I find that, while I still have a taste for the best of the "big budget" movies, I just take a very dim view of most other "big budget" films that are attempting to catch my eye (but failing). I can certainly enjoy a wide range of films and television, but within that particular genre (action/adventure/comic-book/blockbuster style films), the ones that get made seem to be fairly craptastic more often now.
While it's absolutely true that every era has had its share of lousy, formulaic films, my sense is that things have shifted in the modern era, thanks to ever more granular information that companies can glean from social media and other data mining, and an ever stronger impulse to just go with whatever brings quick cash in. Maybe I'm only seeing it clearly now, but there seems to be a far, far more cynical approach to making and marketing these types of films, and much of it seems to carry an undercurrent that assumes the audience is chiefly comprised of low-grade morons. I want to believe that people want better than what they're getting and are simply "settling" for what's produced, but the simple fact is that, settling or not, they're still paying, so all the industry sees is a continued path to quick cash.
That said, I do think that I can be a bit harsh on the industry, and that projects which are legitimately risky -- even in the big budget arena -- are being made. Guardians of the Galaxy was a HUGE risk. NOBODY knows that team. It's a bit-player in the comics industry. I mean, yeah, hardcore comics fans know it...but hardcore comics fans aren't what's driving Marvel Studios' releases. The real beauty of Marvel's films, though, is that -- while they don't slavishly follow the comics the way many fans might want -- they do a fantastic job at paying respect to their source material while simultaneously appealing to a broader audience and generally being just entertaining films even if you stripped out the IP (which is always my test for what makes a good movie in these genre films -- can it stand without the benefit of the IP).
Other films like, say, John Carter and The Lone Ranger were BIG risks for Disney. Make no mistake, while these are "known" properties, they're extremely difficult to adapt to modern audiences and I commend Disney for even giving it a shot, regardless of the end product (which, in both cases, I thought was far more entertaining than the reviews made them out to be...although at best, it was more along the "Eh, not bad" line).
I think within the genres, the biggest "problems" are that the studios assume that all you have to do is slap an IP on an otherwise crappy film, and you're done. And while, yes, that can make money, it's pure laziness. And there are good films out there -- good, IP-based films, I should say -- that show you can respect your source material, revive or reuse an IP, and still tell a damn fine story. It's just that a lot of franchise films don't seem as interested in that, in some degree. Like, the new Star Trek films, in my opinion, are generally entertaining films. They just aren't Star Trek films to me, and the veneer of the IP is largely pointless. I'd probably enjoy them more if they weren't called "Star Trek," because I wouldn't be unfavorably comparing them or rolling my eyes at the "shout outs" to the original material. So that's a failure of respecting source material. Other films like anything Michael Bay has any connection to seem to spit in the eye of the audience in so many ways that it makes me angry at the audience for going to see these films and not recognizing that Bay has such utter contempt for his customers. I mean, I really get the sense that Michael Bay hates film-goers. Either that, or he's emotionless and simply produces films comprised of elements that seem to jack directly into audience's mental pleasure centers, chief among them: explosions and slow-mo pans of cleavage.