Harold and Kumar - 2004
Hollywood's fear of being called out for inappropriate comedy isn't helped by articles like this one, explaining why some 40-year-old comedy classic -- released before the journalist was born -- is now "problematic."Cliff.Booth said:
You can tell by watching great comedies from prior to 2010 and ask how many of them could have been produced now or how many scenes would have been cut.
TCTTS said:
It's not even that IP guarantees success. It doesn't. It's that if it bombs an exec can wash his or her hands hands clean and say, "This project I greenlit was based on IP, and the 'rules' therefor dictate that it has a built-in audience, so that audience not showing up wasn't my fault, it was the marketing team, the writer, etc. But I did my job because I followed the IP 'rule.'"
EclipseAg said:Hollywood's fear of being called out for inappropriate comedy isn't helped by articles like this one, explaining why some 40-year-old comedy classic -- released before the journalist was born -- is now "problematic."Cliff.Booth said:
You can tell by watching great comedies from prior to 2010 and ask how many of them could have been produced now or how many scenes would have been cut.
https://screenrant.com/sixteen-candles-john-huges-not-aged-well-why/
RikkiTikkaTagem said:
Some things that I believe relate to this. What shared experiences do people have growing up anymore? Everybody is so tied to their screen that it's hard to create some sort of connection to experiences that translate to the big screen.
Also, if there is something shared, it immediately gets memed until saturated and no longer funny before somebody could produce a movie to even make fun of it. The life cycle of something being funny now is measured in hours to days whereas growing up a funny movie/show could produce decades of quotes/references that were funny.
Also, a lot of the hilarious comedies have people placing themselves in uncomfortable situations to create tension. The tension is what sets up the potential energies for the comedy but we're no longer tolerant of that in society anymore. Our connectivity allows us to not tolerate any sort of difference in thought or beliefs.
The amount of original content creation has skyrocketed through social media where funny concepts are immediately filtered out and get wordwide views whereas something that's well written, directed and acted might be obsolete before it could even hit the theaters.
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Some things that I believe relate to this. What shared experiences do people have growing up anymore? Everybody is so tied to their screen that it's hard to create some sort of connection to experiences that translate to the big screen.
EclipseAg said:Hollywood's fear of being called out for inappropriate comedy isn't helped by articles like this one, explaining why some 40-year-old comedy classic -- released before the journalist was born -- is now "problematic."Cliff.Booth said:
You can tell by watching great comedies from prior to 2010 and ask how many of them could have been produced now or how many scenes would have been cut.
https://screenrant.com/sixteen-candles-john-huges-not-aged-well-why/
Cliff.Booth said:EclipseAg said:Hollywood's fear of being called out for inappropriate comedy isn't helped by articles like this one, explaining why some 40-year-old comedy classic -- released before the journalist was born -- is now "problematic."Cliff.Booth said:
You can tell by watching great comedies from prior to 2010 and ask how many of them could have been produced now or how many scenes would have been cut.
https://screenrant.com/sixteen-candles-john-huges-not-aged-well-why/
Exactly. Studios bending over backward to humorless Karens who find almost everything problematic has left us in this rut. Until more creatives say **** you, it's comedy, laugh or don't watch, we'll continue to have very little comedy or the same 3 jokes being told ad nauseum.
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Yes, I think "woke" has obviously been a factor, but as I've said many times before, I think the death of R-rated comedies, same as most terrible Hollywood decisions, has been due far more to risk-averse execs scared of losing their jobs
I have a question about this. TCTTS, maybe you can educate me a bit...Rudyjax said:
I think they're both right, but Damon is closer to the bullseye.
I'm not TCTTS but here's how i understand it. Back in the VHS and DVD days they'd make money off of rentals AND sales. Yes you can rent and buy movies and shows digitally but the amount of people who do that is a small fraction of what that used to be. Most people who watch stuff through streaming watch it through a subscription based streaming app.AgGrad99 said:I have a question about this. TCTTS, maybe you can educate me a bit...Rudyjax said:
I think they're both right, but Damon is closer to the bullseye.
So previously they'd make money in the theatres, and then again on DVD rentals. I think we all knew that. I remember reading back in Blockbuster's heyday, that 60% of the revenue came from rentals.
While I understand streaming has replaced DVDs...where did the revenue go? If an movie goes to the theatre, and then gets released to streaming for rental (or licensed to a streaming service), don't they have the same opportunity to make rental revenue (just distributed via streaming instead of DVD)?
Someone's making that money for the content on streaming. Why not the producers? Damon seems to suggest it's completely gone.
I'm curious why the delivery method cut off the revenue stream...
I admittedly don't know but I suspect it's similar to what happened to music. People used to buy albums/cassettes/CDs. Now they just stream whatever they want to listen to. While there is some money via streaming, it's nowhere near the money made when people were buying the physical products.AgGrad99 said:I have a question about this. TCTTS, maybe you can educate me a bit...Rudyjax said:
I think they're both right, but Damon is closer to the bullseye.
So previously they'd make money in the theatres, and then again on DVD rentals. I think we all knew that. I remember reading back in Blockbuster's heyday, that 60% of the revenue came from rentals.
While I understand streaming has replaced DVDs...where did the revenue go? If an movie goes to the theatre, and then gets released to streaming for rental (or licensed to a streaming service), don't they have the same opportunity to make rental revenue (just distributed via streaming instead of DVD)?
Someone's making that money for the content on streaming. Why not the producers? Damon seems to suggest it's completely gone.
I'm curious why the delivery method cut off the revenue stream...
The Collective said:
I don't see how streaming could produce more $. I could be wrong here or an anomaly, but my family rented quite often in the 90s. When you look at what we spent per content hour - streaming can't even come close to touching that. I'd bet my parents spent $5/week in the early 90s. $5 in 1995 is around $30 today... Think about how much content you can consume today for $30. I can see how the revenue stream isn't anywhere close to the same.
Bruce Almighty said:The Collective said:
I don't see how streaming could produce more $. I could be wrong here or an anomaly, but my family rented quite often in the 90s. When you look at what we spent per content hour - streaming can't even come close to touching that. I'd bet my parents spent $5/week in the early 90s. $5 in 1995 is around $30 today... Think about how much content you can consume today for $30. I can see how the revenue stream isn't anywhere close to the same.
Your inflation numbers are quite a bit off there. 5 dollars in 1995 is like 10 dollars today.
There is so much more content now when compared to the blockbuster days. I would guess some blockbuster movies could only release on their own platform but we're talking a handful of movies.AgGrad99 said:
So I guess my follow up question would be 'why'? Why do it that way? if you own the IP, you have control.
Like many networks have done, why not create your own (free) app, and let people rent movies a la carte (or buy them), and maintain control and revenue?
Or, allow streaming apps like Netflix, Prime, Hulu, etc....become the new Blockbuster, and share in the rental revenue.
It seems like they shot themselves in the foot, the way they've structured it.
AgGrad99 said:
I'm not convinced there is more content. Way more places to go for content (which I'd argue sucks for the consumer), but is there more overall (or at least....more that people care about consuming)?
I'll again reference music. Simply put, I think people's expectations of what music should cost changed drastically after the invention of Napster, etc. Once consumer preference changes, it's really hard to buck that.AgGrad99 said:
So I guess my follow up question would be 'why'? Why do it that way? if you own the IP, you have control.
Like many networks have done, why not create your own (free) app, and let people rent movies a la carte (or buy them), and maintain control and revenue?
Or, allow streaming apps like Netflix, Prime, Hulu, etc....become the new Blockbuster, and share in the rental revenue.
It seems like they shot themselves in the foot, the way they've structured it.
It seems like there should be two buckets there - 1) the revenue from your flick streaming on whatever platform; and 2) purchases of the movie outright via Apple/Amazon/whatever.Quad Dog said:Damon talked about how the loss of DVD sales have killed mid budget movies. IMO this has probably hurt R-Rated comedies more than the influence of IP. You'd think the revenue of streaming would have replaced the revenue of DVD sales. But we just had a big strike to prove that revenue stream is making it into the pockets of studios and not writers.Rudyjax said:
Matt Damon said something very similar on the same show. Looking for it but can't seem to find it.
Basically, no one wants to take a risk.Matt Damon on mid-budget movies via Hot Ones
— Film Daze (@filmdaze) September 19, 2022
pic.twitter.com/YBvWWo7dCc
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Similarly, movies, etc. are now bearing the brunt of altered expectations created by the cheap prices streaming services used to get off the ground. As a result, a substantial number of consumers think you should be able to have a huge library to choose from for a couple bucks a month. Convincing people to pay $4.99 (or whatever) to rent a single movie for a single viewing is going to be tough sledding except for movies people really want to see.
But I highly doubt anyone will ever hold the line like that (only way to watch it forever is to pay $5). There has always been a downstream cheaper option after the initial release and that will continue to be the case. That used to be waiting to rent at Blockbuster, waiting for it to come on HBO (or even TV), etc. Now, it's waiting until it is available for streaming for free. I think more and more people will wait for that second option (absent movies they are REALLY gung ho to see) because of their pricing expectations now.AgGrad99 said:Sure.Quote:
Similarly, movies, etc. are now bearing the brunt of altered expectations created by the cheap prices streaming services used to get off the ground. As a result, a substantial number of consumers think you should be able to have a huge library to choose from for a couple bucks a month. Convincing people to pay $4.99 (or whatever) to rent a single movie for a single viewing is going to be tough sledding except for movies people really want to see.
But if your only option to see a movie you want to see, is to rent it for $5...people will do that, like they have since it's been an option. People pay more than that for a coffee everyday. I dont think it'll keep them from watching movies they are interested in.
Or, if you can make more licensing it to a service like Prime, or Netflix...that's still an option.