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11 votes
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Behind Neon’s banner year and rivalry with A24
4 votes -
Annapurna and Remedy Entertainment announce partnership on Control 2, adapting Control and Alan Wake for film and TV
19 votes -
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26 votes -
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4 votes -
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28 votes -
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11 votes -
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28 votes -
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7 votes -
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17 votes -
How Universal burned a swath through the heartland and south, “sold fun” and propelled ‘Twisters’ to $80m+ opening
7 votes -
Neon takes worldwide rights to Chris Stuckmann’s horror film ‘Shelby Oaks’
4 votes -
Martin Scorsese's favorite films
14 votes -
Redbox owner (Chicken Soup For The Soul) to liquidate in Chapter 7 bankruptcy shift; workforce of 1,000 to be let go and 24,000 kiosks shut down, lawyer says
24 votes -
Kevin Costner’s ‘Horizon 2’ pulled from August release in theaters
12 votes -
Credit at last for female screenwriter airbrushed from Hollywood history
12 votes -
It seems to me that movie studios, production and distribution companies are to blame for the decrease in attendance in movie theatres
disclaimer that I haven't done much research into this thought and it's mostly anecdotal but I doubt I am wrong? I personally don't go to theaters, except for comicbook movies. and the only reason...
disclaimer that I haven't done much research into this thought and it's mostly anecdotal but I doubt I am wrong?
I personally don't go to theaters, except for comicbook movies. and the only reason I go to theaters for comicbook movies is just cause I liked to discuss the comicbook movies on social media as soon as possible, but honestly, either I am getting really old or the redditors on /r/marvelstudios are getting young and younger everyday cause i go to those comments and it's not really a place I'd describe as open to a civil and non-memey discussion of the latest Marvel movie but I digress.
Point being, I personally prefer to wait for movie to arrive at streaming services. why?
- I don't have to deal with other people.
- I went to watch Creed 3 near the end of its theater run. 3 people chose to sit in front of me when the whole auditorium was basically empty (they looked to be in their mid-late 20s, maybe even early 30s.) I didn't care. What I did care was that one of the dudes spent half his time on his fucking phone. To the point that I literally had to bend over and ask him to put it away and he still didn't. this idiot just attempted to angle the phone in a manner such that I couldn't see it, or so he thought, the light still was there, just less. At that point, I just got too resentful of theaters to tell him off again but felt very stubborn about not moving away from my seat.
- I went to watch Aquaman 2 (iirc on opening weekend). I knew the movie was not gonna be great going in, just wanted to mark the end of the DCEU in theaters. 3 young girls were sitting in the middle section. as the movie started, these girls started taking selfies of themselves for the grams or snapchat or whatever the fuck it was. The light from their phone was bright. There was a couple sitting a seat or 2 to my right. the dude and I collectively rolled our eyes at the girls. They took 1 picture. I was like "OK, thank God". 2 pictures, I think "let's hope the second take works". Third picture "this is ridiculous". by this point, I wanted to throw something at them and just leaned over and asked them to put their phone away. I may been asshole cause it seemed like I scared them with that comment and to be quite frank, I took pleasure that I scare them, even accidentally.
- Theaters are extremely non-inclusive. This one bugs me a lot just cause of Eternals and CODA and Hollywood pretending they are woke. Not sure if anyone here has ever tried to use the closed captioning devices. I am personally not deaf, but I do have trouble processing words. I am the kind of guy who will often ask people to repeat themselves to fully understand what they said. Obviously can't do that with a movie but reading closed captioning helps me process. I finally decided to start trying the closed captioning devices in theaters around the time of Avengers Endgame I think. It's very hit or miss. either the theater forgot to charge the device so it gives out halfway through the movie, or it's just all old and it's neck doesn't retain it's form when I twist it into the good position and it ends up pointing the closed captioning at someone who is a good 1 foot shorter than me or it's fully charged and can retain its form but the studios behind the movie didn't put any serious effort into the closed captioning so half the fucking words are missing, rendering it pointless. My gf and I went to watch Mad Max Furiosa in theaters the other day and the theater didn't even have any remaining, they had given their to the studio to fix and didn't have any in stock as a result.
- Not sure about the states but up here in Canada, our big chain is Cineplex and they are so desperate to charge us extra that they now charge an extra "service fee" that you get charged only if you buy online.
- And the classic complaint of "just the snacks cost us a movie and a half nowadays"
However, I don't know if I blame the theater for my issues.
I've read the stories about how Disney have theaters over a barrel with how controlling they are with how much of a cut of a theater tickets goes to Disney and how Disney insists on how many auditorium the theaters devote to their movies. And how theaters charge so much for concession cause they are trying to keep the lights on to some extent cause the studios demand so much of the profit. And if it's a struggle to keep the lights on, I am not surprised they can't be more enforcing with the policy of no-phones during a movie.
It seems to me the studios, in an attempt to "maximize" their profit as much as possible, demanded as much as possible from theaters, while not realizing that the less of a cut that theaters take, the less theaters can invest in a welcoming environment where people actually want to go to and therefore people come less cause couple that with streaming services, why wouldn't people come less?
So I think the demise of theaters and the rise of streaming service can't just be attributed to how much more convenient it is to wait 8 months for a movie on streaming service but it's also attributable to the decline in quality at theaters which I think is cause studios are bleeding them dry.
So I find it odd that studios and production companies bitch moan and complain that people don't go to movies more in a time where a movie has to make 500 million $ just to be considered profitable but they've never really done any proper self-reflection on a possible reason why people don't go to theaters as much anymore.
23 votes - I don't have to deal with other people.
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5 votes -
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21 votes -
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11 votes -
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16 votes -
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6 votes -
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4 votes -
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30 votes -
Why ‘Blade’ can’t cut through development hell
10 votes -
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12 votes -
‘Inside Out 2’ shatters box office expectations with $155 million, biggest debut since ‘Barbie’
36 votes -
Sony Pictures acquires Alamo Drafthouse cinema in landmark deal that puts studios back in theater game
36 votes -
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2 votes -
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25 votes -
Paramount and Skydance agree to terms of a merger deal
10 votes -
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16 votes -
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45 votes -
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16 votes -
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24 votes -
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22 votes -
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18 votes -
Meryl Streep: it’s ‘hardest thing’ for men to see themselves in female characters
34 votes -
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24 votes -
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13 votes -
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17 votes -
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23 votes -
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33 votes -
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8 votes -
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22 votes -
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18 votes -
AI video won't work in Hollywood, because it can't make small iterative changes, former Pixar animator says
28 votes -
Zendaya-Palooza box office weekend pushes ‘Dune: Part Two’ to $700M WW; ‘Godzilla x Kong’ to half billion as Legendary Warner pics count $1.2B WW
19 votes -
How Quentin Tarantino’s ‘The Movie Critic’ fell apart
26 votes