this post was submitted on 13 Apr 2025
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Heh, looking at the article and the cesspool of WSJ comments:
The elephant in the room (that the website dances around) is algorithmic attention. If people are glued to feeds on phones/at home, that's less time to chat about (and go to) movies that don't have the critical mass to pop into your feed. That sucks, as there's nothing movie studios can do about our toxic information environment.
Going by the comments... Seems modern movie goers have a thin skin. Even the slightest hint of something woke is apparently unwatchable? But themes and conflicts that make you uncomfortable are what makes fiction interesting. This may cut both ways too (with, for instance, military-themed movies turning off more leftist moviegoers? I feel that way to some extent).
Wanting to watch at home is a major contributing factor, but I think its overstated compared to the above two. Like, our local Movie Tavern isn't super luxurious, I have crazy technical family with OLED/surround setups, but going out is still a fun social excursion. Most peoples' home setups... aren't great.
Maybe this is more personal to me, but I am way more into TV series than movies these days. There's just so much more time to worldbuild and assemble characters, and more room to run and play once established. But I would totally pay for a restaurant booth to, say, watch some TV episode I can pick with buds.
I suppose that depends on how war is depicted in the film. War is hell, but sometimes it's necessary. I don't love the idea of war, but Slaughterhouse Five lives on as one of my favorite books about war. Understanding war and its impacts are important, even if we don't like a world in which we have to resort to war.
Sure, a lot of American film makes war movies all "RAH RAH RAH USA USA USA," but that doesn't mean all films about war have to be that way, especially films about war made in other nations, who perhaps don't have their military so deeply ingrained in the film industry.
Hell, Three Kings is still an underrated war film which has an undercurrent of themes regarding capitalism and consumerism and how it relates to war.
Yeah, these MAGA babies can't handle anything at all that challenges their worldview. Even things that are supposed to challenge their worldview, like The Boys, instead re-enforces the same views because they simply have no media literacy.
Maybe but not because I’m liberal, because we’re shit. The fact that “The Covenant” exists is FUCKING INFURIATING to me. I signed up to put my ass on the line, knowing any flight out of CONUS had a return ticket. We not only told the terps we’d take them to the American dream but made them put their lives on the line…then flew away and made a fucking movie about how it’s too bad they’re all stuck in the suck.