Entertaining sure, but entertaining for a specific (albeit large) audience. There are countless other audiences for movies that are just being increasingly ignored by Hollywood for the past few decades.
I’m gonna nudge your sentence a little bit to make it sound both more realistic and much worse at the same time:
The implication here is that it used to be you could make a bad LAZY movie and still profit.
A bad movie can be full of passion, it can be an interesting failure.
A lazy movie is phoning it in; it has the opposite of passion; here is where all we see is suits with Ferraris and sycophantic (corporate ass-licking) writers and directors.
I admit prior to the pandemic I wouldn’t have minded going to a somewhat mediocre but kinda entertaining movie as part of a night out. Now it is too expensive and the theaters are depressing shadows of their former selves and unless I 100% know a movie is good and can get 2-3 family members to agree I’m not going to a theater.
I think something else that has happened is the breadth of available media in the streaming age means it is easy for individuals to find a show or movie that fits their individual tastes. No compromise needed. I know in my house getting everyone to agree to watch a single show or movie is impossible. No way we’re all piling in the car, driving through ridiculous traffic to sit in a dirty theater that smells like warmed over urinal cakes to watch something none of us are particularly interested in. Why do that when I can chill watching reruns of Stargate SG-1, my spouse is rocking Tik Tok, my kid is watching Twitch?
Movies as a collective experience died circa 2020.
This is true, otherwise these movies would be shelved. Instead they deny reviewers and rush em out to try and scam some money out of people who can only afford to go to the movies every so often
The implication here is that it used to be you could make a bad movie and still profit. Lmao what a fucking asshole.
That was true, though.
In 2018, a Venom movie got a 31% Rotten Tomatoes score, and made $856 million.
Audience score of 80% though. Critics have hated superheroes for decades now.
Something doesn’t have to be a cinematic masterpiece to be entertaining. Sony isn’t doing either with most of their shit.
Entertaining sure, but entertaining for a specific (albeit large) audience. There are countless other audiences for movies that are just being increasingly ignored by Hollywood for the past few decades.
Things like that are why I think so many people are just complete tools
2018 was only a few years ago
It was true if you didn’t spend too much, DVD sales bailed out a lot of bad movies, but streaming doesn’t have the same direct revenue.
I’m gonna nudge your sentence a little bit to make it sound both more realistic and much worse at the same time:
The implication here is that it used to be you could make a
badLAZY movie and still profit.A bad movie can be full of passion, it can be an interesting failure.
A lazy movie is phoning it in; it has the opposite of passion; here is where all we see is suits with Ferraris and sycophantic (corporate ass-licking) writers and directors.
I admit prior to the pandemic I wouldn’t have minded going to a somewhat mediocre but kinda entertaining movie as part of a night out. Now it is too expensive and the theaters are depressing shadows of their former selves and unless I 100% know a movie is good and can get 2-3 family members to agree I’m not going to a theater.
I think something else that has happened is the breadth of available media in the streaming age means it is easy for individuals to find a show or movie that fits their individual tastes. No compromise needed. I know in my house getting everyone to agree to watch a single show or movie is impossible. No way we’re all piling in the car, driving through ridiculous traffic to sit in a dirty theater that smells like warmed over urinal cakes to watch something none of us are particularly interested in. Why do that when I can chill watching reruns of Stargate SG-1, my spouse is rocking Tik Tok, my kid is watching Twitch?
Movies as a collective experience died circa 2020.
This is true, otherwise these movies would be shelved. Instead they deny reviewers and rush em out to try and scam some money out of people who can only afford to go to the movies every so often