Haha, one of my friends who saw the posted article said "Anything to avoid taking the blame for making sh1t movies, I guess."
I think after a while the theaters will be a thing of the past and everything will be on a streaming service.
I haven't seen broadcast TV in ages. I was at my sister's house recently for a double berfday BBQ (for my bro who is visiting from across the country, and my sister's husband), and the living room TV was on, and non-streaming stuff was showing on it. Two things: First of all, commercials. Wow, I completely forgot what it was like to deal with commercials (aside from when I used free Hulu in the late 2000s), and I forgot how frequent, long, and annoying they are! That is one part of my distant past I'm glad is gone for good. What's strange is that while shows made for broadcast TV often have commercial break points built in, it seems these days the TV service providers aren't using them, and instead cut the show off in other sections, which is quite jarring. My sister said it's even more hilarious for shows that have music to lead into and out of commercials, cuz now those music tracks play back-to-back without a commercial in between.
Second, it was really weird to see commercials on broadcast TV for stuff on streaming networks. And they would say sh1t like "streaming now on Paramount+!", which is kinda hilarious. I guess they are trying to win over those last few holdouts of society that haven't ditched broadcast stuff like cable and switched to streaming yet.
I guess when they all get together for their awards, ceremonies, and private parties they feel the rest of the world is doing the same and have no clue how many folks started moving on so very long ago.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA yeah!
The scrap that's left doesn't quite have that audience to draw from. Don't get me wrong I do think there are still some Marvel movies that could be made that will at least do $100-$500 million or more but you can only sell The End of the Universe, multiverse, etc., so many times.
Indeed.
I was absolutely hooked on MCU between
Iron Man 1 and
Endgame. By the time
Endgame rolled around, they just plain weren't making any good movies anymore. That's why I left (or am still in the process of leaving). And then yeah, I stopped liking moving theaters long before MCU came around. Other people in the audience, cell phones, staff (sometimes), terrible food prices, adhering to movie playback schedules, and not being able to control the media (pause, rewind, etc) combined with superior displays at home (and in a lot of cases comparable audio) ruined the theater-going experience for me. Oh, and the rising ticket prices too. Why should I pay their sh1t prices when I can get a better, more convenient movie-watching experience at home? Don't gotta waste gas and time traveling to the theater when I can just flip on a good high-res display inside my own home and fire up a BD disc or rip.