Here's the picture I get, summarizing the current situation. It looks like the universe conspired against the exhibition industry for whatever reasons:
This reminds me of a board game we once played, aptly named Robinson Crusoe. I remember it having little of the romance of being stranded on a deserted island, but more of the practical horror of the situation, as the entire ordeal felt as a never-ending string of worse things happening to you. And yeah, I still consider myself to be an optimist.
- First and foremost, the movies that currently hit the main-stream cinemas simply aren't good enough to entice people to see them there. Formulaic, run-of-the-mill "content" has lots of people bored to death and has watered down many of the biggest intellectual properties out there.
- The short theatrical window is killing any incentive for people to go see those movies anyway. They're not good enough for the extra hassle and cost.
- The short theatrical window also causes people to see movies as something of low value. They can watch those movies wherever and whenever they want, with zero efforts involved.
- Lack of consistent advertising combined with a short theatrical window only conspires to worsen the situation, as people are less aware of those movies and word of mouth doesn't have the time necessary to make a big impact.
- Strict licensing requirements by most big studios force exhibitors to exclusively commit to movies for weeks on end, which often locks up bad performing movies on the biggest (or only) screen and greatly limits the diversity of movies that could be shown, especially for exhibitors with low screen counts.
- While alternative content could be a relief for the situation, the awareness of the availability of this content is low, combined with low advertising budgets tied to those kind of releases and the strict licensing requirements of current main-stream fare, often blocks exhibitors from trying to experiment with this kind of content.
- Lots of other distractions take up people's busy schedules those days, all competing for the same time and money.
- The current, post-pandemic economic situation in many places around the world, where inflation is a major factor, isn't helping either.
This reminds me of a board game we once played, aptly named Robinson Crusoe. I remember it having little of the romance of being stranded on a deserted island, but more of the practical horror of the situation, as the entire ordeal felt as a never-ending string of worse things happening to you. And yeah, I still consider myself to be an optimist.
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