this post was submitted on 08 Mar 2025
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I generally believe most movies should be shorter and that there's a lot of room for addition by subtraction. That said, if a movie earns its runtime then I don't think there's an upper limit to how long it can be. Lawrence of Arabia is 3 hours and 45 minutes and it's incredible, I don't think I'd cut anything in it besides the long black intro screen which is a relic of its time. I would say justifying that run time gets exponentially harder past a certain point.
With Way of Water sitting at 3 hours and 12 minutes I do think Avatar 3 needs an intermission if it's going to be longer. Asking people to sit and be fully engaged for 3 and a half hours is a big ask and having a chance to go to the bathroom, get snacks, stretch your legs, etc is needed for something that massive
I think there's been a problem with editing in Hollywood for quite a long time now. Many movies are much longer than they need to. A recent example is Anora, which could have easily trimmed 20-30 minutes of its runtime without losing any plot or character development.
Especially if kids are going to see it.
Part of me wonders what would happen if you released a movie in two parts at the same time. If it were direct to streaming, that would essentially just be a mini (micro?) series. But in theaters... I'm not sure that sort of thing has been done
I don’t think people would be willing to pay twice.
They are if you just release them a year apart.
Right, but you said released at the same time.
I'm not saying you're wrong to believe that people would be upset, perceiving being double charged, I'm just pointing out that if people were upset, it would be irrational, and gave the example of a two-parter with a normal release schedule to explain why.
People would pay a dozen times if it was good enough