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11 votes
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About the times American films focused on labor struggle
18 votes -
In Hollywood, the strikes are just part of the problem
11 votes -
SAG-AFTRA officially calls strike as National Board approves guild’s first walkout against film & TV industry since 1980
99 votes -
‘Deadpool 3,’ ‘Mission: Impossible 8’ and ‘Venom 3’ halted amid actors strike
20 votes -
SAG-AFTRA strike imminent as talks conclude with no deal
17 votes -
Hollywood studios’ WGA strike endgame is to let writers go broke before resuming talks in fall
42 votes -
Hollywood CEOs and industry insiders seek Federal mediation to help avert SAG-AFTRA strike
29 votes -
Pentagon to filmmakers: We won’t help you if you kowtow to China
46 votes -
‘Diversity fatigue’? Hollywood loses four DEI leaders in less than two weeks
33 votes -
OK but what do we really think about the Spider-Verse Vulture article?
A post for this exists. I checked, I searched for it first thing and skimmed through the comments. So this should be the end of it. I know you shouldn't make a duplicate post, lest make any kind...
I checked, I searched for it first thing and skimmed through the comments. So this should be the end of it. I know you shouldn't make a duplicate post, lest make any kind of post in a different group.
(if you don't know what I'm talking about, click the link at the top, open the article in incognito mode, read.)
As young folk say, idc. I feel this is beyond the scope of the original post as industry talk deserves serious, dedicated discourse. ~talk seems to be the place for this, anything here barely gets the same engagement like ~talk posts; they garner lots and lots... I mean, LOTS of comments. Plus, the WGA writer's strike is still goin on — they been doin this shit for 2 months with tedious media coverage, and have made their presence known. If they can do that, I think I can take a page from their book and post here.
This is not a retread on the Vulture article, not necessarily about your opinions on the work culture Phil Lord creates, etc. If you feel like this post is a duplicate: Don't vote, don't comment! Ignore this post! Revive the original post — you can do it as long as it's on-topic and thoughtful.
This post is about the ripple effects of what that article says, and how it may reflect industry-wide treatment of animators, and even adjacent subcultures and sectors. Take VFX, for instance: Lots of ppl seem to criticise Marvel Studios for their overuse of CGI in their productions, blissfully unaware that Marvel Studios is a bad client to work with.
In other words; this post is meant to discuss Phil Lords in the industry that cause over 100 animators to quit (which I think is too much to ignore). This post is a launching pad for industry awareness, and should hopefully give you the idea to protest in your own way. Don't believe skipping movies will work? It doooooeeeeeeessss~~
So.... what do we REALLY think about the Spider-Verse article on Vulture? What does this truly reveal about the broader treatment of animation in Hollywood? Does Sony raise good points? What are some other instances where a producer or executive caused such upset during the production of an animated movie? What are other reasons or work culture tidbits outside people or moviegoers don't know about? What's it like being an animator working in Hollywood?? What are some labour unions or orgs to look into? What are some novel solutions or fixes that should be pushed by everyone as much as possible?
I was gonna post this on ~talk, but decided last minute not to. If you have read this far (and think this is not a duplicate post), I implore you to vote a/o comment! If this gets to at least like... 40 or 50 comments, that would be so amazing. If not, oh well. But I think it would be a disservice since no matter how small or insignificant this post is, it will help. It may inspire someone here to do something out there, and I think that's more than enough reason.
7 votes -
Vietnam bans ‘Barbie’ movie over South China Sea map
30 votes -
Amazon CEO asks his Hollywood studio to explain its big spending
26 votes -
After “Barbie,” Mattel is raiding its entire toy box
22 votes -
Superhero fatigue is real. The cure? Make better movies than ‘The Flash’
67 votes -
Warner Bros. needs to stop copying Disney and let its superheroes fly solo
25 votes -
Dear David Zaslav: Gutting TCM will not help you win filmmakers back to Warner Bros
15 votes -
The Accused | Interview with Kevin Spacey
15 votes -
Can Warner Bros. restore its movie glory? Michael De Luca and Pam Abdy want Christopher Nolan back, will prioritize theatrical and take more big swings
6 votes -
Disney is staring down the barrel of a no good, very bad year
The Little Mermaid opened this Memorial Day weekend. Pre-sales, being the tickets that people buy in advance, were looking strong. It looked like it would open to over 100 for the 3-day weekend,...
The Little Mermaid opened this Memorial Day weekend. Pre-sales, being the tickets that people buy in advance, were looking strong. It looked like it would open to over 100 for the 3-day weekend, and 130 for the 4-day. Potentially the highest opening weekend for Memorial Day ever.
That didn't happen. While it had a strong opening day, it failed to keep up the pace for the rest of the weekend. Ultimately opening under 100 for the 3-day weekend. The expected casual audience, referred to as "walk-ups" didn't show up in the numbers that were expected (based on past live-action Disney films). Hollywood trades are seemingly ignoring this, most of them calling the opening weekend a success.
While the Domestic opening weekend is certainly not bad, it's worldwide opening weekend is terrible. Internationally the film opened behind Fast X's second weekend. It's acting closer to Dumbo, a big bomb for Disney in 2019, than any of the successful live-action Disney films. Domestically, also, the film is acting closer to Solo, another bomb, than Aladdin (which had amazing legs).
Why this happened is still being debated. Some say that having a black lead turned off a lot of the international audience, others say they were turned off from a lack of a big star in the film (like say Will Smith in Aladdin or Emma Watson in Beauty and the Beast). Whatever the case is for the international audience, it's clear that there was a total market rejection of the film. Domestically, it seems like casual audiences are experiencing a bit of fatigue with these live-action movies (perhaps due to all the bad ones going straight to Disney+).
And maybe, perhaps, Disney betting big on Disney+ in 2022 while the other studios started to refocus on theatrical, was a mistake. Maybe that's diluted the Disney brand in all forms.
But whatever it is, Disney now has two bombs on their hands. Ant-Man failed to make a profit and now Little Mermaid is unlikely to reach that as well (considering the huge 250 million dollar budget on it). And the rest of the year is not looking any better for them.
Disney went to Cannes with Indiana Jones and Elemental. Which we all assumed was a sign of confidence in the films. That ended backfiring as both Indiana and Elemental ended up rotten on RT. Now they have to deal with a negative reception for both films, on top of the fact that there was very little excitement for both to begin with. Pixar, and Disney animation as a whole, is now looking at back to back to back bombs (Lightyear, Strange World, and now Elemental). Indiana Jones had an inflated budget of 300 million and now looks like it won't break even either.
Haunted Mansion might surprise, but it's gonna be a tough ladder to climb considering the really big 150 million dollar budget.
The Marvels will need to be as well received as Guardians in order not to be Ant-Man'd out of existence, which most people are not expecting, especially as you need to watch two TV shows to understand it.
Wish could finally be a win for Disney's animation department, but considering the track record I wouldn't count on it.
It's really not looking good for Disney, what a fall considering the immense success they experienced in 2019. They really might just end up with one success this year (Guardians).
38 votes -
Writers Guild calls first strike in fifteen years
23 votes -
Yep, it’s slow: How a potential strike and industry pivoting has Hollywood at a standstill
5 votes -
Desperate for profits and souring on streaming, Hollywood falls back in love with movie theaters
5 votes -
Hollywood’s Covid protocols get expiration date; vaccine mandate will end
2 votes -
Amazon may buy distressed AMC theater chain in seismic Hollywood streaming shift
10 votes -
Why Hollywood isn’t - and can’t be - just about blockbusters
6 votes -
Cannes 2023: Thierry Fremaux on the festival’s relationship with Hollywood, Scorsese, Netflix, Oscars and TikTok
1 vote -
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was Walt Disney’s biggest box office gamble
2 votes -
Apple to spend $1 billion a year on films to break into cinemas
7 votes -
Shazam 2 and the birth of the lame duck superhero movie
3 votes -
What studio franchises can learn from the rise, fall and rise of the western
2 votes -
Killer dolls, cocaine bears and dinosaur time travel: how the B-movie became big business
4 votes -
Harvey Weinstein sentenced to sixteen years after rape conviction, putting former movie mogul behind bars for life
12 votes -
Alec Baldwin charged with involuntary manslaughter in Rust shooting
7 votes -
Netflix offloads two completed films, filmmakers shop projects elsewhere
6 votes -
Hollywood cannot survive without movie theaters. Why is this so hard for studios to believe?
5 votes -
Alec Baldwin and ‘Rust’ armorer to face involuntary manslaughter charges in shooting death
12 votes -
Was 1920s Hollywood really as decadent and debauched as it looks in ‘Babylon’?
4 votes -
Harvey Weinstein convicted on three charges of rape and sexual assault
8 votes -
Kim Masters on Hollywood’s year of wishful thinking
1 vote -
Disney shocker: Bob Iger returning as CEO, Bob Chapek exits
9 votes -
Chinese protesters want ‘cinema freedom.’ Hollywood should help them.
3 votes -
Babylon | Official trailer
4 votes -
Amazon plans to invest $1 billion a year in movies for theaters
4 votes -
‘Fast X’ budget has ballooned to $340 million – Can it still turn a profit for Universal?
5 votes -
‘Babylon’ first reactions are all over the place: Responses for Damien Chazelle’s film range from a ‘daring Hollywood epic’ to ‘truly monstrous’
3 votes -
How ‘Pig’ became Nicolas Cage’s cash cow. After making fifteen indies in the span of a few years, the storied action star has recaptured the studios’ attention — raising both his profile and his quote
13 votes -
James Gunn and Peter Safran named co-chairmen and CEOs of DC Studios
9 votes -
Marvel, DC among last bastion for supersized paydays
3 votes -
Movie theaters want more from Netflix, but the streaming giant isn't ready to budge on its release model
10 votes