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Why Are the Movies Dying?
www.stolinsky.com ^ | 10-27-11 | stolinsky

Posted on 10/26/2011 7:49:15 PM PDT by stolinsky

 

Why Are the Movies Dying?

David C. Stolinsky
Oct. 27, 2011

The other evening my wife and I went to the movies. We intended to see “Margin Call,” a film about the financial crisis starring Kevin Spacey, Demi Moore, Stanley Tucci, Paul Bettany, and Jeremy Irons. The cast is outstanding and the subject timely. But the film was playing in only one small theater in all of the West Side of Los Angeles.

The theater held only about 150 seats, and all but the first two rows were taken. So instead we went to another theater playing “The Three Musketeers.” This is yet another remake of the classic, but hyped up with swordsmen flying through the air, and a warship sailing aloft on a balloon. The special effects were childish, and there were barely 20 people in the 1500-seat theater.

Here in Los Angeles, the movie capital, many theaters have closed. In Westwood, the area around UCLA, theaters with 10 screens have closed in the last few years. A few films still make many millions of dollars, but the movie business is in trouble. Why?

Juvenile movies.

Adult films like “The Driver” play to good audiences, but are distributed to few theaters, so they appear to have mediocre success. The same fate may befall “Margin Call.” The unpopularity of adult-themed films may be a self-fulfilling prophesy. And by “adult” I mean adult, not raunchy.

Most moviegoers are young. Understandably, movie moguls aim films at this audience. But if they make films for young people, mainly young people will see them. Successful businesses strive to attract new customers.

When I was young, a frequent expression was “Grow up!” But today, we see middle-aged “boys” walking through the mall wearing shorts, baseball caps, and T-shirts with juvenile lettering. And we see middle-aged “girls” with see-through tops, tattoos, and navel rings. Only weeds grow spontaneously. Boys and girls must be taught to become men and women.

● The teaching used to be done by parents, who knew their job was to be parents, not pals to their kids. But now, middle-aged parents try to dress and act as young as their kids. Mothers run around in revealing clothes and tattoos. Fathers shave their legs in an attempt to look prepubescent. How can they be role models of adulthood?

● The teaching used to be done by teachers, who dressed and acted as adults. But now, many teachers dress sloppily and try to act “cool,” instead of modeling adult behavior.

● The teaching used to be done by Scoutmasters and ROTC instructors. But now, the Scouts and ROTC have been kicked out of schools. Now, schools teach “nonviolence.” Defense of self, family, and nation are no longer considered noble − or even acceptable. Boys no longer have master sergeants with combat ribbons as role models. They are left with “gangsta” rappers or real gang members to emulate.

● The teaching used to be done by movies. I watched Gary Cooper in “High Noon,” and saw a lawman face criminals alone while cowards hid. I watched Ward Bond in “Fort Apache,” and saw a sergeant who had received the Medal of Honor but didn’t wear it. He had the respect of his men because he earned it, not because he demanded it. I learned what it meant to be a man.

These men were middle aged, as were John Wayne and Clint Eastwood for much of their careers. And actresses like Maureen O’Hara and Katherine Hepburn remained stars well into their middle age. The worst effects of the media’s obsession with youth are not incessant ads for wrinkle removers. The worst effect is the removal of older role models for young people.

Instead of “High Noon” and “Fort Apache,” we have “The Hangover.” Instead of men acting like men, we have men acting like teenaged fools. Instead of adults being role models for the young, the process is reversed. Watching films like “The Hangover” and playing video games into one’s thirties is no way to become men and women − or responsible citizens.

Many moviemakers make films to please themselves – their own leftist, atheist, foul-mouthed, rootless, juvenile selves. Otherwise, they would be aiming at a larger audience, not a smaller one. They would be making films that depict our war on terrorists, and which show our Judeo-Christian values in a favorable light. But they don’t make such films. They prefer their narrow agenda to a wider audience.

Anti-American movies.

I used to keep a list of films that depict America as militaristic, imperialistic, greedy, racist, and generally despicable. I used to be able to recall the films that depict our leaders as corrupt or homicidal. I used to be able to name the films that show our military as crazed, murderous fascists, and our veterans as alcoholic, drug-addicted, divorced, unemployed, mentally unstable losers.

But there have been so many of these films that I lost track. For example, take the “Bourne” series. The hero is so disgusted with being an assassin for the CIA that he develops amnesia. He is so busy beating up and killing Americans that he has no time to fight America’s enemies. It’s not only Jason Bourne who forgets his own identity – it’s also the moviemakers who forget theirs.

I grew up watching “Sergeant York” and saw a pacifist learn that violent evildoers must be opposed by force, then go on to earn the Medal of Honor. I watched “The Fighting Sixty-Ninth” and saw the chaplain, “Fighting” Father Duffy, praying with wounded soldiers.

Instead, we now watch “Training Day” and see police as drug dealers who kill their own partners. We watch “Syriana” and see Americans as murderous money-grubbers, while the only sympathetic character is a Muslim suicide bomber. We watch “In the Valley of Elah” and see our troops murder their own buddy, then go out for a chicken dinner. We watch “The Da Vinci Code” and see Christian clergy as homicidal fanatics.

Now films teach that America is loathsome, our military and police are treacherous, and Christianity is detestable. Why should Americans patronize films that insult their values? Why should Americans patronize films that insult their family members in the military?

People all over the world see these films. Why should we support an industry that presents us in such an unfavorable light? Who knows how much anti-American feeling, or even terrorism, may have been provoked by such films?

Hollywood Lemmings.

During World War II, Hollywood gave us films that built morale. Even during the less popular wars in Korea and Vietnam, Hollywood gave us films like “The Bridges at Koto-Ri” and “The Green Berets.” What films has Hollywood given us since 9/11?

We have “United 93,” a docudrama about the brave passengers who fought the hijackers on 9/11 and prevented the plane from crashing into the Capitol or the White House. But omitted was the heroic Todd Beamer reciting the Lord’s Prayer with the phone supervisor, then shouting, “God help me. Jesus help me. Are you ready? Let’s roll!” All this is documented − why omit anything of religious significance?

And we have “World Trade Center,” which depicts police buried in the rubble. Americans are often shown as villains, sometimes as victims − but rarely as heroes. “The Hurt Locker” is conspicuous by its rarity. But it’s not a matter of money. The film cost $15 million and made over $49 million. In this economy, how many other investments made a 227% profit? No, it’s a matter of ideology.

There are films about heroes. But they are cartoon heroes like Spiderman and the X-Men, who fight cartoon villains. They don’t inspire; they merely entertain. I could try to emulate Gary Cooper in “High Noon,” but today’s kids can’t emulate Spiderman. They can only sit passively and watch.

Support us in our time of danger? No, that’s too “controversial.” If someone did make a pro-American film, he might not be invited to any more Hollywood cocktail parties, and that would be a fate too horrible to contemplate. Lemmings aren’t known for their individuality. They just go along with their group − even if it’s over a cliff. But we’re not following.

H. L. Mencken remarked that nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American public. But even he wasn’t cynical enough. Hollywood is in the process of proving him wrong.

A prior version of this article appeared on Aug. 30, 2007. Dr. Stolinsky writes on political and social issues. Contact: dstol@prodigy.net. You are welcome to publish or post these articles, provided that you cite the author and website.


TOPICS: Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: antiamerican; juvenile; movies
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To: stormer
You know, blog pimping is bad enough, but when I encounter this, “A prior version of this article appeared on Aug. 30, 2007”, it's pretty pathetic...

It looks like sequels aren't for movies only

41 posted on 10/26/2011 8:56:59 PM PDT by InvisibleChurch (welcome dies irae)
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To: dfwgator
The only good movies I’ve seen that were made in the last few years are foreign movies.

"The Lives of Others" is a good example of that.
42 posted on 10/26/2011 8:59:37 PM PDT by Ticonderoga34
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To: Ticonderoga34
Best movie I've seen in years is Der Untergang, relabeled Downfall for the USA. A german film about the last days of Hitler in the Fuhrer Bunker.



My only caveat is to avoid it if you don't like movies with subtitles.
43 posted on 10/26/2011 9:09:14 PM PDT by WildWeasel
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To: RayChuang88
1. The cost of tickets--even matinee tickets--have gone through the roof.

The average price of a ticket in 1970 was $1.65. Adjusted for inflation, that's $9.71, which is about what a ticket costs today.

OTOH, a ticket cost .36 in 1948, which would be $3.22 today.

44 posted on 10/26/2011 9:11:24 PM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: WildWeasel

I’ve seen one part of that movie many times.


45 posted on 10/26/2011 9:12:25 PM PDT by Sherman Logan
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To: GlockThe Vote

I love those old horror movies. :D

Horror movies are a true lost art these days.

Now they are all oh look scary CGI smoke monster, aren’t you scared? No, no I am not scared, and I don’t believe a 2 year old would be scared.

I swear somtimes I think some of these new horror movies would be scarier if they just drew the effects on the film with crayons -_-


46 posted on 10/26/2011 9:14:07 PM PDT by chris37 (Heartless.)
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To: truthguy
That said, I thought Moneyball was pretty good.

Husband and I saw that last week and really enjoyed it.

I enjoy a low-key Armageddon movie, and thought Melancholia was quite good.

47 posted on 10/26/2011 9:20:08 PM PDT by Calliecat
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To: stormer

At least it’s the full article, not an excerpt. I thought it was a worthwhile read, even if it was partially recycled.


48 posted on 10/26/2011 9:53:30 PM PDT by Gil4 (Sometimes it's not low self-esteem - it's just accurate self-assessment.)
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To: stolinsky
Watching films like “The Hangover” and playing video games into one’s thirties is no way to become men and women − or responsible citizens.

Watching films of any kind is no way to become men and women - or responsible citizens. I agree that most of the movies coming out of Hollywood these days aren't good. I don't agree that it matters very much. Watching "High Noon" does not make one an honorable man or woman, and watching "The Hangover" isn't going to destroy one's soul. Movies are a couple of hours of amusement - hopefully. The fact that they aren't much good anymore and fewer people are watching them means people have more time to go do things instead of staring at a movie screen.
49 posted on 10/26/2011 10:07:58 PM PDT by AnotherUnixGeek
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To: stolinsky

Obama meeting with the most powerful ‘influencers’ in Hollywood in a ‘stealth’ meeting pretty much answers the question posed in the article.


50 posted on 10/26/2011 10:08:14 PM PDT by GOP Poet (Obama is an OLYMPIC failure.)
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To: WorkingClassFilth
2. Any night out at the movies for a date or family will kill a sane budget for working families.

Yep. We opt for the cheap seats at an NHL game (Blue Jackets) where know we won't be fed anti-American crap.

51 posted on 10/26/2011 10:35:47 PM PDT by buccaneer81 (ECOMCON)
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To: GlockThe Vote
look at the gems made on the 70’s. Could they be made today?

Not a chance in Hell. "Slapshot" being the prime example.

52 posted on 10/26/2011 10:37:56 PM PDT by buccaneer81 (ECOMCON)
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To: stolinsky

My wife and I saw a wonderful little movie last week called “A Bird of the Air.” It’s about a withdrawn man who comes across a lost parrot that says inspiring and mysterious things. A talkative female librarian helps him track down its former owners, and he comes out of his shell as he unravels the bird’s past. It’s a really nice little romance with funny, likeable characters, and the parrot is great. I’ve rescued parrots for 20 years, and this is the most realistic depiction of one I’ve ever seen onscreen. We liked it so much, we went back to see it twice. You can see the trailer here: http://www.abirdoftheair.com

Of course, doing that required upending our entire schedule because this little jewel of a movie was playing in only two cities (L.A. and here in Dallas), and here, it was on only one screen, at 11 a.m. If I’d wanted to see some 3D, CGI-filled crap, though, there were dozens of screens showing that all day and all night long.


53 posted on 10/26/2011 10:54:35 PM PDT by HHFi
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To: stolinsky

I refuse to watch movies that have outspoken liberal acters/actresses. They can bite me. They are worthless scum and I won’t finance them by paying for tickets.


54 posted on 10/26/2011 11:02:54 PM PDT by lwoodham (Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.)
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To: dfwgator

Hollywood needs to make movie people want to see. They do not want to be preached at or told what to think—they want good entertainment and mindless action films. Comedies that are not right out of the toilet. Suggestions from my fertile mind:
1. Re do Charlie Chan but with Asian actors and with a focus on the Real Hawaiian Chan and his deeds as a skilled detective.
2. Do a Civil War movie on the Confederate raider CSS Alabama and her voyage and destruction off France.
3. Do a story on US Black pilots who fought Mussolini’s troops and air force in Ethiopia in the 1930s.
4. Re-do the Chandu the Magician of the 1930s—it would make a great 3 d film.
5. Do a movie of Brick Bradford and his time top—from the 1940s comic Book.
6. Do a good version of Flash Gordon and not that bad one made by the Italians. Space Opera at its finest.
7. Do the story of two aces shot down over Nazi Germany—one American—one Russian. they become friends but meet and duel over Korea in Jets.
8. Do a story on the air war over Vietnam about North Vietnamese ace Col. Tomb and his destruction.

A few ideas for anyone trying to come up with new movies.


55 posted on 10/27/2011 12:04:29 AM PDT by Forward the Light Brigade (Into the Jaws of H*ll)
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To: stolinsky

Socialists poop in their own nest.


56 posted on 10/27/2011 12:15:46 AM PDT by SaraJohnson
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To: stolinsky

Netflix, streaming on demand movies, and DVDs are the main culprits.

Poor quality movies and high ticket prices also have something to do with it.


57 posted on 10/27/2011 12:18:45 AM PDT by 3Fingas
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To: stolinsky

Thanks for posting the entire article, sir.


58 posted on 10/27/2011 12:24:09 AM PDT by metesky (Brethren, leave us go amongst them! - Rev. Capt. Samuel Johnston Clayton - Ward Bond, The Searchers)
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To: stolinsky

A. The best writers and scripts and plots and acting are on tv now.

B. Movie theaters are dirty and uncomfortable and you can’t pause it to go to the bathroom.


59 posted on 10/27/2011 12:26:46 AM PDT by Yaelle
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To: stolinsky

Because people like my wife and I refuse to support the lifestyle of these spoiled brats. They’re idiots on and off the screen and, thanks to a liberal media, examples for our youth to follow.


60 posted on 10/27/2011 5:45:28 AM PDT by Boomer One
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