NAB News
Bond is back – but will audiences follow? That’s the
multi-million dollar question to which no-one in Hollywood knows the answer. Or
perhaps even cares, since the studios first priority is no longer theatrical
but streaming.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/what-the-next-few-months-will-tell-us-about-the-movies/
After a year and more starved of the opportunity to visit
the cinema, during which feature productions were forced to postpone principal
photography and / or had their release dates delayed, the schedule is unwinding
in a flurry of Awards season releases.
Hot on the heels of Daniel Craig’s final bow as 007, comes
Denis Villeneuve’s already acclaimed adaptation of Dune and Steven
Spielberg’s remake of West Side Story. Lin Manuel Miranda debuts another
musical, Tick, Tick…Boom!, this time on Netflix. The streamer also has
one of the early hot Awards prospects in Jane Campion’s The Power of the Dog.
Other big name properties include Ridley Scott’s House of
Gucci, Cannes Palme d’Or winner Titane, Edgar Wright’s
trippy Last Night in Soho, Joel Cohen’s Shakespearean take The
Tragedy of Macbeth (shot in black and white) starring Denzel
Washington for AppleTV+; Will Smith as the father and coach of famed tennis
players Venus and Serena Williams in King Richard; and Guillermo del
Toro’s follow up to Best Picture winner The Shape of Water called Nightmare
Alley starring Bradley Cooper. Plus, before Christmas, a new PT Anderson
drama Licorice Pizza with another Bradley Cooper performance –
to list a few.
The big question is whether people will rush to see these
movies in theaters or, their curiosity piqued, just wait until they’re
available to stream. Some like Dune will have a dual release in
theaters and on HBO Max, some like The Tragedy of Macbeth have no
plans for theaters at all.
As Stephanie Zacharek, the film critic for Time points out, it’s not like the box office numbers for recent releases give us a clue.
Box-office returns for Disney’s Black Widow, released
simultaneously in theaters and via streaming, were ultimately disappointing.
But the Ryan Reynolds comedy Free Guy and the Aretha Franklin
biopic Respect – which both launched only in theaters before being made
available via streaming—"lured a respectable number of moviegoers from
their pandemic-era lairs,” she reports.
“People who want to go back to the
movies really want to go back; their idea of what movies can and
should be hinges on a vision writ large in their imagination. Other, more
indifferent viewers are happy to welcome the new delivery methods, depending on
what’s most convenient for them. Either way, studios will find ways to make
money off their products—and evidence suggests that most of them don’t care
where or how you watch, as long as they make their money.”
We should also be careful about who is
telling us—even indirectly—that streaming is the new and ideal model. All the
studios have a vested interest in promoting their own streaming subscription
platform.
“The companies that used to make big-screen movies now have
a great deal invested in feeding you a steady diet of small-screen ones,”
Zacharek says.
The pandemic induced convenience is no longer an excuse, she
thinks. “All the better if [the studios] can make it look like it
was our idea in the first place—that way they can pretend they’re
merely offering us a wonderful service (for a price), rather than killing off
movies as we know them.”
Zacharek doesn’t however think the die is cast for
big-screen movie watching. It won’t be the big studios that will keep
movie-going alive, she thinks.
“Movies will be kept alive by people who care about them as
artistry first and a means of making big bucks second. Streaming just may
become the major delivery system for what we used to think of as big-studio
theatrical releases. But smaller, smarter films aimed at grown-ups may be the
ones that save the movies.”
She’s talking here of films by Pedro Almodóvar, Pablo Larraín
or Claire Denis—on the big screen and argues that the streaming revolution
might strengthen, rather than chip away at, people’s desire to see this kind of
movie on the big screen.
I’d like to believe her - I’m a cinefile too. That also
means the romantic view of experiencing a film for the first time on the big
screen in a darkened room in the company of strangers is something to cherish –
but may no longer be a basis for a mass market business model.
Theatrical will likely survive, probably for the IMAX and
multi-sensory overload luxury giant screens for playing occasional mega-budget
blockbusters (also available online) and at the other end of the market, for
the ‘analogue’ romance of going out to enjoy an arthouse classic projected.
“Stranger things have happened: in music, vinyl has been
kept alive by boutique enthusiasts of all ages, while CDs—though still beloved
by some—are as quaint as gramophone records.”
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