Showing only topics in ~movies with the tag "movie industry".
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3 votes
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Brendan Fraser on his "comeback" in 'The Whale' and defying Hollywood's obesity prejudices
3 votes -
‘Amsterdam’ stands to lose nearly $100 million: What this means for upscale movies
5 votes -
Hollywood says farewell to Chinese investment bonanza
9 votes -
Moral clauses: Why a red scare tactic revived in the #MeToo era could lead to a fight with the guilds
3 votes -
The visual effects crisis
4 votes -
High anxiety in Hollywood: “Everyone is totally drained and burnt out”
8 votes -
Bryce Dallas Howard: I was told to lose weight for ‘Jurassic World’ films
7 votes -
Inside the documentary cash grab
8 votes -
Film productions from around the world are eager to capture Iceland's dramatic landscapes – and to take advantage of an attractive incentive scheme
3 votes -
HBO Max and Warner Bros. Discovery seem to be on fire, and that's on purpose. The plan is to make a lot of money as cheaply as possible.
7 votes -
Former Disney CEO Bob Iger battled the company's board over succession, insiders say, and was unhappy about the transition of power to Bob Chapek
7 votes -
The golden age of the aging actor
7 votes -
Hollywood execs brace for advertising “storm clouds” ahead
5 votes -
Bob Chapek’s empire of insecurity
3 votes -
Tom Cruise’s new ‘Top Gun’ could take movies back to the late ’70s and the golden age of blockbusters
12 votes -
How the US market crash is forcing Hollywood giants to reassess digital strategies
9 votes -
Massive film marketing spends are back as summer tentpole season kicks off
2 votes -
MGM’s Amazon era begins with big, unanswered questions
5 votes -
Event Cascade: Cinematographer Halyna Hutchins was tragically killed on the set of Alec Baldwin's movie Rust. The catastrophe has sent the district attorney on a quest to find answers.
7 votes -
Disney, Sony and Warner Bros pause film releases in Russia over Ukraine invasion
9 votes -
Roland Emmerich: Marvel and Star Wars are ‘ruining our industry’
13 votes -
How January became a "dump month" for cinema - and why that's changing
3 votes -
Critics of “Don’t Look Up” are missing the entire point
15 votes -
Guns, ammo, accountability: Hollywood munitions experts grapple with ‘Rust’ tragedy
6 votes -
Hollywood crews vote to authorize a strike for better pay and working conditions
33 votes -
Bob Iger’s long goodbye
1 vote -
Hollywood battle lines emerge in simmering vaccine war
6 votes -
Disney and Scarlett Johansson resolve bitter ‘Black Widow’ profits lawsuit
7 votes -
Amazon is acquiring MGM for $8.45 billion
15 votes -
Beyond the Snyder cut: From an R-rated Mrs Doubtfire to an ultra-violent Event Horizon, film history is littered with rumours of cuts that may or may not exist
8 votes -
Los Angeles Department of Public Health urges film industry vigilance to help contain COVID-19
7 votes -
When every set looks like Contagion: Inside Hollywood's pandemic year
6 votes -
Movie theater rescue called for by top filmmakers, NATO, MPA, DGA in letter to Congress: “Theaters may not survive”
11 votes -
Christopher Nolan's sci-fi thriller 'Tenet' delayed indefinitely
16 votes -
Moviefone, worth 1% of its former value, is being run by one employee after parent company’s bankruptcy
6 votes -
You couldn't make Blazing Saddles today!
14 votes -
Alan Smithee - the director who doesn't exist
I just found out about this and it's something I guess I should have known about before. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Smithee Alan Smithee (also Allen Smithee) is an official pseudonym used...
I just found out about this and it's something I guess I should have known about before.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Smithee
Alan Smithee (also Allen Smithee) is an official pseudonym used by film directors who wish to disown a project. Coined in 1968 and used until it was formally discontinued in 2000,[1] it was the sole pseudonym used by members of the Directors Guild of America (DGA) when a director, dissatisfied with the final product, proved to the satisfaction of a guild panel that he or she had not been able to exercise creative control over a film. The director was also required by guild rules not to discuss the circumstances leading to the movie or even to acknowledge being the project's director.
12 votes -
Productions that could have taken advantage of Swedish locations and craft expertise continue to run away to foreign locations for lower costs and tax incentives
4 votes -
Les Moonves, Kevin Tsujihara and the art of Hollywood self-sabotage
2 votes -
Sundance faces existential questions in search for new leadership
3 votes -
The absurdities of 'franchise fatigue' and 'sequelitis' (or, what is happening to the box office?!)
6 votes -
Hollywood went to the moon first!
4 votes -
The slow death of Hollywood
11 votes -
Ann Sarnoff named Warner Bros. CEO in surprise pick
3 votes -
How will the movies (as we know them) survive the next ten years? Twenty-four major Hollywood figures peer into the future
7 votes -
“The big error was that she was caught”: The untold story behind the mysterious disappearance of Fan Bingbing, the world’s biggest movie star
12 votes -
Avengers IP, assemble: The wild, circuitous path to Marvel getting its own brands back
4 votes -
What the Oscars’ new “popular film” category says about the art—and business—of the movies
8 votes -
We're experiencing the biggest revolution in movie ticket prices in decades
8 votes