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by HlessClaudesman 1128 days ago
I went to see many small to mid sized films in the 1990s - 2000s, and heres the thing: it was often just 3 or 4 other people in the cinema. Seems like a misallocation of resources. The old system wasn't perfect either.

Nowadays the energy, ingenuity and talent that would have gone into making smaller films is instead going into making premium TV. I can see why cinema purists are upset by the shift to streaming, but as an audience member I'm currently getting an unlimited buffet of content on 3 streaming services paying about what I would have paid back in the day to see 3 movies.

Are you not entertained?

2 comments

> Nowadays the energy, ingenuity and talent that would have gone into making smaller films is instead going into making premium TV.

I hate this. I think 80-110 minutes is a good amount of time to tell a story. It's enough time to develop characters and build a world, but it's short enough that to be effective a film has to be ruthlessly edited.

Stories for TV are so bloated. Series like Stranger Things, Servant, The Last of Us and Russian Doll would have been perfectly suited to the movie format, but instead they get padded out to 8-hour seasons.

I should note I don't think this is true of all series, by any means. Lots of stories are well suited to the series format, like Succession, Dahmer or The Boys. And I know my opinion won't be a popular one because the runaway success of long bloated stories shows us which way the winds are blowing.

I have a similar opinion about series. They tend to become either repetitive or implausible over time, and they rarely have a decent ending. Too much time to fill and too little ability to plan ahead to avoid these.
The theatrical releases were probably a waste but these movies made their money on vhs and dvd sales. However, direct to dvd was considered a bargain bin only movie without prestige and theater appearances were and are required for Oscar contention so even then theater releases did make some economic sense.

On paper, a lot of these movies should have moved to direct to streaming but haven’t for whatever reason.

Yeah it's surprising how shallow the back catalogues of all the streaming services are. Currently they don't seem to be incentivised to acquire the rights to older content, because the flashy new stuff is what reels in the flashy new customers.

Would there be demand for a streaming service to host older quality content under a new umbrella, or maybe just a retro focused offshoot of an existing streaming service? Kind of like one of those old timey video stores that specialised in rare cult classics.