I wonder if what we're seeing is the twilight of the movie theater as a viable distribution model. As far as theatrical viewings are concerned, I'd side with the old guard (Scorcese, Spielberg, Coppola) in lamenting that the considerable economic impact of the MCU has meant almost everything else has been shoved into a few screens for a few weeks at a time which makes it almost inevitable that Marvel movies will continue to dominate the Box Office. There have been a lot of movies I wanted to see this year that were in and out of the theater before I could find a free weekend to watch them. And if we're talking about marketing, you would be forgiven for not even knowing that most of those movies exist at all.
On the other hand, you would need to have tunnel vision to miss how competition between streaming services and near ubiquitous market saturation (is there a household in America that doesn't subscribe or at least share a subscription one or more home entertainment services?) has created opportunities for a large number of content creators to get their content produced. Maybe the scale has diminished a bit -- the middle budget film is nearly extinct right now, especially if it involves an entirely new IP -- but in it's place we have dozens of series and documentaries and narrative features which would never get past a corporate film or television studio development board just a decade ago. Unless you're preferential to the narrative feature film format over the extended mini-series format (which admittedly, I am) there is no shortage of intriguing new content to consume and the means of obtaining it has never been easier.
As for Disney specifically, I do feel like they are actively harming the market with their seemingly bottomless pool of resources and single-minded commitment to profit margin. Every Disney animated feature is getting a live action remake. Every Marvel character gets not just their own film but their own series of films. Since they acquired the Star Wars license at the end of 2012 we've seen 5 films and a TV series in 7 years with many more still in production. I am a huge Star Wars fan and I have to admit, my enthusiasm for new Star Wars content has been bled nearly dry over that period of time. I have yet to see The Mandalorian and I'm not sure that I even care. So I have to agree here that while comic book movies are the most visible expression of this over-saturation, the root cause points further up the food chain. I've never liked comic book movies so there's no danger of genre fatigue for me there, but if they can get me to turn on Star Wars in such a short period of time they've really accomplished something.
Having grown up in the 80s/90s when blockbuster filmmaking got it's start and there were really only 1 or 2 "tentpole" movies of any kind released each year, there's a nostalgic feeling of loss I associate with the apparent end of the big screen format except as a means to sell established IP. I realize though that the film/video format as a means of narrative storytelling, cultural exchange, social commentary etc. is as strong as it has ever been even if the vast majority of us now enjoy that content from the confines of our own homes and personal devices. It's also apparent to me that what I truly miss about the theatrical viewing experience is the communal exchange that it once entailed. I may be overgeneralizing here, but I feel like we've fractured into individual content consumers with access to whatever we're interested in at any time and that seems to have shifted us culturally into a society of self-selecting ideological tribes with little patience for one another. Even if you have a novel and important message to convey and a compelling way to package it, is it even going to make it to a mainstream audience or are you rhetorically limited to preaching to your own choir? That's an open question to me right now and as an individual who maintains (against my better judgment) a professional interest in the art of narrative storytelling, I've never been more discouraged.
On the other hand, you would need to have tunnel vision to miss how competition between streaming services and near ubiquitous market saturation (is there a household in America that doesn't subscribe or at least share a subscription one or more home entertainment services?) has created opportunities for a large number of content creators to get their content produced. Maybe the scale has diminished a bit -- the middle budget film is nearly extinct right now, especially if it involves an entirely new IP -- but in it's place we have dozens of series and documentaries and narrative features which would never get past a corporate film or television studio development board just a decade ago. Unless you're preferential to the narrative feature film format over the extended mini-series format (which admittedly, I am) there is no shortage of intriguing new content to consume and the means of obtaining it has never been easier.
As for Disney specifically, I do feel like they are actively harming the market with their seemingly bottomless pool of resources and single-minded commitment to profit margin. Every Disney animated feature is getting a live action remake. Every Marvel character gets not just their own film but their own series of films. Since they acquired the Star Wars license at the end of 2012 we've seen 5 films and a TV series in 7 years with many more still in production. I am a huge Star Wars fan and I have to admit, my enthusiasm for new Star Wars content has been bled nearly dry over that period of time. I have yet to see The Mandalorian and I'm not sure that I even care. So I have to agree here that while comic book movies are the most visible expression of this over-saturation, the root cause points further up the food chain. I've never liked comic book movies so there's no danger of genre fatigue for me there, but if they can get me to turn on Star Wars in such a short period of time they've really accomplished something.
Having grown up in the 80s/90s when blockbuster filmmaking got it's start and there were really only 1 or 2 "tentpole" movies of any kind released each year, there's a nostalgic feeling of loss I associate with the apparent end of the big screen format except as a means to sell established IP. I realize though that the film/video format as a means of narrative storytelling, cultural exchange, social commentary etc. is as strong as it has ever been even if the vast majority of us now enjoy that content from the confines of our own homes and personal devices. It's also apparent to me that what I truly miss about the theatrical viewing experience is the communal exchange that it once entailed. I may be overgeneralizing here, but I feel like we've fractured into individual content consumers with access to whatever we're interested in at any time and that seems to have shifted us culturally into a society of self-selecting ideological tribes with little patience for one another. Even if you have a novel and important message to convey and a compelling way to package it, is it even going to make it to a mainstream audience or are you rhetorically limited to preaching to your own choir? That's an open question to me right now and as an individual who maintains (against my better judgment) a professional interest in the art of narrative storytelling, I've never been more discouraged.