Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
The marketplace triumphs again!
It is all politics. The theater owners decide which films to screen, from within their distributor's catalog. The distributors decide which film to distribute, from within the catalog of the Studios they are associated with. The Studios decide which films to finance and which artists and equipment to use.
The theaters and distributors are mostly owned by Studios, which in turn are owned by a few individuals.
Even pornography is controlled by few individuals.
Most modern industrial societies have decided it's in the public interest to subsidize the arts, as they've been subsidized from time immemorial. You prefer that corporate commercial norms and popular entertainment prevail. You're welcome to that vision of civilization, but I don't know why you insist on imposing it on society at large.
It's may be because you yourself have no interest in the kind of work which isn't generally supported by the marketplace. But you remain silent on other subsidies. Sports, popular entertainment and network TV receive a variety of direct and indirect subsidies in the U.S., next to which art subsidies are trivial in amount. You really ought to be boycotting football games, if you don't believe in public support of private ventures.
To be honest, I find your arguments well -- argumentative. At a time when the U.S. government throws trillions at politically connected military contractors and agribusiness, and bails out for-profit corporations for trillions more, righteous rage against arts' subsidies is downright ridiculous.
"
Anyway this argument that films are just "entertainment," of no more value than "Ultimate fighting" is crap. Go film sports then, and leave the filmmaking to filmmakers. Messages beside "winning is everything" deserve a place in our culture.
I think it's a case of Buddy-can-you-spare-a-paradigm?:whistling:
Ten years ago who would have predicted the MP3 revolution? Or near DVD-quality pirate movie downloads off the internet? Or easily available software that lets you copy DVDs on $20 or so DVD drives?
Nobody marketed those, and legal or otherwise, you can't say they haven't been successful.
But CDs and DVDs seem to sell as well as they ever did and I haven't seen too much fall off in the number of video rental libraries (or cinemas for that matter).
In the LA area, we have tons of "indie" productions going at any given time, but they completely lack imagination or anything fresh to say. 95% of indies in LA are set in the LA area and feature a bunch of 20- or 30-somethings sitting around running their mouths in their apartments (with brightly painted walls, of course) or perhaps shooting one or two scenes at their friend's restaurant... in LA. Who wants to watch this type of crap?