned a sequel to one of its smaller, original IPs to bring those developers over to another Assassin's Creed. In theory, 40% more developers = higher quality game, but also bigger teams = bigger budget and experience shows that large budgets = huge financial pressure to turn a big profit. What does this equal? Safe, generic, "little bit of everything", creatively compromised blobs of games that might look pretty and be liked by everyone for a while, but end up being loved by no one. Products from those kinds of producers end up being confused, bland, unfocused, undercooked, and ultimately dispassionate.
To think, all that man-power and money could be put into projects that are smaller, more creative, and more profitable in the long run.
Consider this. I watched an MST3K movie this weekend called Robot Monster, made in 1953. It's considered to be one of the worst movies ever, BUT, it only cost $16,000 to make and took in $1,000,000 at the box office.
Also consider, how many great movies, were also done with low budgets. Clerks, Blair Witch, Pulp Fiction, Mad Max, the Original Halloween. These movies were all done on the cheap, are now iconic, and turned a huge profit.
All those movies were character-driven, not effects driven. That's why they could be made cheap. Acting and story had to keep the viewer's attention when effects were too expensive. "Halloween" is an outstanding example. As cheaply as that movie was made it could have been made even CHEAPER if necessary. The whole thing could have been shot on a good camcorder.
@@davestang5454 Even the original Star Wars was made for only $11 million.
@@davestang5454 The Terminator was low budget too, yes the film is carried by the characters but also by the sfx of the terminator and Arnie pulling off the performance of a machine. Lower budgets due to being "character driven" matters little to the majority of the audience and box office, it factors in to the budget but not at the box office. The point being made is that movies can be made with low budgets and still be big hits. Regardless of being character driven or spectacle driven.
@@williampilling2168 i think 11 mil was a lot back then though, inflation costs effect hollywood too
@itsakindamagik5891 $11 Million would translate to about $46 Million in 2019. Compare that to the $275 Million that was spent in 2019 on The Rise of Skywalker.
This series continues to be fantastic because you really hammer home why some modern movies tend to feel lifeless while others stand out for going against the norm and audiences seem to be more aware of this thus more big BO bombs while giving their attention and money to movies that deserve it.
Back in the day even though the internet existed I wasn't tech savvy enough to find any movie reviews. If you wanted movie reviews you had to watch Siskel and Ebert babble about why horrible movies are great to prop up their hollywood friends. Maybe a newspaper review from someone equally as stuffy. People have such better word of mouth and ability to find reviews now and the reviews are so much better. I never have to watch Velma when I can just watch funny people dunk on it instead.
@@Drak976 It's gonna be more entertaining at least and the reviews are more informative. It also helps you discover something you never would have thought you'd be interested in until someone really breaks it down like when I found Shape of Water through a review from Chris Stuckmann.
I live in Japan and overall the quality is much better than Hollywood. There are far more small budget and no budget movies here which leads to more risk-taking and also allows the filmmakers of tomorrow to cut their teeth. They also have better master/apprentice-type relationships here with senior directors helping mentor younger filmmakers.
"The Legend and Butterfly" is a great Movie
@@Takeda_Katsuyori Why do you say that, please? Mind if you explain why that movie's great?
I thought Legend and Butterfly was great because of how it portrayed the transformation of Nobunaga. It did not insult the viewer’s intelligence with a lot of explanation. Also, the action was quite good and how the interaction between Nobunaga and his wife
But it’s not just Legend and Butterfly. Blue Giant was also great. Monster was also great. Shin Kamen Rider was really good.
I so love you Critical Drinker! You clarify so accurately what is wrong with Hollywood these days. You've obviously studied the structural aspects of storytelling and scriptwriting, character creation and development, acting, production, direction, and the process of financial backing and marketing of films. I mean for Christ's sake! Just give us a good story with characters we care about, and villains we love to hate, or, even love. (Darth Vader comes to mind, with the love/hate thing on villains.)
The underlying problem isn't new but I agree that it has gotten worse. Several hit movies were initially turned down by studios who didn't think they would make money including American Graffiti, My Big Fat Greek Wedding, and the original Star Wars.
I recently heard a story that Peter Jackson lied to get Lord of the Rings made. They turned him down when he said he wanted to do them all at once so he agreed to make one film and let the studio decide if the sequels would be worth it. He took the money and filmed a little bit of all three movies but not enough to make anything, ultimately telling the studio that if they wanted a finished product they had to fund the whole trilogy up front. They took the risk rather then write off the millions already spent.
The story I heard was that Jackson had gone to nearly every studio with a plan to make TWO LOTR movies, (and had been turned down) but when he went to New Line the Executive said "I'm confused...there are THREE books, so why don't you want to make three movies?" Jackson said "Yeah, I think that would probably work." and history was made.
@@michaelnash2138 That's the story that's told in the DVD extras on one of the trilogy, just don't ask me which one.
The version I heard was that the folks running New Line Cinema knew the place was almost certainly about to get shut down thanks to it recently being acquired, so they figured they were gonna lose their jobs whether _LoTR_ did well or not, and putting down for the full set would keep the company around for longer before the new owners could unwind everything.
Then the movies performed superbly, and New Line looked like geniuses.
@@boobah5643 To be fair it was quite a risk not 1 year before the D&D movie came out and it was just so incredibly horrible. The fact that LOTR was so good really is a testament.
@@martindixon54 That's where I heard it. Also read it in a magazine. I suppose that's the story Jackson wants people to believe, whether it's true or not.
I was re-watching the old Bond movies with my family, and found it really quite interesting to note the difference in scale of the 'big' finale/fight scenes there compared to modern movies. The Bond films were *famous* (for their era) for massive, over-the-top fight scenes, with hundreds of ninjas rappelling into a volcano-rocket-base, space marines brawling in orbit, scuba-gunmen fighting underwater, and the like.
But compared to modern films? You see 'bigger' (in terms of raw numbers of actors, cgi or not, and effects) fights in almost every scene in a modern film. Just watching the clips here from this Drinker video made me feel almost exhausted, trying to follow the massive complexity of what was on-screen. And it's all so meaningless - for all that scale, the fight scenes mean nothing more (at best) than any of the much-smaller battle scenes in the finale of a Bond film.
I know several channels have covered the whole 'scale =/= quality' of a fight scene in a movie, but this really illustrated the comparison for me.
What a good movie needs is not ever bigger action scenes. It needs what the drinker often refers to as "stakes", on a proportionate level. Because the stakes have gone up as well: with Bond it's sometimes about the fate of the world, but often about something smaller, like a critical piece of military tech, or even just money. But now? When it's not just the world at stake but all other worlds, the universe, or even the multiverse... we stop caring. Just as we the audience need to be able to relate to the characters, we need to be able to relate to the stakes as well. Do that on the right scale, and a gunfight between 20 guys can become more poignant and interesting than any given MCU mega-battle.
@@kaasmeester5903For example: Tombstone, Kill Bill, and possibly the best of all; the final confrontation in the original Infernal Affairs, though the diner scene in Heat is an all-time classic too in terms of tension vs stakes.
I mean, which is better: The Ultron 'battle' in Age of Ultron, or the cliff fight in Last of the Mohicans?
"Nobody" just has a guy getting the crap beaten out of him in (mostly..) a bus.
@@kaasmeester5903 I don't need men butchered by the million by machine-guns or death rays - we have enough of that in real life. Give me two men, pistols at dawn, and make me care about them, make me understand why each hates the other and believes himself to be in the right. Make me uncertain of the outcome, and make me uncertain as to what outcome I should desire. Modern film is the same as modern warfare: indiscriminate destruction. At least two men sizing each other up at twenty paces have the human capacity to hate.
Movies dont need to actually be expensive, they just need to look expensive. The best filmmakers are able to utilize special techniques and tricks to make their films look relatively more expensive than they actually are, and this helps to satisfy the best of both worlds. Audiences are drawn in by the seemingly high level of polish and professionalism, and film studios have a much better chance of achieving a higher profit margin, since their expenses are significantly lower.
check the movie "upgrade"(2018) if you want to see an example of good writing and directing with low budget, in modern times. If that movie had a little chance to advertise itself more, it would be a great hit at least. But nope, big studios tended to shoot hollow sequels..
I remember that film - great low budget sci-fi horror that's on par with "Vivarium" and "Await Further Instructions." We need more films like those today...
to me, a lot of movies have long seemed more like showcases for special effects studios, than movies telling an interesting story.
Now I watch films from the 50s and 60s that are much simpler but tell stories that I like.
Thanks to modern cinema, I was able to discover the old!
The problem is, when you say a movie cost 100 million and it's 100 million in distribution and 100 million in marketing, you think executives, distributors and marketers as separate people, and that is what they do to justify movies losing money.
I found Elemental fascinating, that they had the assembled minds of the best comedy writers in the industry and couldn’t write a single joke or humorous reference in 90 minutes of cartoon.
That's because wokeness kills comedy.
@@1992holycrapThere's no wokeness in that movie though?? Like bruh, it's a generic cutesy heterosexual romance story.
@@helion_ut Except there is. The man is a pussy and the woman is a badass who gives up on her dream of owning her dad's restaurant because why not. It's point about racism makes no sense because the fire people can KILL THE OTHER RACES.
@@1992holycrap Everything's "woke" to you sheep.
@@helion_ut What you're saying is true, but on a much broader scale he's right, nowadays thanks to woke culture most comedy must remain completely inoffensive in every conceivable way. Not that clean humor is inherently bad, but when it's so clean and especially bland that a G-rated film could be considered a Hard R, you start to notice a decline.
Look at stand up routines of old and compare them to today's, comedy is trash now because God fucking forbid someone somewhere will take offense to it.
I remember when T2's budget was considered insanely huge, but now it's almost modest.