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this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2024
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Asklemmy
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I feel like bad movies nowadays are bad for simpler reasons. Trying to pin down why some movies from the 1980s worked or didn't, for that audience or a modern audience, was complicated and remains complicated. Nailing down the failure points of modern crap is so straightforward that it naturally becomes comedy.
Maybe it's a matter of proportion. There's complex duds now, and there were blatantly atrocious movies then. But it's like... people making movies grew up watching too many movies, and don't recognize which parts are a choice. They know a thing is supposed to happen, but don't recognize that it was clearly set up to appear obviously necessary, so they don't do that setup. And then the "have I got a movie for you" guy gets to say "unclear." The same cyclical regurgitation creates live-action adaptations of animated films, which neither build on nor live up to the originals, despite examples where stage musicals outclassed the celebrated hand-drawn films.
The good news is that AI is going to destroy all of this by eliminating Hollywood. I mean really - if any writer who can sketch their own animatics can extract a finished scene from their computer, what is a billion-dollar studio going to offer them besides marketing?