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Apparently between Alien and Aliens.where does that one sit in the timeline?
Looks great.
Apparently between Alien and Aliens.where does that one sit in the timeline?
looks good but i do hate when these franchises keep jamming new content into the same time period...star wars is the worst at itApparently between Alien and Aliens.
Looks great.
They've released 5 films?Disney ‘Star Wars’ Box-Office Profits Fail To Cover Cost Of Buying Lucasfilm
Box office profits generated by Disney's Star Wars movies have fallen $2.8 billion short of covering the media giant's purchase of the sci-fi saga’s creator, Lucasfilm.www.forbes.com
I'm a bit surprised by this.
Force awakens, last jedi, Rise, Rogue One, Solo, Indiana Jones and Willow. Then you have all the star wars TV shows etc.They've released 5 films?
The issue is more they haven't done one for close to 5 years.
There has been no Willow film but your right about Indy.Force awakens, last jedi, Rise, Rogue One, Solo, Indiana Jones and Willow. Then you have all the star wars TV shows etc.
The willow film was released on Disney+ and then removed due to lack of interest/poor ratings (I guess). But yeah, Disney + does muddle the numbers. Still, feels like it should have done more by now.There has been no Willow film but your right about Indy.
The TV shows won't be calculated in the box office calculations. Which is actually why the numbers are crap to work out if Disney has made thier investment back. Because you have to try to work out how many Disney+ subscribers they'd have less without Lucasfilm
Why? Apart from Rogue one everything else Disney did with Star Wars was a bag of spannersDisney ‘Star Wars’ Box-Office Profits Fail To Cover Cost Of Buying Lucasfilm
Box office profits generated by Disney's Star Wars movies have fallen $2.8 billion short of covering the media giant's purchase of the sci-fi saga’s creator, Lucasfilm.www.forbes.com
I'm a bit surprised by this.
But even then it's some simple math take usual double budget to account for marketingsnip
Movie wise certainly, I think some of the series have been decent. The Mandalorian was good although got worse towards the end and I found the bad batch to be good (I liked the old Clone wars series too). I've also enjoyed Endor.Why? Apart from Rogue one everything else Disney did with Star Wars was a bag of spanners
Issue with tv shows is that now everyone wants a slice of the pie and people now have to pay multiple subscriptions is that people just aren't. Either they only sign up to one or two, or they pirate. I imagine they didn't get the number of subscribers they hoped.Movie wise certainly, I think some of the series have been decent. The Mandalorian was good although got worse towards the end and I found the bad batch to be good (I liked the old Clone wars series too). I've also enjoyed Endor.
We touched on this in the music thread, but streaming seems to be very good for discovering, but completely void of any real cultural relevance or impact like previous generations. There used to be a big push to make these releases feel like an "event" or unmissable. Now they're just dumped onto a streaming platform and forgotten about fairly quickly. The Red Letter Media guys may have been half joking, but they're right with the "endless trash" comment and the "don't ask questions. Just consume product and get excited for next product"Issue with tv shows is that now everyone wants a slice of the pie and people now have to pay multiple subscriptions is that people just aren't. Either they only sign up to one or two, or they pirate. I imagine they didn't get the number of subscribers they hoped.
Amazon failed with Fallout but it does appear with Disney+ and HBO they are currently leaning back to the one per week system. Even if the first episode is extra long. Paramount are doing well with that for Star Trek as well.We touched on this in the music thread, but streaming seems to be very good for discovering, but completely void of any real cultural relevance or impact like previous generations. There used to be a big push to make these releases feel like an "event" or unmissable. Now they're just dumped onto a streaming platform and forgotten about fairly quickly. The Red Letter Media guys may have been half joking, but they're right with the "endless trash" comment and the "don't ask questions. Just consume product and get excited for next product"
I kinda feel like the creative industries needed to slow down. With the race for streaming services we saw a huge increase in production and none of it was given time to breathe during and after the release. We've ended up with a lot of rushed and questionable quality media as a result. From what I hear, like every industry, they're making huge cutbacks now and a lot less is getting the go ahead. We'll have to see if it works.Amazon failed with Fallout but it does appear with Disney+ and HBO they are currently leaning back to the one per week system. Even if the first episode is extra long. Paramount are doing well with that for Star Trek as well.
The drop it all model appears to be failing. Nothing is staying in thr cultural zeitgeist long enough if it does. And more importantly as we ove onto the next new things the old thing no matter its quality get quickly forgotten.
I have friend who save to binge but I just don't find I have the time for that.
Also mich like most things are actually worse now takes I don't have much tike for it. Succession, Ted Lasso, Rogue One, Shogun, The Last of Us. Have all been highly acclaimed stuff in past half decade so it is getting produced and made.
We're also living post actors/writers strikes and COVID I imagine that's slowed a lot of things down. And as production usually takes a couple years when something is first started up it's likely taking a greater impact.
I think this is less likely than it sounds.I have heard the younger generations are less interested in shows/films now and are watching more tiktok style media instead.