Everything Everywhere All at Once made $140 million on a $25 million budget. It was a film about bagels, multiverses, and tax audits. A traditional studio would have killed it in development. A24 survived because they operate like a venture capital firm for auteurs: high risk, high reward, low volume.
Today, the surviving titans—Disney, Netflix, Amazon, and Universal—operate on a strategy. They flood the zone to prevent competition. Netflix isn't trying to make Citizen Kane ; it’s trying to make sure you never turn off the TV. This leads to what screenwriters call "second screen content"—shows designed to be watched while folding laundry or scrolling Twitter. The Franchise Prison: Marvel, Star Wars, and the Nostalgia Industrial Complex No studio exemplifies the current crisis better than Marvel Studios (Disney) . Under Kevin Feige, Marvel perfected the "cinematic universe." It is a stunning logistical achievement—like landing a plane while building it. But the Infinity Saga ended in 2019. Since then, Marvel has entered what critics call the "Maintenance Phase." Brazzers - Isis Love - Milf Spa Part 1 -22.11.2...
The studio is no longer selling stories; it is selling . You don't watch Ant-Man 3 because you love Scott Lang. You watch it because you need to understand the quantum realm before Avengers: Secret Wars drops in 2027. This transforms entertainment from leisure into homework. Everything Everywhere All at Once made $140 million
If you want to save your own attention span, stop watching the "algorithm feed." Stop finishing shows you hate just to see the ending. Vote with your remote. Watch the weird movie. Read the subtitles. A24 survived because they operate like a venture
We live in the golden age of television and the gilded age of film. Never before has so much money been thrown at so many screens. Yet, if you ask the average viewer how they feel after a night of scrolling, the dominant emotion isn't joy—it's exhaustion.
Meanwhile, is playing the long game with their horror division (Blumhouse) and their animation (Illumination). They learned the lesson Disney forgot: You can't kill the mid-budget movie. M3GAN , The Black Phone , Cocaine Bear —these are stupid, fun, profitable movies. They cost $20 million and make $100 million. That is the math of a healthy industry. The Talent Rebellion: Why the Writers Strike Mattered The 2023 strikes were not about money. They were about existential dread. Writers realized that studios view shows as "loss leaders" to drive subscriptions. A hit show like Stranger Things costs $30 million an episode, but the actors and writers see zero backend profit because streaming doesn't have syndication (reruns) the way network TV did.
Because right now, the studios are betting that you will consume whatever they put in front of you. The only rebellion left is to be bored. The Town podcast by Matt Belloni. The Ankler newsletter. Recommended Viewing (Non-Studio Slop): Past Lives (A24), How to Blow Up a Pipeline (Neon), The Boy and the Heron (GKIDS).
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