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#1
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Did ‘Jaws’ and ‘Star Wars’ really ruin Hollywood?
http://douthat.blogs.nytimes.com/201...uin-hollywood/
For those that are too lazy to click - Quote:
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"If you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Friedrich Nietzsche |
#2
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Absolutely not.
I admit we're in one hell of a slump these days, but this isn't the first time this has happened; I have faith things will turn around. |
#3
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There is alot of quality cinema out there but not much comes from Hollywood. They are in a slump but Wickerfan is right, things come around in cycles and things will improve.
The summer blockbusters aren't to blame, its the lack of new ideas behind them.
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![]() ![]() Battle Royalty, 2009 @Wolf_Scousemac |
#4
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I don't think they ruined Hollywood.
Sure, the Blockbuster of the late '70s onward didn't have the gritty realism or social commentary of the late '60s and '70s. But times were different. In the late '60s the world had Vietnam to fear and outrage. Hollywood reflected this with a raw, visceral cinema. Relative harmony and prosperity in the late '70s and '80s led to a more "larger than life" experience in the cinema. It's like the 1930s vs the late '40s and '50s. In the early to mid '30s some of the biggest 'stars' of Hollywood were the Universal monsters. These early Universal monster films were dark and intense (for the audience of the time at least). Fast forward to the mid '40s and the Monsters are all meeting Abbott and Costello, and we are well into the domain of the Hollywood Musical. World War II (and the turbulent inter-war period of the late '20s and '30s with its fragility and Great Depression) gave us a more serious, more downbeat cinema, yet the prosperity of the post-war era led to a 'lightening' of Hollywood. So, these Blockbusters really reflected a changing social consciousness. This is no different to the situation we have today. The world is becoming expensive and cautious (GFC, etc). Hollywood is cashing in on what it sees as a 'sure thing' - modern remakes of stars of the past. It is not a time for risk taking. The '80s were the time for that. |
#5
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No, Jaws and Star Wars didn't ruin Hollywood, they made Hollywood, but they destroyed good film. In any genre. If you are an auteur, it is basically impossible to get your films made and have a career. People like Spielberg, Lucas and Cameron aren't auteurs, they are businessmen. That said, I even enjoy some of their films.
I am in LOVE with 1970s giallo films. Almost every single one of these has some wack-o convoluted plot. But you know what? Almost every single one is way better made in every single way than every movie out of Hollywood in the past 30 years. Digital equipment and post-production technologies have made filmmaking better sure, but it has also made the abundance of crap a lot easier to get made and distributed. Look at how many supremely stupid and awful horror movies come out direct to DVD/onDemand every year? Granted, I and probably many others on this forum like watching them, but at least 99% of those films are beyond awful. Then look at mainstream movies in theaters, they are not much better, if at all. Total crap designed by studio heads, marketers and investors to maximize profit at the box office - content of any film is almost irrelevant. This current paradigm is due to Jaws and Star Wars.
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Sonor et Musica Extemporale http://www.facebook.com/AperionProject ------------------------- ![]() |
#6
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#7
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__________________
Sonor et Musica Extemporale http://www.facebook.com/AperionProject ------------------------- ![]() |
#8
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I definitely understand how you feel; I am really starting to lose patience with Hollywood these days. I've been to the theater once this year to see The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, but I have to drive over an hour to get to our local art-house cinema (that film was worth it though). Guess I'll have to trek out there again to see The Girl Who Played With Fire; none of the more mainstream films look interesting.
Things really should turn around, but I do hope this 3-D mania doesn't take over all movies. |
#9
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I work in movie market research, and let me tell you- the studios would LOVE it if every film was released in 3-D. They're going to push it as far as they can for as long as they can. They have us recently polling people about what types of films they'd like to see in 3-D- romance, comedy, drama... etc.
There's no such thing as a "negative nancy" in regards to Hollywood mentality. To paraphrase the old vaudeville axiom- you'll never go broke underestimating your audience. |
#10
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