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1->''"A long time ago, in a studio boardroom far, far away..."''
2
3The current Blockbuster Age of Hollywood is an era where marketing and spectacle have dominated, in contrast to the creative freedom (and excesses) that marked the MediaNotes/NewHollywood era of the 1970s. It has also created a new "studio-system", built upon the ashes of the old. This time however, there are only five major studios: Creator/{{Sony}} (releasing films under the Creator/ColumbiaPictures, Creator/TriStarPictures and Creator/ScreenGems imprints), [[Creator/{{Universal}} Universal Pictures]], Creator/WarnerBros, [[Creator/{{Paramount}} Paramount Pictures]] and [[Creator/{{Disney}} Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures]] (formerly known as Buena Vista Pictures)--Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox and Creator/{{MGM}} still exist, but the former was acquired by Disney in 2019, renamed [[RenamedToAvoidAssociation "20th Century Studios"]] to remove connections to Fox Corporation (the shell of Fox's former self) and the latter is a shadow of its former self, owned by its creditors for years until Amazon bought it in 2021, and a major studio [[GrandfatherClause only by virtue of]] its [[GloryDays glamorous past]]; on the other hand, mini-major Creator/{{Lionsgate}}, founded in 1997, has proven itself able to compete with the major players. But fundamentally, this is a studio-system InNameOnly. The studios have become part of larger conglomerates instead of being independent companies like in the Golden Age. In addition, actors still operate on a "free agent" basis instead of being contractually tied to a studio, and the New Hollywood mentality of directors having just as much say in the final product as studio executives-- if not more so-- remained (mostly) intact for much of the era.
4
5!!'''"Blockbusters" in both senses of the word'''
6The term "block buster" (note the space) was first used for a giant bomb during World War II, with ''Variety'' quickly adopting it to describe films whose premieres attracted lines around the blocks surrounding Broadway's top movie houses like the Radio City Music Hall or the Paramount, Strand, Capitol and Roxy theaters.
7
8There is significant overlap between the end of MediaNotes/NewHollywood and the start of the Blockbuster Age. While New Hollywood is generally held to have ended in the early '80s after a string of expensive, high-profile flops, the beginning of the Blockbuster Age is generally pinned much earlier, in the year of 1975, which marked the arrival of one Creator/StevenSpielberg into mainstream Hollywood, with his classic shark film ''Film/{{Jaws}}''. ''Jaws'' was a revolution in cinema, marking a shift towards advertising, HighConcept and disciplined production as ways of producing high-quality, commercially viable films. This was followed up two years later by the success of Spielberg's ''Film/CloseEncountersOfTheThirdKind'' and Creator/GeorgeLucas' ''Franchise/StarWars'' (later retitled ''Franchise/StarWars Episode IV: Film/ANewHope''), which revitalized the science fiction genre. ''Star Wars'' also showed Hollywood how [[MerchandiseDriven merchandising]], {{spinoff}}s into other media, and sequels could be used by the studios to return to profitability. Together, ''Jaws'', ''Close Encounters'' and ''Star Wars'' invented the SummerBlockbuster as Hollywood's new paradigm for film-making.
9
10Notable is the fact that these science-fiction thrillers were in genres that in the Old Hollywood days would be BMovie (and ''Star Wars'' was called such by ''Creator/RogerCorman'' during a visit to the set on hearing Creator/GeorgeLucas' ideas) and would have been made on low-budget or NoBudget with limited technical resources. The above films more or less structured on similar concepts with a much higher production standard and better visual effects. This trend continued with the wild success of ''Film/SupermanTheMovie'' in 1978 and ''Film/StarTrekTheMotionPicture'' in 1979, which showed that adaptations from media previously scoffed at by Hollywood, such as the ComicBook SuperHero and genre TV series, had potential to become big-time film genres and that the supposedly niche teenager, geek and nerd concepts could in fact appeal to a big part of the mainstream. The huge success of these films -- and another '79 entry, ''Film/TheMuppetMovie'' -- with children was also noted. For all its rebelliousness, MediaNotes/NewHollywood fundamentally was built on the old genres of the Golden Age Hollywood (TheMusical, the ScrewballComedy, TheWestern, FilmNoir, the women's film, the EpicMovie) and either made {{Deconstruction}} of those genres, [[DeconReconSwitch or updated or reconfigured it]]. What Lucas and Spielberg achieved was a PerspectiveFlip whereby the disreputable serials, science-fiction and adventure stories suddenly went from micro-budget BMovie to more or less epic spectacular made on a scale and budget comparable to a Creator/CecilBDeMille production. This realignment of the audience kicked off the Blockbuster Age.
11
12More importantly, both films were among the first to have "wide" releases (''Film/TheGodfather'' was the first) instead of being released first in major cities. This eventually blurred the line between the different kinds of movie theaters existing until then.
13
14!! '''Rise of Home Video'''
15
16The name "Blockbuster Age" also has another origin: Blockbuster Video. It is very difficult to overstate how great an impact the invention of [[Platform/{{VCR}} the videocassette]] had on the film industry. It started a golden age for independent cinema, the full impact of which is described below. (It also started a golden age for the porn industry, but that's for [[TheRuleOfFirstAdopters a completely different article]].) It also effectively killed second-run theaters, grindhouses, and porn theaters, as people could now watch movies in the comfort of their living rooms instead of having to go to sleazy, run-down theaters in ''[[WretchedHive that]]'' [[WretchedHive part of town]] -- and in the case of porn theaters, not worry about getting caught at an establishment that was only one step above a brothel or a bathhouse. In addition, MediaNotes/{{home video|distributors}} and cable television offered the studios additional revenue streams for their films after they'd left theaters, allowing them to continue making money off of older films -- some of which could see [[VindicatedByCable a second chance]] [[CultClassic at success]] when they came out on video or on a movie channel. Last but certainly not least, the videocassette seriously spooked Hollywood's traditional arch-enemy, the over-the-air television industry, which feared people recording shows just to fast-forward through all those lucrative commercials.
17
18Of course, there's a catch to everything. Video camcorders also opened the doors to bootleggers, the pre-internet manifestation of {{digital pira|cyIsEvil}}tes, who hawked their wares on the street and packed everything up in seconds the moment they saw a cop. In the early '80s, the film industry, having not yet learned what a potential gold mine it was, feared that the videocassette would destroy them; MPAA head Jack Valenti [[WesternAnimation/{{Freakazoid}} (and his cheeks)]] went so far as to compare the effect it would have on cinema to the effect of the Boston Strangler on a woman alone at home. ([[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything Any similarities to the hysterical reaction of the MPAA to file-sharing are completely coincidental.]]) Persuaded by calmer voices like Creator/FredRogers, the Supreme Court's decision in the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_Corp._of_America_v._Universal_City_Studios,_Inc "Betamax case"]] in 1983-84, which held that the makers of Platform/{{VCR}}s couldn't be held liable for copyright infringement committed by the devices' users, ultimately settled the matter, with the film industry getting in on the booming home video industry not long after.
19
20When the Platform/LaserDisc appeared in the 80s and, more importantly, Platform/{{DVD}}s came around in TheNineties, the studios were able to make even more money by putting out a [[LimitedSpecialCollectorsUltimateEdition Limited Special Collectors Ultimate]] UnratedEdition for each of their big films, packed with [[DVDCommentary commentaries]], deleted scenes and "director's cuts", "making of" featurettes, {{feelies}}, and other [[DVDBonusContent bonus features]]. The high-end [[Creator/TheCriterionCollection Criterion Collection]] series emerged as taking the greatest care in preservation and supplementation of classic films.
21
22!!'''Rise of the multiplex'''
23
24Another factor in the return of Hollywood to profitability was the rise of the multiplex theater, something that began during the MediaNotes/NewHollywood era [[note]]although, depending on your definition, the first multiplex opened as early as the 1930s[[/note]] but truly took off in the [[UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan Reagan]] years and after. The multiplex follows a fairly simple logic: if you have more screens, then you can run more showings of more movies, and can therefore make [[MoneyDearBoy more money]]! Six-screen theaters were opening by the end of TheSeventies, and by TheNineties, they had gone up to eleven with 20-screen "megaplex" theaters and beyond. It is no coincidence that the rise of the multiplex occurred at the same time as the boom of malls and big-box stores; most multiplexes were part of such complexes, and like their retail cousins, were a driving force behind [[{{Suburbia}} suburban sprawl]] through TheEighties and the early years of TheNineties, the decade when downtown theaters slowly got squeezed out of business, unable to compete with the massive profits made by this new breed of theater. Multiplexes caused the moviegoing experience to undergo a fundamental shift, and very few would argue that the shift was for the better -- it went from large, well-appointed theaters with well-dressed, butler-like staff (something that is now seen only in the few remaining "legacy" movie palaces, like the [[Creator/EastmanKodak Kodak]] and Chinese Theatres in Hollywood) to small, fairly spartan auditoriums with floors covered in dropped popcorn and spilled soda (both of which are ridiculously overpriced), staffed by young people making minimum wage and not particularly happy about it -- movie theater jobs are often considered to be just a step above [[BurgerFool fast food]] and supermarket jobs in terms of crappy, humiliating employment for teenagers.
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26None of this really mattered to the studios, who were mainly pleased with the fact that a movie could make back its budget, no matter how big it was, in a matter of days instead of weeks or even months. The goal of the studios had shifted from making movies with "legs" (i.e. movies that would keep marching on to large, stable box office numbers week in and week out) to movies that could rake in a colossal take on opening weekend. Who cares if bad word-of-mouth causes it to take a 50-60% drop for round 2? However, there was some push back from the opposing camp of viewers who tried to encourage more discerning tastes, such as when two movie critics from the Chicago newspapers, Creator/RogerEbert of the ''Sun-Times'' and Gene Siskel of the ''Tribune'', starting doing TV on the PBS show, ''Sneak Previews'', on the side. As such, they later created the long running syndicated movie review TV show, ''Series/SiskelAndEbert'', that became a popular mainstay for decades spreading insightful film reviews from the wordy newspapers and magazines to a more easily digestible medium. While obviously it could not raise all the public's taste, the duo and their imitators at least could help make good artistic work pay off and any halfway ambitious movie studio still knows that credible praise is valuable stuff in marketing. After all, there's a reason that S & E's trademarked catch phrase, "Two Thumbs Up," was front and center for any advertisement for movies earning it.
27
28!!'''Hollywood rebuilds'''
29
30There are many waves and stretches for the Blockbuster era. The first wave is 1982 which saw the release of a slew of summer blockbusters that are now regarded as classics, including: ''Film/ETTheExtraTerrestrial'', ''Film/TheThing1982'', ''Film/RockyIII'', ''Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan'', ''Film/ConanTheBarbarian1982'', ''Film/BladeRunner'', ''Film/{{Poltergeist|1982}}'', ''Film/{{TRON}}'', and ''Film/MadMax2TheRoadWarrior'' with the caveat that ''Blade Runner'', ''TRON'' and ''The Thing'' were flops. 1982 is often regarded as Hollywood's second "golden year" in terms of creativity and classic films, not unlike how 1939 is considered to be the highpoint of MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfHollywood. Other memorable films released around this time include ''Film/{{Ghostbusters 1984}}'', ''Film/RaidersOfTheLostArk'', ''Film/BackToTheFuture1'', and the first film to be released with the new PG-13 rating, ''Film/RedDawn1984''. However, unlike 1939, 1982 most certainly did ''not'' come at a high point for the studios financially. Hollywood spent much of TheEighties reeling from the fallout of the MediaNotes/NewHollywood era, and the combined share of the six surviving major studios from the [[MediaNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfHollywood Golden Age]] had fallen to just 64% by 1986 -- the lowest it had been since the days of silent film. Two young studios -- Orion and Tri-Star (the former was a company formed by executives of United Artists who'd fled that company shortly before the ''Heaven's Gate'' debacle; the latter was initially a joint venture of Columbia, Creator/{{CBS}} and Creator/{{HBO}}) -- maintained about 6% market share each, Disney had about 10%, and smaller independents (the largest being Creator/NewLineCinema, "the house that [[Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet Freddy]] built") would together make up 13% (more than any one studio besides Paramount).
31
32It would be in TheNineties -- after a new round of corporate acquisitions (Columbia was purchased in 1982 by Coca-Cola, which spun it off in 1987; Creator/{{Sony}} then bought Columbia in 1989; Fox became part of UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch's News Corp in 1985; Warners merged with Time Inc. and HBO to form Time Warner in 1990 [the Turner Broadcasting merger of 1996 brought New Line Cinema into the fold]; Also in 1990, Universal came under the control of Matsushita after it bought MCA, only to sell them in 1995 to Seagram, which was bought in 2000 by Vivendi, which sold it in 2004 to GE, merging it with Creator/{{NBC}}, it was finally absorbed into cable giant Comcast between 2011 and 2013; and Paramount Communications [formerly Gulf+Western] was acquired by Creator/{{Viacom}} in 1995) -- and the TurnOfTheMillennium that the rebirth would finally come. Orion would go bankrupt in 1992 (and eventually get eaten by MGM), Tri-Star would merge with Columbia (HBO and CBS having since sold out) in 1998, and New Line would merge with Warner Bros. in 2008 (after getting into a dick-swinging contest with Peter Jackson). By 2006, the six major movie conglomerates' share of the box office (counting Disney) had climbed back to 89.8% of the North American market. The two largest independent studios, Creator/LionsGate and Creator/TheWeinsteinCompany, would share 6.1%, MGM would have 1.8%, and the remaining indie studios shared the remaining 2.3%.
33
34While Hollywood in the '80s became associated with family-friendly films like ''Franchise/IndianaJones'', ''Film/Ghostbusters1984'', ''Back to the Future'' and the like, adults-only audiences did not go away quickly. This was the decade that Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone, and Bruce Willis became (more) famous for appearing in ultra-violent action movies like ''Film/TheTerminator'', the ''Franchise/{{Rambo}}'' series and ''Film/DieHard'' respectively; their colorful shoot-outs and thinly-veiled glorification of vigilantism greatly contrasted with the self-pitying demeanor of 1970s-era films. (On the B-picture level, Creator/CharlesBronson and Creator/ChuckNorris became Creator/TheCannonGroup's biggest stars via action movies.) There was a big market for R-rated comedy, with Creator/EddieMurphy toplining several such films as part of his emergence as the decade's most popular comic performer. (He also helped popularize action-comedy hybrids with films like ''Film/BeverlyHillsCop''.) And between the relaxed content restrictions New Hollywood had established and the special effects advances ''Star Wars'' and similar hits developed and encouraged, horror movies saw their highest profile in pop culture since the 1950s, if not 1930s. MoralGuardians everywhere wailed about the SlasherFilm craze, the emergence of BodyHorror, and a wave of DarkerAndEdgier, BloodierAndGorier, ''and'' HotterAndSexier takes on every horror concept under the moon.
35 Creator/StephenKing novels and short stories saw multiple adaptations per year from 1983 onward. Filmmakers like Creator/JohnCarpenter, Creator/WesCraven, and Creator/DavidCronenberg, all of whom got their start on the B-picture circuit of the '70s, are notable for gaining respect among gutsier professional critics for their imaginative, provocative films as they graduated to bigger budgets and ideas.
36
37Speaking of Cannon, they were able to grow remarkably fast in a short period of time thanks to Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus, the two Israelis who took over Cannon in the late 1970s, pioneering the "pre-buy" -- paying for movies to be made by selling the home video, TV, and foreign distribution rights to their films in advance, meaning the films were profitable even before theatrical release. Other companies, including arch-rival Creator/CarolcoPictures, copied the same formula, relying on foreign and ancillary rights to help fund films. Ultimately, both companies fell apart later amid constant financial mismanagement; both Cannon and Carolco, and well a slew of other B-level film companies, were being funded by the French bank Credit Lyonnais in what's been described as a "massive Ponzi-like scheme" where the bankers and studio higher-ups were busy bribing each other to insane levels; Cannon's perilous financial state [[https://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1996/07/08/214344/ subsequently attracted the attention of]] Italian scammer Giancarlo Parretti, who purchased Cannon and then MGM/UA, the latter under false pretenses; merging the two together, [[TyrantTakesTheHelm he owned the company for a tumultuous eight months]], leaving a trail of chaos in his wake, until CL seized control and had Parretti arrested in 1992. Most of the other companies entangled with CL had already gone under by that point; Carolco was the last company to fail, in 1995, which also resulted in a ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'' film being [[ScrewedByTheLawyers webbed up in legal disputes]] until Columbia Pictures managed to untangle it via a deal with MGM, which itself spent much of the 1990s recovering from the Parretti fiasco and buying up other companies and libraries, including the bankrupt Creator/OrionPictures.
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39The 1980s also brought two important developments in monetizing films: ''Film/ETTheExtraTerrestrial'' popularized ProductPlacement when a preteen boy's use of Reese's Pieces to draw out the titular creature from hiding resulted in a gigantic uptick in the candy's sales. And at the end of the decade, ''Film/BackToTheFuturePartII'' rolled out internationally over a few weeks in November and December 1989, an unprecedented move probably sparked by the popularity of home video (contrast this with the fact ''Film/ANewHope'' had its European premiere in France three months after the American release, while it didn't get released in the UK until Christmas, ''seven months'' after it premiered stateside) and resultant fears of piracy.
40
41The faltering animation industry got a badly-needed kick in the pants at the end of the 1980s with the releases of ''Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit'', ''WesternAnimation/TheLittleMermaid1989'' and ''WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast''. The "Disney Renaissance" became one of the main factors of [[MediaNotes/TheRenaissanceAgeOfAnimation a new age for not only cartoons]], but also for the film industry as a whole as studios began to take interest in animation. However, the success of 1995's ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory1'' meant the end not only for the in-house animation divisions, replaced by up-starts like Creator/{{Dreamworks|Animation}} and Creator/{{Blue Sky|Studios}}, but also caused the decline of live-action family films.
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43More importantly, it revived the fortunes of the Walt Disney Company, which declined after its founder's demise and during TheEighties saw a lot of defections and came close to becoming a theme park-based company with film-making as a side-business. Their first major step in keeping themselves relevant was to move into non-family films by establishing Creator/TouchstonePictures; previous attempts at more adult-aimed films like ''Film/{{TRON}}'' had flopped in large part [[AnimationAgeGhetto because of the family-friendly stigma the Disney name had at the time]]. Touchstone's creation bypassed this problem and soon enough they'd even established a second label in Creator/HollywoodPictures to continue creating mainstream films. By the mid-1990s, Disney became a major money-spinner with a huge slew of valuable properties; in the 2000s it acquired Creator/{{Pixar}}, ''Franchise/StarWars'' (via Lucasfilm) and Creator/MarvelComics, becoming far and away the biggest studio in Hollywood.
44
45The second half of the 2010s saw a trend for greater consolidation with some controversial merger proposals: The first being AT&T's proposed acquisition of Time Warner, which had been subject to congressional scrutiny (albeit largely over politically-charged concerns regarding CNN). Meanwhile, Disney's takeover of Fox gave way to concerns about a potential near-monopoly of the industry as two of the largest media conglomerates amalgamated, even if both will keep their separate operations.
46
47!!'''The "indies"'''
48
49There has been an ''independent cinema'' in America since TheFifties (with Creator/JohnCassavetes being seen as ThePioneer) but until TheSeventies, the understanding was that independent cinema was a proving ground for talented artists to transition into the mainstream. Now of course some independents will stay independent and be better off for it, but most people who made independent films could conceivably expect some kind of audience and a shot at the big league. In TheEighties and TheNineties, independent film-makers were more or less expected to make a career in the margins and remain there and at best hope to break through by carving out some niche or the other, or somehow reinventing themselves into a mainstream film-maker (such as Creator/StevenSoderbergh who was a Sundance discovery who later made ''Film/OceansEleven'' and ''Film/OutOfSight''). The real hope of revenue for these films was home video and international sales. Home Video provided wide accessibility but also greater marginalization and invisibility from the mainstream. Prior to home video, independent films would often get (at best) limited releases in "arthouse" theaters that would limit their exposure, and films with controversial subject matter or [[ExploitationFilm offensive content]] often found themselves getting consigned to the "grindhouse" circuit by virtue of the X or NC-17 ratings. Now they could bypass theaters entirely and go DirectToVideo. Much of the DTV sales model was built by independent studios that couldn't afford theatrical runs for their films. But this meant that the audiences for these films were largely niche fans or genre-specialists and cinephiles and provided little room to reach audiences from other demographics. Film critics note that before one could say that both the mainstream and the independent scene had great talent and visionaries, now the independent scene had the bulk of the innovation, much of it was unrewarded, little-known and had little to no cultural impact.
50
51The major positive effect of home video was that it provided a channel for young film geeks who had spent much of their lives watching old films on TV and video, picking up the various techniques used by classic directors, and deciding that they wanted to become filmmakers themselves. People like Creator/QuentinTarantino, Creator/KevinSmith, Creator/SpikeLee and Creator/StevenSoderbergh made such films as ''Film/ReservoirDogs'', ''Film/PulpFiction'', ''Film/{{Clerks}}'', ''Film/DoTheRightThing'' and ''Film/SexLiesAndVideotape'', sparking a renaissance in independent film that lasts to this day. Other directors, such as Creator/TheCoenBrothers, worked with both independent and major studios interchangeably. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the big studios started their own subsidiary labels devoted to independent films such as Creator/FoxSearchlightPictures, [[Creator/{{Sony}} Sony Pictures Classics]], Creator/{{Universal}}'s Creator/FocusFeatures and (prior to 2008) [[Creator/{{Paramount}} Paramount Vantage]], in order to farm Hollywood's [[OscarBait award-season arsenal]], winning critical acclaim and, sometimes, commercial success. In addition, many independent studios, such as Creator/LionsGate, Creator/{{Annapurna|Pictures}}, {{Creator/STX|Entertainment}} and Magnolia (as well as the now-defunct Creator/{{PolyGram|FilmedEntertainment}}, Creator/{{Miramax|Films}}, Creator/TheWeinsteinCompany, Creator/FilmDistrict, Creator/{{New Line|Cinema}} and Creator/{{Summit|Entertainment}}), have gained footholds in the mainstream market by both distributing independent and foreign films and, increasingly, making films in-house (Lionsgate's ''Franchise/{{Saw}}'' franchise, Summit's ''[[Literature/TheTwilightSaga Twilight]]'' adaptations), often raking in enough money to blur the line between "indie" and "major". At the same time, the "Indie wave" not only rehabilitated the names of the New Hollywood-era auteurs which had spent the 1980s dealing with financial failures and critical indifference, but in many cases drove them to a degree of mainstream recognition they never expected.
52
53!!'''The Franchise Age of Hollywood'''
54
55While 1990s film-making was marked by a resurgence of New Hollywood tropes amid a slump of high-budget films and franchises, Corman alumnus Creator/JamesCameron stumped Hollywood in 1997 with ''Film/{{Titanic|1997}}'', an update of the old-fashioned EpicMovie blended with DisasterMovie elements, featuring the then little-known actors Creator/KateWinslet and Creator/LeonardoDiCaprio. It became the first film to gross over one billion dollars, thanks in no small part to its marketing campaign, aimed at the teen/young adult audience in addition to the more traditional female audience an old studio head honcho would have targeted thoroughly, something that was seen as a huge gamble back then as it was thought that youngsters would just not be interested in an old-fashioned love story. Not only Cameron's vision had paid off but it would set the pattern for an ever-increasing focus not only on how a film should be made, but more importantly how it should be ''sold''. Movies now had to appeal to the widest audience possible to be successful, putting special attention to the FleetingDemographicRule.
56
57While movies have always depended on other media for material, adaptations of popular works would not become a dominating force in the industry until 2001, the year Creator/WarnerBros released films based on the literary sagas of ''Literature/HarryPotter'' and ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'', which would become the two biggest films of a year that also saw the debuts of the ''Franchise/{{Shrek}}'', ''Film/OceansEleven'' and ''Film/TheFastAndTheFurious'' sagas. The success of both ''The Sorcerer's Stone'' and ''The Fellowship of the Ring'' changed the industry entirely, even establishing the modern storytelling structure found in Hollywood films. Their successes immediately sent waves to the other studios, now urged to look for a) "fantasy" material, as it is attractive to audiences of all ages, b) a property with long-term potential, and most importantly c) get your hands on anything popular (extending the previous point) -- a video game, a 1980s TV show (preferably a cartoon), a comic strip, toys or even ''internet symbols'' -- to take advantage of existing fandoms and merchandising.
58
59But one source, carrying all these attributes, would prove by far, the most popular to be translated to the screen: superhero comic books, something that actually came off as a surprise at the beginning, considering that it had been confined to low-budget fare for decades, except for WB's attempts to cash on its newly-acquired Creator/DCComics properties in TheEighties (''Franchise/{{Superman}}'') and TheNineties (''Franchise/{{Batman}}''), [[{{Sequelitis}} with both attempts eventually crashing]]. Then, 2000's ''Film/XMen1'' (released by Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox) became a surprise hit (following on the footsteps of 1998's ''Film/{{Blade}}'' by Creator/NewLineCinema) and Creator/SamRaimi's 2002 film ''Film/SpiderMan1'' (released by Creator/ColumbiaPictures) turned out to be an unprecedented success that set the trend for more superhero films: Creator/{{Universal|Pictures}} attempted to turn ''Film/{{Hulk}}'' into a franchise to no avail, while [[Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox Fox]] had mediocre results with ''Film/FantasticFour2005'' and Warners decided to give their DC characters another chance, but they would only have success with Creator/ChristopherNolan's ''[[Film/TheDarkKnightTrilogy Dark Knight]]'' [[Film/TheDarkKnightTrilogy trilogy]]. With time, Marvel decided to get a larger piece of the cake and started their own film studio, 2008's ''Film/IronMan1'' kick-started the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse ([[CareerResurrection and revived]] Creator/RobertDowneyJr's career). By the time ''Film/{{The Avengers|2012}}'' was released in 2012, the MCU became a major player in Hollywood, also helped by Disney's acquisition of the publisher in 2009. By the mid-2010s, Creator/WarnerBros launched the Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse, which has also been commercially successful (although not to the extent of Marvel) although it would be generally mauled by critics until ''Film/WonderWoman2017'', with ''Film/Aquaman2018'', ''Film/Shazam2019'' and ''Film/Joker2019'' establishing the DCEU as a more serious alternative to the MCU (although there is debate about the latter being either part of the franchise or a stand-alone drama loosely adapted from a comic book character).
60
61The main reason for this flood of adaptations, sequels, remakes, reboots and the like was a series of improvements on the home entertainment field during the second half of the 1990s and the early part of the 2000s: Cable TV became ubiquitous, with channels upping their ante on terms of original content, especially in the case of "premium" networks such as Creator/{{HBO}} and Creator/{{AMC}}, both of which launched series with unheard-of production values such as ''Series/TheSopranos'' and ''Series/CurbYourEnthusiasm''. Meanwhile, the booming Internet, game consoles and the fact that TV networks were skewing towards younger audiences kept the coveted 15-34 demographic away from the movie house. To complicate matters, the arrival of [=DVDs=] meant that people could enjoy a movie at home not only with reliable, high-quality image and sound compared to VHS, but also allowed access to added features and other freebies. Their popularity and later decline led to the "theatrical window" to shrink from six months (or more) to 90 days, which added to the urge for higher first-weekend grosses at the box-office. All this also contributed to the use of gimmicks to attract audiences: IMAX offered high-resolution images at a time HDTV was a novelty while 5.1 and 7.1 surround sound systems attempted to counter the popularity of "home theaters". Later on, movie circuits began adding "premium" services with reclining bergere-type seats and dine-in options. These changes eventually translated in a general increase on the prices of tickets from the mid-2000s onwards, and grosses have increased in a sustained basis even if attendance hasn't reached the heights of the late 1990s and early 2000s (peaking with 2002's 1,575,700,000 admissions, with no year surpassing 1.4 billion tickets after 2009).
62
63The post-9/11 landscape also bolstered escapism, a trend that would establish in the 2006-07 film season--As late '90s/early 2000s prosperity began to wear thin, studios were compelled to make flashier pictures to keep moviegoers in theaters. By the end of 2006, studios rolled back their mature and/or independent projects in favor of investing in more family-friendly franchises, big-budget blockbusters and adult comedies, a pattern that would define filmmaking for the rest of the decade. The 2009-10 season had another turning point: 3D films took off (again) and raunchy comedies reached a peak at the same time dependence on adaptations and franchises increased.
64
65The releases of James Cameron's ''Film/{{Avatar}}'' (which surpassed ''Titanic'''s record, holding the title of the highest-grossing movie for nine years) and Creator/TimBurton's ''Film/AliceInWonderland2010'' led to a(nother) three-dimensional craze, although it did not take long for the arrival of a glut of poorly-made films with 3-D added in post-production mostly to make them marketable. All this alienated audiences, which saw 3-D an excuse to rise prices further instead of actually using it to improve storytelling or experience, the fact some theaters had no "flat" prints becoming an annoyance to many who did not have the money or the inclination to see a 3-D movie. By the end of the 2011-12 season, 3-D pretty much became the province of animated films and superhero movies, being gradually and quietly sidelined by the middle of the decade, although without ''completely'' disappearing in contrast to previous 3-D waves.
66
67Adult comedies, which had become increasingly successful during the late 1990s and early 2000s with films like ''Film/TheresSomethingAboutMary'', ''Film/AmericanPie''. ''Film/DudeWheresMyCar'' and ''Film/ScaryMovie'', came to the forefront with the surprise success of 2005's ''Film/TheFortyYearOldVirgin'', which sparked a trend for outrageous humor, including [[Film/DateMovie genre]] [[Film/TropicThunder satires]] in the vein of ''SM'', [[Film/{{Borat}} ethnic humor]] [[RuleOfThree and]] {{stoner|s are funny}} [[Film/PineappleExpress hijinks]]. The trend hit its peak in 2009, when ''Film/TheHangover'' became one of the ten highest-grossing films of the year. By this time, even comedies promoted to family audiences would offer material that would have been considered distasteful years earlier. 2010 however, marked a turning point, as stricter MPAA guidelines made it harder to portray borderline-vulgar material, particularly prominent in these films. Social attitudes towards humor in general also shifted early in the decade, especially regarding the constant use of certain actions and language that had come to be considered offensive. 2011's ''The Hangover II'' and ''Film/BadTeacher'', 2012's ''Film/{{Ted}}'', 2013's ''The Hangover: Part III'' and 2014's ''Film/{{Neighbors|2014}}'' were among the few bona-fide comedic successes for the succeeding years, even though the sequels for ''Ted'' and ''Neighbors'' as well as a TV spin-off for ''Teachers'' became massive failures. With the exception of the superhero comedy ''Film/Deadpool2016'', the animated film ''WesternAnimation/SausageParty'' (also 2016), the two theatrical adaptations of ''Literature/{{It}}'' (2017-19) and the loosely-based-on-comics dramas ''Film/{{Logan}}'' (2017) and ''Joker'' (2019), female-geared films pretty much became the only commercially-viable type of R-rated films during the 2010s, beginning with the ''Film/FiftyShadesOfGrey'' trilogy (2015-18). Similarly, comedy films became mostly geared to women after the success of ''Film/BadMoms'' (2016).
68
69After over a decade of mounting criticism from parents' associations and watchdog groups, the MPAA enacted more stringent measures that radically changed its ratings system: "PG-13" became both the most common rating for films and the highest-grossing one, replacing "PG" which soon gained the "G" rating's reputation of being a sign of "kiddie stuff", being now associated with animated films; indeed, Creator/RogerEbert wrote in 2010 that the two might as well be combined. By the second half of the 2010s, the number of G- and PG-rated films released per year ''combined'' was not more than twenty. 2016 marked the first year in which not a single non-documentary film was rated G, while in other years, this was mostly reserved for Pixar films. On the other hand, the number of R-rated films also decreased (many of the films receiving this rating primarily, if not only, for language) while the NC-17 rating, never able to shake off its being a successor to the "X" rating, pretty much fell into disuse, with films that would have received the rating choosing to go unrated. All of the above, combined with the [=#MeToo=] movement (where actresses and other women in Hollywood came forward about their sexual harassment experiences) resulted in sexual content and nudity in particular almost completely disappearing from films receiving wide distribution, even most R-rated films. [[https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20211029-why-hollywood-is-shunning-sex Many film critics and journalists]] have noted that this created an almost paradoxical pop-culture landscape, where film is becoming the [[TamerandChaster tamest and most chaste]] it has been since the days of MediaNotes/TheHaysCode, while streaming and premium cable shows and movies are pushing the boundaries of nudity and sex on screen to levels previously considered unthinkable (MaleFrontalNudity especially is a rarity in theatrical releases because of the MPAA, but is now near-ubiquitous in streaming releases).
70
71All this has generated a BrokenBase among film fans. One side has considered that Hollywood has underwent a "kid-ification", spearheaded by fantasy-laden HighConcept productions, while the other considers that the opposite has occurred, with the prevalence of FamilyUnfriendlyViolence in action films and raunchy humor in family movies.
72
73This has meant a shift on the animation industry, the irreverent humor of films like the ''Franchise/DespicableMe'' saga and ''WesternAnimation/TheLEGOMovie'' put Universal and Warner Bros. on the map as prominent makers of animated movies. In addition, Disney's in-house feature animation studio regained pulse with the enormous success of films like ''WesternAnimation/WreckItRalph'', ''WesternAnimation/Frozen2013'' and ''WesternAnimation/{{Zootopia}}''. Meanwhile, the already-established Creator/{{Pixar}} and Creator/DreamWorksAnimation faced numerous problems: "The House Woody and Buzz Built" faced its first critical failure with 2011's ''WesternAnimation/Cars2'' [[ToughActToFollow after the magnum opus that was]] ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory3'', released the previous year, and would not redeem itself until the release of ''WesternAnimation/InsideOut'' in 2015. They would however face their first domestic BoxOfficeBomb with ''WesternAnimation/TheGoodDinosaur'' that winter, not returning to top form until 2017 with ''WesternAnimation/{{Coco}}'', which kicked off a renaissance of sorts for the studio. That same year, DWA released ''WesternAnimation/Home2015'', which ended a parade of flops which coincided with the studio's shift in tone towards more character-based stories following 2010's ''WesternAnimation/{{How to Train Your Dragon|2010}}''. The studio behind ''Shrek'' and ''Madagascar'' was absorbed by Comcast in 2016, becoming Illumination's "second unit".
74
75The 2008 writers' strike heavily affected the film industry as films became more expensive. The solution came in the form of making less films, and more of them based on popular works. Budgets also grew higher to make up for the lesser quantity. However, this has brought concerns over a narrowing landscape, the bulk of mainstream releases being epics mostly aimed at young adults. As other audiences drifted to other platforms, numerous voices aired their concerns about the future of movies: Creator/StevenSpielberg commented on [[http://www.newser.com/story/199954/how-hollywood-killed-the-mid-budget-movie.html the disappearance of the "middle film"]], defending himself from cries of hypocrisy by pointing out [[GenreRoulette he made a wide variety of movies]] instead of just action/adventure or fantasy films. He also joined Creator/GeorgeLucas in his concerns that the current business model could collapse like in the 1960s if too many films bombed, in that case the model could shift into a system similar to live theater (or the "roadshow" treatment high-profile films often got during the Golden Age), with movies playing at certain locations for years on end. Between late 2010 and 2014, it didn't seem too far-fetched to see this scenario play out in the near future: In 2010-11 a number of family films flopped even if some of these were released in 3-D, killing the genre for live-action productions. The following years meanwhile saw much-hyped productions like ''Film/JohnCarter'', ''Film/TheLoneRanger'' and ''Film/DraculaUntold'' tank at the box-office. Contrast this with the fact the early 2010s became the peak years for cable TV with highly-regarded series like ''Series/BreakingBad'' and ''Series/MadMen'', leading some actors to consider the notion that "video work" was degrading to be no longer true.
76
77The second half of 2014 saw ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy2014'' became an overnight success in spite of not being backed by a particularly popular property while the middling reception to ''Film/TheMazeRunner2014'' and ''Film/TheHungerGamesMockingjayPart1'' became harbingers that the YA literature craze was reaching its peak. 2015 and early 2016 had originally sourced films like ''Film/AmericanSniper'', ''WesternAnimation/InsideOut'', ''WesternAnimation/{{Zootopia}}'' and ''WesternAnimation/TheSecretLifeOfPets'' as well as adaptations of less prominent works such as ''Film/KingsmanTheSecretService'', ''Film/TheMartian'', ''WesternAnimation/ThePeanutsMovie'' and ''Film/Deadpool2016'' becoming critical and financial successes. In addition, domestic gross records were broken ''twice'' during 2015, first by ''Film/JurassicWorld'' and then by ''Film/StarWarsTheForceAwakens'', demonstrating that the reports of the death of the film industry and appetite for original content had been exaggerated. The second half of the 2010s has also seen a resurgent prominence of ''auteur'' filmmaking, which has enjoyed a renewed credibility, financial success and mainstream influence at the same time that numerous franchises, genres and actors popular at the turn of the decade took a beating.
78
79With films becoming more expensive, the international market for Hollywood films has grown more prominent than ever, and has even begun to overshadow the once all-important domestic North American market. For instance, the true biggest animated feature film of 2011 ''worldwide'', ''WesternAnimation/KungFuPanda2'' earned a gross of $665,692,281 with 75.2% of it from international markets, including $95 million from China alone.[[note]]When you consider how China happens to be kung fu's native soil, while also being the world's most populous country, you start to see how this trend might affect the ''content'' of Hollywood films in the future (there have been some cases).[[/note]] Furthermore, many films since the 2011-2014 period were saved from bombing by overseas rentals. For instance, the Creator/StevenSpielberg film ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfTintin2011'' earned $230 million (more than covering its budget) ''before'' it ever opened in North America outside of the Canadian province of Quebec, and a remarkably short-sighted failure to account for the international popularity of ''Film/TheGoldenCompass'' ultimately [[CreatorKiller destroyed New Line Cinema as an independent studio]].[[note]]''Film/TheGoldenCompass'' made over $300 million overseas, but unfortunately for New Line, they had sold off all of the international distribution rights in order to raise money, meaning that the only red cent they saw from the $180 million blockbuster fantasy film was its $70 million domestic gross. This has been cited as the "last straw" in Time Warner's decision to fold New Line into Creator/WarnerBros[[/note]] ''Film/TerminatorGenisys'' and ''Film/{{Warcraft}}'' both failed to cross $100 million domestically, but managed to cross that mark in China and over $400 million overall worldwide. And franchises like ''Fast & Furious'', ''Transformers'', ''WesternAnimation/IceAge'' and ''Franchise/DespicableMe'' have become more popular overseas than in the domestic market.
80
81The growing importance of global markets has also marked a shift in focus towards the story and visuals instead of relying on "star power". This, coupled with the fact many 2000s-era headliners basically disappeared from prominence by the end of the decade led to doubts about [[http://www.economist.com/news/business/21693591-hollywood-studios-can-no-longer-bank-pulling-power-famous-actors-fading-stars if movie stars could be still capable of pulling a film on their own]] as it often happened for decades.
82
83Unfortunately, The New Tens has brought a major AudienceAlienatingEra for two of Hollywood's major studios, Columbia Pictures and Paramount. Both studios suffered from lack of preparedness for challenges from the tech world, poor creative decisions brought on by ExecutiveMeddling, turmoil within their parent companies (Sony and Viacom, respectively) due to their core businesses suffering continued financial losses, lack of synergy between their various subsidiaries and divisions, and movies that were considered mediocre at best and atrocious at worst. This has resulted in many of their {{Cash Cow Franchise}}s [[FranchiseKiller dying off]], a number of their films being considered some of the worst of the decade, executives being shuffled around, and the two studios falling behind even ''mini-majors'' in terms of box office share. Viacom even tried at one point to sell a majority stake in Paramount just to make a profit, only to see their plans torpedoed following objections from their controlling shareholders, the Redstone family, which attempted to merge it with CBS, only to be rebuffed by their minority shareholders who wanted to get rid of the studio (Viacom and CBS re-merged in 2019). Columbia, meanwhile, has had to deal with rumors of Sony contemplating selling off their entertainment properties due to loss of box office share and continued turmoil, rumors that both companies have repeatedly denied.
84
85!!'''The Web Goes to the Movies'''
86
87The internet offers several new revenue streams for the studios, most notably streaming movies from home. With Netflix leading the way in this area, the studios can look ahead to a future where they can charge customers every time they want to watch movies at home -- something that was attempted in TheNineties with the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DIVX_(Digital_Video_Express) DIVX]] disc system, but which didn't take (chiefly because DIVX was a physical format). Many of the major film companies are now planning to try out a "premium download" distribution model to offer downloads of their theatrical feature films only one or two months after their theatrical release for around $30 each, which means that, for a bit of patience, whole families could be able to forgo going to the cinema altogether. Of course, this has run into heavy resistance from theaters -- Universal was forced to cancel plans for a limited VOD release of ''Film/TowerHeist'' after the Cinemark and National Amusements theater companies responded by threatening to refuse to show the film. Keep in mind that this VOD release was to happen in just two cities (UsefulNotes/{{Atlanta}} and UsefulNotes/{{Portland}}), and at a price of $60 per viewing. However, while many have feared this might be the end of the blockbusters, theatrical runs have not been replaced just yet.
88
89Meanwhile, the major film studios drove the issue forward when they decided to convert their film distribution to digital instead of physical film stock. This was done to in part to economize on film processing, printing and the physical delivery of the heavy film reels. Unfortunately, this proved a serious financial burden on theater chains who had to convert to costly digital projectors that were expected to be usable for about 10 years, compared to regular film projectors that can run on their proven design for decades. While major theater chains often got financial support for the conversion, small independent movie houses, especially in smaller communities, had to pay for it themselves, which prompted pleas for donations from their customers and/or crowdfunding effort to stay alive. In addition, there is a more serious implication to the conversion: it meant that cinemagoers were not technically going to see films anymore, but now essentially giant widescreen projection video presentations instead... with all its disadvantages (digital projectors are ''way'' harder to keep in focus than analog ones given the fact the image is composed of pixels--cue the complaints from hardcore film goers about digital lacking film's perceived warmth as well). The movie companies apparently did not consider the possibility if they removed a key difference from the televisions their audiences have at home, what's to stop them from staying there if other factors changed?
90
91In 2014, Creator/SonyPictures got the necessity to find out for real with the film, ''Film/TheInterview'', when vague terrorist threats against showing it caused all the major theatre chains to drop the film. As a result, Sony decided to shelve the film, which drew a storm of criticism ranging from media pundits to US President UsefulNotes/BarackObama himself about "giving in to terrorists." As a result of the pressure, Sony decided to open it not only in the few independent theaters willing to show it, but also simultaneously made it available online such as on [=iTunes=] and Google Play as well. The result of this move was that it earned about $31 million.
92
93After achieving success with their own TV programs, streaming services like Netflix and Amazon have begun producing their own movies as well as buying the rights to others. While Amazon productions tend to get a rather traditional theatrical run before hitting the streaming service, Netflix tends to prefer to give their films a very limited release (usually the minimum to qualify for Oscars) while putting those films on the streaming service at the same time. This has received mixed reception amongst the people within the film industry. Some are supportive as they feel Netflix gives certain projects a chance that many of the major studios won't, particularly films that would be financially risky to distribute in a traditional manner. On the other hand, many feel the theatrical experience is superior to the home viewing experience and supporting Netflix's distribution model would harm those in the exhibition side of the industry. Some went to question if these films should be allowed to be screen in competition at film festivals or be eligible for major awards such as the Oscars. As a result, Netflix has strove to win respectability by financing OscarBait such as ''Film/{{Roma}}'' by Creator/AlfonsoCuaron in 2018. When its fight for the Best Picture Oscar fell short, Netflix tried again in 2019 by taking on ''Film/TheIrishman'' with the most prestigious ProductionPosse possible: Creator/MartinScorsese as director with Creator/RobertDeNiro, Creator/AlPacino, Creator/JoePesci, Creator/HarveyKeitel and Creator/AnnaPaquin starring.
94
95Seeing the success of the streaming services, Hollywood has sensed the game has changed and now almost all the major Hollywood studios and TV networks are jumping on that bandwagon. For instance, Creator/{{Disney}} has started Creator/DisneyPlus to display all the vast library from not only all its family friendly original content but also acquisitions such as the library of Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox, while more adult content is on Creator/{{Hulu}}, which Disney has gained complete control over. CBS has CBS All Access (rebranded as Paramount+ in 2021), and NBC debuted their own service "Peacock", while HBO premiered HBO Max to cover not just that premium cable channel's content but all of its owner, Creator/WarnerBrothers. Meanwhile, one of the biggest tech companies in the world, Apple Corporation, got into the game with its own deep pockets to create Creator/AppleTVPlus. In fact, it has been speculated that the influence of this new medium is growing so dominant that Disney is considering a long-term goal to exit theatrical distribution for its films entirely so they don't have to split revenues with the theater chains. For now, the service has released a couple of films that were released directly in the service without a theatrical run.
96
97With the decline of print journalism and movie review TV shows having all but disappeared (and replaced by "hype-shows"), online reviewing has exploded with both professionals from the remaining print publications' websites and exclusive website and amateurs. Furthermore, ways have been found to make their influence more organized as a whole with the rise of aggregate review sites like Website/RottenTomatoes and Metacritic providing scores that now have the influence that "Two Thumbs Up" used to have. The studios tend to have a love-hate relationship with the former. Some studios have blamed them sometimes for box office flops if the film in question got a low score. However, it is common to see a film's score as part of its marketing if the film got a high score.
98
99!!'''Block... busted?'''
100While in the early 2010s, it was expected for the movie exhibition industry to wither and die in a few years' time as mentioned above, the second half of the decade saw box-office numbers swell to unknown heights (conversely, cable television was rapidly being reduced in the late 2010s to a seldom-consumed media that most people only use nowadays as background noise thanks to the concurrent rise of streaming services, leading many to comment on the irony of the seemingly obsolete movie theater outliving the very medium that was supposed to succeed it). By the end of the decade, however, HypeBacklash set on, with filmmaker Martin Scorcese leading the pack of those questioning the artistic value of modern commercial film, joining critiques for the perceived lack of mature themes and omnipresence of franchise movies. While 2019 saw ''Film/AvengersEndgame'' beating ''Avatar'' as the highest-grossing film of all time, it also saw sure bets for success get underwhelming returns (''Star Wars: Film/TheRiseOfSkywalker'') or become downright failures (''Film/{{Cats}}'') while so-called "prestige" films (a term that generally covers OscarBait ''and'' smaller-scale, indie-style productions) became unlikely successes, like ''Film/OnceUponATimeInHollywood'', ''Film/FordVFerrari'', ''Film/KnivesOut'' and ''Film/Joker2019''. This trend continued in early 2020 with ''Film/BadBoysForLife'' making gains while ''Film/BirdsOfPrey2020'' barely earned its budget back. Furthermore, the attention given to films made by streaming services, such as Netflix's ''The Irishman'' and ''Film/MarriageStory'' or released through such platforms in most countries did not help theatrical movies regarding their quality. Prestige productions and the names associated with them were also tarnished by the 2017 downfall of Harvey Weinstein, who was indicted on charges of sexual assault, as he pretty much monopolized that market as the major studios began to hyper-focus on blockbusters from the second half of the 1990s to the early 2010s. This was also the era where "toxic fandoms" for filmmakers, franchises, and even corporations came to the forefront, as social media and otherwise exploded with virulent debates over the merits of Marvel movies vs. DC ones, the quality of the ''Star Wars'' sequel trilogy, etc. that were often laced with racist, sexist, and homophobic invective regarding the creative and corporate decisions made on such films (reflecting the general coarsening of socio-political debate in TheNewTens).
101
102By February-March 2020, another blow, which could become more significant depending how long the situation lasts, came in the form of the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, with many countries encouraging their citizenry to avoid large crowds to avoid being infected. Movie theater chains took measures to ensure social distancing between filmgoers, initially reducing the number of available seats as much as by 50% (unlike live theater and concerts, movie theaters were not liable to bans on events hosting over 500 people as most movie screens seat less than 150 people) but eventually enacted temporary closings ''en masse'' upon advice to avoid social gatherings or legal bans over it as well as national lock-downs in various countries.
103
104In addition to the already dismal box office numbers from before the health emergency plummeting by the middle of March, movie production and distribution practically ground to a halt, with many high-profile films [[TheShelfOfMovieLanguishment delaying their releases as much as by a year or two]], meaning billions of dollars lost on advertising. With people turning to streaming services and potentially becoming scared of being among crowds, there are serious concerns that going to the movies will become extinct. In response, Creator/{{Universal}} announced that it would temporarily abandon the 90-day "theatrical window" (the period of time when movie theaters have exclusive access to new theatrical films), its films currently in theaters, ''Film/TheHunt2020'', ''Film/TheInvisibleMan2020'' and ''Film/Emma2020'' being released on certain on-demand video platforms on March 20, 2020, months ahead of schedule.
105
106The studio also scheduled a simultaneous theatrical and on-demand release of the much-hyped Creator/DreamworksAnimation feature film, ''WesternAnimation/TrollsWorldTour'', which proved a success with a 200 million+ haul that Universal doesn't have to share with online retailers to the same percentage that it would have had to do with the theatrical chains. The theatrical chains took umbridge with that business move, especially when Universal forwent the opportunity to be diplomatic about it as an experiment for families looking for new entertainment during a trying time and announced more films would be similarly distributed in the future. As such, the major theatrical chain, AMC, announced that it would no longer exhibit Universal in its theatres, but few seriously expected that boycott to last considering that would mean forgoing the upcoming major blockbuster films of series like ''Film/TheFastAndTheFurious'' and ''Film/JamesBond'' when the theatre chains need all the major content they can get to attempt to regain their patrons.
107
108Meanwhile, other film companies have announced similar distribution moves for their own films such as Disney with the online release of ''Film/ArtemisFowl'', while Warner Brothers did the same with the latest ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'' film, ''WesternAnimation/{{Scoob}}''. In May, the trend took on a new intensity when the major war drama, ''Film/{{Greyhound}}'', starring the beloved two-time Oscar winner, Creator/TomHanks, was acquired by Creator/AppleTVPlus to be available on their service after its theatrical release date was twice delayed due to the pandemic. Paramount followed suit with ''WesternAnimation/TheSpongeBobMovieSpongeOnTheRun'', with Viacom divvying the streaming rights between Netflix and their Creator/ParamountPlus streaming service. Despite the belief that a release of this kind could never be financially viable for an expensive tentpole, Disney further added to this by announcing that the long-awaited and delayed ''Film/Mulan2020'' would be made available as VOD at an additional charge to Creator/DisneyPlus members. A number of other big-budget, high-profile films followed the day and date release near the end of 2020 such as ''WesternAnimation/{{Soul}}'' for Creator/DisneyPlus and ''Film/WonderWoman1984'' and it continued for the first half of 2021. In fact, this trend has become so prominent with the prevailing public health necessity that the MediaNotes/AcademyAward rules have officially waived its theatrical presentation rules for the 2021 awards, allowing potentially all streaming films to be eligible.
109
110The situation became even more stark when sure enough, Universal and AMC soon came to an agreement that allowed Universal to pull films from AMC theatres for online distribution after only 17 days as opposed to the usual 90 while AMC would get a percentage of online sales of those films. Since the theatrical window is viewed in the movie theatre industry as a necessary guarantee of its business viability, such a change in practices was seen at the time as one that would have made the very idea of going to movie theaters a victim of COVID-19. Warner Bros. went even further by announcing that their entire slate of films for 2020–21 would be available to stream on Creator/HBOMax for one month, concurrently with a theatrical release. By the spring of 2021 however, mass vaccination led to a reopening of theaters in most countries, with ''Film/GodzillaVsKong'' becoming the first domestic and international box office success since the pandemic's start, despite its simultaneous release on HBO Max. Subsequent tentpole releases such as ''Film/{{Black Widow|2021}}'', ''Film/{{F9}}'', ''Film/NoTimeToDie'' and ''Film/{{Dune|2021}}'' did quite well financially, however their box office numbers were still far from their pre-pandemic high points and held-over films ultimately lost millions in unused publicity.
111
112Superhero films kept their previous stranglehold on the box office at first, with ''Film/VenomLetThereBeCarnage'', ''Film/ShangChiAndTheLegendOfTheTenRings'' and ''Film/SpiderManNoWayHome'' easily becoming successes--''No Way Home'' managing to be the first movie in two years to break a billion dollars worldwide--followed by ''Film/DoctorStrangeInTheMultiverseOfMadness'' and later on, ''Film/BlackPantherWakandaForever''. However, the genre faced severe difficulties over 2022–23. First, ''Film/ThorLoveAndThunder'' garnered mixed reviews and was a box-office disappointment (at least by the MCU's standards) while the DCEU became engulfed in various controversies, particularly regarding WB's shaky finances and Discovery's drastic measures to turn the studio around, including the erasing of ''Batgirl'' for tax purposes. Furthermore, ''Film/BlackAdam2022'' was thrashed by critics and floundered financially, leading to a war of words between Dwayne Johnson and DC Studios over how much the film made and thrusting WB into a slump just as Paramount was recovering from theirs. Late in 2022, James Gunn was appointed head of DC-related projects going forward...but his confirmation that the 2023 slate of DCEU films (''Film/ShazamFuryOfTheGods'', ''Film/{{The Flash|2023}}'', ''Film/{{Blue Beetle|2023}}'', and ''Film/AquamanAndTheLostKingdom'') would be the last in that particular continuity contributed to the disastrous box office performances of all four films. Marvel's 2023 film slate had only one success story with ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyVol3'', with ''Film/TheMarvels2023'' doing so poorly that Disney stopped reporting on its box office take just a month into its run, while future plans were compromised by the intended BigBad of the MCU's current and next phases, Kang the Conqueror, being played by an actor (Creator/JonathanMajors) whom Disney was compelled to fire after he was convicted of domestic abuse.
113
114Increasing opposition to "day-and-date" releasing schemes came to a head when Creator/TomCruise insisted on keeping ''Film/TopGunMaverick'' out of streaming as long as he could. The film's success soon convinced studios to return to exclusive theatrical releases by the end of the 2021–22 season: Warner Bros. stopped simultaneous releases by having ''Film/Elvis2022'' as a theatrical exclusive, while Disney did the same, having done some only-in-theaters releases after the success of ''Shang-Chi'', although this had been restricted to MCU films beforehand.
115
116The post-pandemic environment, thus fully set in place halfway through the 2021–22 season, soon showed audiences went to the movies mostly seeking thrills, squarely favoring action-adventure films as well as movies featuring cultural juggernauts, as demonstrated by the success of ''Top Gun: Maverick'' (which cemented Paramount’s return to form after a decade-long AudienceAlienatingEra), ''Elvis'', ''Film/EverythingEverywhereAllAtOnce'', ''Film/JurassicWorldDominion'', ''WesternAnimation/MinionsTheRiseOfGru'', ''WesternAnimation/TheSuperMarioBrosMovie'', ''Film/{{Barbie}}'', ''Film/{{Wonka}}'', and most notably ''Film/AvatarTheWayOfWater'', which obliterated all known box-office records in a matter of weeks, and also its competition. However, most attempts at counter-programming were met with indifference as ''Film/TheGreenKnight'', ''Film/TheLastDuel'', ''Film/NightmareAlley2021'', ''Film/WestSideStory2021'' went to show, and even highly-anticipated films such as ''Film/TheMatrixResurrections'', ''The King's Man'', ''Amsterdam'', ''The Fabelmans'', ''Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody'' and ''Babylon'' failed to click in this new theatrical climate. (A key exception was 2023's ''Film/{{Oppenheimer}}'', thanks in part to an unconventional social media trend called "Barbenheimer" -- due to it opening the same day as the ''Barbie'' film, jokes about how there was seemingly little overlap between them blossomed into many people checking ''both'' films out.)
117
118And not all cultural juggernauts are created equal: 2023 saw a number of long-profitable franchises besides superheroes significantly underperform, with the latest ''Mission: Impossible'' and ''Indiana Jones'' films losing tens if not hundreds of millions, while the ''Star Wars'' franchise remained in limbo on the big screen in favor of direct-to-streaming series. Many animated films -- ''WesternAnimation/{{Lightyear}}'', ''Film/LyleLyleCrocodile'', ''WesternAnimation/StrangeWorld'', ''WesternAnimation/{{Elemental|2023}}'', ''WesternAnimation/RubyGillmanTeenageKraken'', and ''WesternAnimation/{{Wish}}'' (Disney's centennial animated feature) among them -- underperformed at the box-office if not downright bombed, likely an effect of families opting to wait for these to hit streaming instead of taking the kids to the movies. Notably, the only 2023 animated features that were definitively profitable were ''WesternAnimation/TheSuperMarioBrosMovie'' and ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManAcrossTheSpiderVerse'', both franchise-derived. On the other hand, horror and suspense pictures are trendy again with films like ''Film/OrphanFirstKill'', ''Film/{{Smile|2022}}'', ''Film/Terrifier2'', ''Film/TheMenu'', ''Film/{{M3GAN}}'', and ''Film/FiveNightsAtFreddys'' becoming hits in no small part because of innovative viral campaigns, cheeky twists on black comedy in most cases, and reasonable budgets.
119
1202023 also had a bad omen for Hollywood's struggle to fully recover from the pandemic with not one, but two major union strikes: [[UsefulNotes/TVStrikes first one by the WGA, then one by SAG-AFTRA]] that delayed the production of numerous films and also compromised promotional campaigns for those about to be released in the case of the latter strike (as actors could not promote their films publicly). Many intended "tentpole" releases for 2024 were pushed back to 2025 due to the dual strikes, leaving audiences and exhibitors appalled at a lack of potential blockbusters. For instance, once-dominant Disney (which went from having seven of the worldwide top ten grossers of 2019 to only two in 2023) only offered ''Inside Out 2'', ''Film/DeadpoolAndWolverine'', ''Mufasa: The Lion King'', and ''WesternAnimation/{{Moana}} 2'' (the last reedited from an in-production streaming series) for theaters in 2024, not counting a few films made under their Fox/Searchlight shingles.
121
122As for the future, analogies have been made with video games and music shows, as in the case of the former, the initially low-quality home systems eventually superseded the price-quality threshold of game arcades, which countered with fancy equipment whose use would be too impractical for home use (compare with IMAX and dine-in theaters for instance), while in the case of the latter, big-time pop and rock acts soon regained the audiences of their pre-pandemic concerts, but on the other hand, musicians with less of a showboating appeal as well as upstarts soon were locked out, although they would benefit from streaming concerts, potentially making themselves known to a wider audience.
123
124!!'''Key filmmakers of this era include:'''
125
126[[index]]
127* Creator/JJAbrams (''Film/{{Star Trek|2009}}'', ''Film/{{Star Wars|The Force Awakens}}'')
128* Creator/PaulThomasAnderson (''Film/ThereWillBeBlood'')
129* Creator/PaulWSAnderson (''Film/ResidentEvilFilmSeries'')
130* Creator/JuddApatow (''Film/TheFortyYearOldVirgin'', ''Film/KnockedUp'')
131* Creator/MichaelBay (''Film/Armageddon1998'', ''Film/{{Transformers|2007}}'')
132* Creator/TimBurton (''Film/{{Batman|1989}}'', ''Film/AliceInWonderland2010'')
133* Creator/JamesCameron (''Film/TheTerminator'', ''Film/Terminator2JudgmentDay'', ''Film/{{Titanic|1997}}'', ''Film/{{Avatar}}'', ''Film/AvatarTheWayOfWater'')
134* Creator/JohnCarpenter (''Film/EscapeFromNewYork'', ''Film/Halloween1978'')
135* Creator/TheCoenBrothers (''Film/NoCountryForOldMen'', ''Film/TheBigLebowski'')
136* Creator/ChrisColumbus (''Film/HomeAlone'', ''Film/MrsDoubtfire'', [[Film/HarryPotterAndThePhilosophersStone Harry]] [[Film/HarryPotterAndTheChamberOfSecrets Potter]], ''Film/NightAtTheMuseum'')
137* Creator/RyanCoogler (''Film/{{Creed|2015}}'', ''Film/{{Black Panther|2018}}'')
138* Creator/WesCraven (''[[Film/ANightmareOnElmStreet1984 A Nightmare on Elm Street]]'', ''Film/{{Scream|1996}}'')
139* Creator/DavidCronenberg (''Film/{{Scanners}}'', ''Film/{{Videodrome}}'', ''Film/TheFly1986'', ''Film/DeadRingers'')
140* Creator/NiaDaCosta (''Film/Candyman2021'', ''Film/TheMarvels2023'')
141* Creator/FrankDarabont (''Film/TheShawshankRedemption'', ''Film/TheGreenMile'', ''Film/TheMajestic'')
142* Creator/GuillermoDelToro (''Film/PansLabyrinth'', ''Film/TheShapeOfWater'')
143* Creator/ScottDerrickson (''Film/DoctorStrange2016'')
144* Creator/RichardDonner (''Film/SupermanTheMovie'', ''Film/LethalWeapon'')
145* Creator/ClintEastwood (''Film/GranTorino'', ''Film/{{Sully}}'', ''Film/MillionDollarBaby'')
146* Creator/RolandEmmerich (''Film/IndependenceDay'', ''Film/TwoThousandTwelve'')
147* Creator/JonFavreau (''Film/{{Elf}}'', ''[[Film/IronMan1 Iron]] [[Film/IronMan2 Man]]'', ''Film/TheJungleBook2016'')
148* Creator/DavidFincher (''Film/Se7en'', ''Film/FightClub'', ''Film/GoneGirl'')
149* Creator/MelGibson (''Film/{{Braveheart}}'', ''Film/ThePassionOfTheChrist'')
150* Creator/JamesGunn (''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy2014'', ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyVol2'', ''Film/TheSuicideSquad'')
151* Creator/RonHoward (''Film/Apollo13'', ''Film/TheDaVinciCode'')
152* Creator/JohnHughes (''Film/TheBreakfastClub'', ''Film/FerrisBuellersDayOff'')
153* Creator/PeterJackson (''Film/TheLordOfTheRings'', ''Film/KingKong2005'', ''Film/TheHobbit'')
154* Creator/PattyJenkins (''Film/Monster2003'', ''Film/WonderWoman2017'')
155* Creator/MarkStevenJohnson (''Film/Daredevil2003'', ''Film/GhostRider2007'')
156* Creator/RianJohnson (''Film/TheLastJedi'', ''Film/KnivesOut'')
157* Creator/JoeJohnston (''Film/HoneyIShrunkTheKids'', ''Film/{{Jumanji}}'', ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger'')
158* Creator/StanleyKubrick (''Film/BarryLyndon'', ''Film/TheShining'', ''Film/FullMetalJacket'', ''Film/EyesWideShut''; the former two also overlap with the New Hollywood era; also planted the first seeds for ''Film/AIArtificialIntelligence'', which was completed by Creator/StevenSpielberg)
159* Creator/AngLee (''Film/CrouchingTigerHiddenDragon'', ''Film/BrokebackMountain'', ''Literature/LifeOfPi'').
160* Creator/GeorgeLucas (''Franchise/StarWars'')
161* Creator/JamesMangold (''Film/WalkTheLine'', ''Film/{{Logan}}'')
162* Creator/SamMendes (''Film/{{Skyfall}}'', ''Film/NineteenSeventeen'')
163* Creator/GeorgeMiller (''Film/MadMax'', ''Film/{{Babe}}'')
164* Creator/MichaelMoore (''Film/RogerAndMe'', ''Film/BowlingForColumbine'')
165* Creator/ChristopherNolan (''Film/TheDarkKnightTrilogy'', ''Film/{{Inception}}'', ''Film/{{Interstellar}}'', ''Film/{{Dunkirk}}'')
166* Creator/JordanPeele (''Film/GetOut2017'', ''Film/{{Us}}'')
167* Creator/ToddPhillips (''Film/TheHangover'', ''Film/Joker2019'')
168* Creator/SamRaimi (''Film/SpiderManTrilogy'', ''Franchise/EvilDead'', ''Film/DoctorStrangeInTheMultiverseOfMadness'')
169* Creator/RobReiner (''Film/ThisIsSpinalTap'', ''Film/ThePrincessBride'')
170* Creator/GuyRitchie (''Film/{{Snatch}}'', ''Film/SherlockHolmes2009'', ''Film/Aladdin2019'')
171* Creator/RobertRodriguez (''Film/ElMariachi'', ''Film/SpyKids'')
172* Creator/EliRoth (''Film/{{Hostel}}'', ''Film/CabinFever'')
173* Creator/TheRussoBrothers (''Film/CaptainAmericaTheWinterSoldier'' & ''[[Film/CaptainAmericaCivilWar Civil War]]'', ''Avengers'': ''[[Film/AvengersInfinityWar Infinity War]]'' & ''[[Film/AvengersEndgame Endgame]]'')
174* Creator/RidleyScott (''Franchise/{{Alien}}'', ''Film/BladeRunner'')
175* Creator/TonyScott (''Film/TopGun'')
176* Creator/SeltzerAndFriedberg (''Film/ScaryMovie'')
177* Creator/MNightShyamalan (''Film/TheSixthSense'')
178* Creator/BryanSinger (''Film/TheUsualSuspects'', ''Film/XMen1'')
179* Creator/KevinSmith (''Film/{{Clerks}}'')
180* Creator/ZackSnyder (''Film/ThreeHundred'', ''Film/{{Watchmen}}'', ''Film/ManOfSteel'', ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice'', ''Film/ZackSnydersJusticeLeague'')
181* Creator/StevenSoderbergh (''Film/OceansEleven'')
182* Creator/StevenSpielberg (''Film/{{Jaws}}'', ''Film/ETTheExtraTerrestrial'', ''Franchise/IndianaJones'', ''Franchise/JurassicPark'', ''Film/SchindlersList'')
183* Creator/QuentinTarantino (''Film/PulpFiction'', ''Film/ReservoirDogs'', ''Film/IngloriousBasterds'', ''Film/OnceUponATimeInHollywood'')
184* Creator/MatthewVaughn (''Film/KingsmanTheSecretService'', ''Film/KickAss'')
185* Creator/GoreVerbinski (''Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean'', ''Film/TheRing'')
186* Creator/JamesWan (''Franchise/{{Saw}}'', ''Film/TheConjuring'', ''Film/{{Aquaman|2018}}'')
187* Creator/TheWachowskis (''Film/TheMatrix'')
188* Creator/TaikaWaititi (''Film/WhatWeDoInTheShadows'', ''Film/ThorRagnarok'')
189* Creator/JossWhedon (''[[Film/TheAvengers2012 The Avengers]]'')
190* Creator/EdgarWright (''Film/ThreeFlavoursCornettoTrilogy'', ''Film/BabyDriver'')
191* Creator/RobertZemeckis (''Franchise/BackToTheFuture'', ''Film/WhoFramedRogerRabbit'', ''Film/ForrestGump'', ''Film/CastAway'')
192* Music/RobZombie (''Film/TheDevilsRejects'')
193[[/index]]

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