Its an interesting article but it lacks honesty. Hollywood continually goes through phases of making and remaking films time and time again. They will only stop when the returns and public interest in them collapses.
Look at the franchises that have lived, died and returned again and again over the last thirty five odd years. Alien, Star Trek, Superman, Star Wars, Batman, X men, Terminator , Indiana Jones. Inevitably the box office crashes or its critically mauled and the series grinds to a halt until its eventually given a new lease of life because NOTHING else does as well.
There been many new sci fi and fantasy movies made at the same time as these series were. But the hard truth is they were just not good enough. People didn’t go to see them because they lacked the buzz, critics disliked them ,or they did okay but not really well enough and the truth is you’ve simply forgotten they were ever made until you spotted them on Netflix or Amazon years later.
I think " Jupiter Ascending" will be a perfect example of this. Its yet another space opera and visually it reminds very much of "John Carter" but its being critically savaged at the moment but until I see it I'm not going make any judgement. But Warner Bros have gambled $175 million on it. If you look back in that thread you'll see I said at the time I thought the delay for work on the special effects sounded odd . But thats because WB had already funded two bombs, "Transendance" deserved to be one and "Edge of Tomorrow" which most definitely didn't. If you total the cost ALONE of making those three original and new films, its close to a terrifying $500 million!!!!
I’ve heard this argument about reboots and remakes countless times before and it’s still a weak one. Hollywood isn’t the be all and end all of all film making but it’s one of the very few places in the world were the multi million dollar funding for making “mega” blockbusters could ever be put together. It’s a huge complicated business and a massive financial gamble for a product brand that is so often untested, which is why ,when a successful series comes along ,it makes sense to continue to making others like it. Finding the exact combination of things that work for the paying public to see and love a film is not an easy thing.
That’s why I don’t really worry about certain types of films doing brilliantly well even if I don’t like them. It all goes back into the pot which allows more funding for more films, and the chances are there will be one amongst those that I like, probably quite a bit.
Lets face it Marvels success didn’t happen overnight. If you look at their attempts pre Iron Man they weren’t exactly box office busters. How many attempts at the Hulk did we need until they got it right?
I do agree that the next few years do look over stuffed though and there are a couple of things that are worth noting that are now effecting cinema attendances particularly in the States and the UK.
Too many blockbusters crammed in a crowded schedule released within weeks of each other are reducing the overall box office, in some cases quite severely. Why?
Because now many more people can watch and stream films on line after a relatively short period of time after the cinema release dates quite easily. Most people I know have very decent “big” flat TV screens and unlimited broadband and are now therefore fairly reluctant to cough up a considerable amount of money for them all to go out as a family to see a film they don't know much about , when ,come the dark winter nights, they can watch it at home in comfort, for a fraction of the total cost, even of a DVD. That happened with "Edge of Tomorrow". No matter how hard I recommended it to people I could NOT get them to go. Its only months later when they've watched on line that they've said how much they enjoyed it . I really noticed this this summer when more and more people made the one or two choices to go see a film at the cinema and waited for the rest to come on line later . A few didn’t bother at all with any cinema releases, but have caught up with them now as they have been released these last few months.
Its like at Christmas there are just so many films on television you simply cannot be bothered to see them all, no matter how good they are. I’ve still some recorded that I haven’t watched and I’m an avid film fan. Which brings me to my second point.
There really is a huge amount of quality media entertainment everywhere these days. Winter time is the point at which I catch up my video gaming, my reading, my tv series and films (thank you Netflix!!) and even I struggle to do it all. So it would not be surprising that particularly with the sheer number of future films being released unless they pace it right there are going to be some really disappointing BO figures