Christopher Nolan Rips HBO Max as "Worst Streaming Service," Denounces Warner Bros.' Plan
To many insiders, WarnerMedia's blindsiding of talent and their reps with news that it would send 17 films directly to HBO Max in 2021 felt like an insult.
For many in the movie business — producers, directors, stars and their representatives — Dec. 3, 2020, is a day that will live in infamy.
"Some of our industry's biggest filmmakers and most important movie stars went to bed the night before thinking they were working for the greatest movie studio and woke up to find out they were working for the worst streaming service," filmmaker Christopher Nolan, whose relationship with Warners dates back to Insomnia in 2002, said in a statement to The Hollywood Reporter.
[...] According to a source, [Warner Bros. film studio chairman Toby] Emmerich tried to soothe In the Heights director Jon M. Chu by pointing out that the movie was still getting a "global theatrical release." But industry insiders say the studio is pretending that pirates won't pounce as soon as these films are streaming on HBO Max. As soon as one does, there's an "excellent version of the movie everywhere immediately," notes one industry veteran.
[...] Many think Legendary [Entertainment] will be the first to file a legal challenge. The company fired off a previous lawyer letter after Netflix offered something north of $225 million for the rights to Godzilla vs. Kong, which has seen its release date moved from March 2020 to November to May 2021. Though Legendary financed 75 percent of the movie, Warners had the power to block the sale and did. Legendary asked whether the studio would then give it a deal to stream the movie on HBO Max — and got no clear answer until its executives woke up one December morning to find that the movie was going day-and-date on the service without the benefit of a negotiation. Legendary's even more expensive picture, Dune, is getting the same treatment. The other companies that finance Warners movies, Village Roadshow and Bron, are also said to be aggrieved parties that might end up going to court.
Related: AT&T Exempts HBO Max From Data Caps but Still Limits Your Netflix Use
"Gone With the Wind" -- Gone from HBO Max
(Score: 3, Interesting) by Grishnakh on Wednesday December 09 2020, @01:38AM (3 children)
It's even worse than that for Hollywood, though, because the young'uns have little interest in scripted content anyway. They'd rather watch YouTube clips or other quick cuts on social media. Which means that Hollywood is chasing a shrinking, older demographic.
While I agree with the rest of your post, I'm not so sure about this part. From what I've seen and read, the young people (namely teenagers, as well as younger kids) are the ones who were mostly keeping the theaters alive before Covid. Basically, for teens, it was a way of getting out of the house and hanging around their friends. It also made movie-going (esp. on weekends) a miserable experience for non-teenagers. Sure, teens have been watching a lot of YouTube too, but it's not one or the other.
The older demographic is the one that can afford nice big TVs and living rooms, and who don't want to hang around a theater eating nasty concessions and listening to noisy teenagers. Also, notice how all the movies are superhero movies now: older people don't want to watch Marvel Avengers #24. Of course, there's also the crowd that goes to art-house theaters, but that's a small minority of theaters and theater-goers.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 09 2020, @04:33AM
I *LOVE* going to the theaters (genx) even if it is some random explosion fest. But the thing is the price is nuts and why I stopped going except once a year. At this point if I want to go see a movie it is about 50 bucks for 2 people. Now I make decent money but that is *way* out of line for the benefit. If I wait 1 year I can see the same movie for about 5-10 bucks. My 'tv/stereo' is OK but nothing compared to most theaters. I could do better but you are splashing out some decent cash (2-4k) for a good system. Making my own popcorn is easy. Just buy the same ingredients they have at the theater and use a stir pop. I have a 1 gallon jug of 'butter oil' that is wildly more than I will ever use. Popcorn is dead cheap. For the cost of 1 theater exp (which I do like) I can have almost a lifetime supply of it. Then on the other side the studios have royally screwed the theaters and keep like 90% of the profit of ticket sales. So yeah theaters are going to have a tough time of it. I went this route not because I hate theaters. But they just charge too much. They charge too much because the studios screwed them. The studios screwed themselves with things like 'star wars never made a dime' and taking all the profit for a select few.
This is basically the studios trying to squeeze out whatever was left of the middlemen.
Butts in seats makes money. Has for a long time. When covid is done it will again. You just cant make 200+ million dollar movies and make it up in streaming. The streaming people expect a catalog of movies for 10-20 a month. The model just does not work there unless you plan to up the price. You can make tons of 'indie' movies but those are extremely hit or miss (mostly miss).
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Wednesday December 09 2020, @01:31PM
Before my time, it was discos, roller rinks, drive-in movie theaters, and supermarket parking lots. For us it was as you said. I'm not sure younger generations will congregate in meatspace, given the social media platforms we built for them and the coronavirus the Chinese built for us.
If they do congregate in person, perhaps they'll rediscover the great outdoors and the joy of holding keggers in the woods.
Washington DC delenda est.
(Score: 2) by cmdrklarg on Wednesday December 09 2020, @04:04PM
No they're not, and speak for yourself: some of us do.
Answer now is don't give in; aim for a new tomorrow.