https://deadline.com/2020/12/warner-bro ... 234649760/
RIP to the theatrical industry. There's no way Disney and Universal don't do something similar next year. Can't wait to watch Godzilla Vs. Kong as it was intended to be watched--on my laptop!




(Er, wouldn't arrogant people in a rush to end their lives be the ones seeing it in a theater? Presumably California or Florida?)
Physical disc fans just drooling for karmic payback after Flixster:Sensible People with patience and a respect for filmmaking craft: "Wait just a couple of months after they’re in cinemas and then you can!"
Pirates: "Bring it on! Once these brand new films hit the web we'll rip and get you the files so you don’t even have to pay! Below the line talent be damned and goodbye to $200m blockbuster films!"
Er, I’m obviously talking about the modern rush of life in general, and not about Covid times specifically, where everything is me, here, now, and people are in such a rush it seems they are on a mission to burn through their lives as fast as they can. Obv.
Well, where WB is actually being smart is in going day and date. Their streaming model will no doubt be a variation of PVOD, not going "for free" to HBOM. So cinemas *will* make some money, and as we have seen from worldwide grosses, this will cover about half the cost of a movie if it’s a hit. And the PVOD is all their taking.
Yes, just that my point was that up till now, Warner was the last stubborn studio still trying to pursue the "Marvel-envy" franchise formula of the 10's, where studios lump together any old properties they own that another studio doesn't, and nonsensically try to force links to an un-asked-for six-film "Shared universe", hoping another Avengers will emerge out of it.Ben wrote: ↑December 4th, 2020, 5:02 amMoviegoing will return, when studios realise that they can just about cover a budget but not generate those big billion dollar event pics, but it may be a much reduced kind of experience for a long while, the biggest threat being the availability of pristine, sometimes master quality 4K files, being actively let loose on the net on the same day films hit cinemas.