Ben wrote: December 9th, 2020, 5:11 am
The 90s created the term "franchise", and Warners was king with Batman. Every film they made was made with an eye on "can this be a franchise?", like The Fugitive for instance, which fizzled after two films, as did Ace Ventura and Analyze This. They had a lot of expensive misfires, like Wild Wild West and The Avengers, as well as some big hits that never got past film one (Twister, Maverick), before they unexpectedly hit paydirt with The Matrix.
Of course, the 90's--for which we especially doubled our plex screens after Jurassic Park and T2--also had the, quote, "middle-tier" movies:
You could go to see Batman or the Matrix, but since those only came out in summer, the rest of the year, you could go see a Julia Roberts rom-com, or a Steve Martin comedy, or a Wesley Snipes action thriller (well, okay, nobody went to see those), or even one of those 90's animated knockoffs that didn't want to sell anything but toys and videos.
Problem is, you need a struggling screenwriter to write an out-of-nowhere movie that studios don't want to take a chance on, and do with a small budget for a March or October release.
And after the Writers' Strike of '08, writers and studio execs didn't want to talk to each other anymore--Writers knew they'd never sell their spec-scripts, which had too many expensive union ties, and studios petulantly wanted to show that now that we had YA novels, comic books, classic remakes and TV shows that audiences already came running for, they didn't NEED ungrateful jerks to make up something new that audiences might not.
So, studios started figuring out ways they could hire their own for-hire writers to write "Franchise-starter" five-year marketing blockbuster strategies on the studios' own terms, and the poor jilted screenwriters took their poor little first-drafts--with no one to "fix" them into a more coherent shooting script--and set out to become Bold Independent 21st-Cty. Filmmakers.
And that's the reason why plexes were empty even
before the Pandemic: There's nothing in the middle anymore.