Netflix CEO: Movie Theaters Are 'Strangling the Movie Business'' (businessinsider.com) 342
Netflix CEO Reed Hastings thinks the state of film is a "real tragedy" and that movie theaters are "strangling the movie business," he said at The New Yorker's Tech Fest on Friday. From a Business Insider report:On Friday, Hastings came down hard on these theater owners, saying there had been no innovation in the movie theater business in recent years, even as TV has been shaped by the rise of cable and internet networks. "Money" and "innovation" has flooded to the TV industry, Hastings said. Not so with film. The movie theater business has seen flatline revenue, Hastings said. Part of the problem is that small movies, such as many Netflix has snagged from places like Sundance, would be better distributed both at home and in theaters. That's a convenient position for Netflix to take, but Hastings said the movie studios feel the same way. Each movie studio would like to "break the oligopoly" of the theaters, but "they don't know how," he continued. If they collude to face the theaters, it's anti-trust, but if they are the ones to take the first step, their films will get killed. That means they just go along with the status quo.
Movie theaters (Score:4, Insightful)
It's all a bunch of teenagers kicking the back of your seat and smacking gum and talking on phones. I'll pass.
even worse (Score:4, Interesting)
I seldom go to theaters any more.
The food mediocre and overpriced.
There are no intermissions or breaks on 3 hour long movies. Old movies had intermissions. Live theater has intermissions. When do I get rid of all this soda that has made its way to my bladder? I can pause a movie at home any time I want.
Re:even worse (Score:5, Insightful)
There are no intermissions or breaks on 3 hour long movies.
Slightly side-issue, but a lot of movies are way too long anyway. Sure, there's the odd Schindler's List or whatever that actually has three hours of story to tell. But Batman v Superman? F**k off with that. These shitty movie directors need to get their egos under control and realise that that kind of movie needs to be 90-100 minutes tops. More isn't necessarily better when you're telling a story that isn't actually very complicated or fundamentally interesting.
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I love superhero movies... well I used to but bloody hell the Marvel ones are pretty hard to get into. They're absolutely determined to shoehorn bloody everyone in to every movie and have everyone fight everyone else. They're just a massive mess, and they seem to eschew plot and character development in order to get more characters crammed into each film.
If you didn't like "Age of Ultron", don't watch the next one "Civil War".
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And even if they do have 3 hours of story to tell, they really should go the Lord of the Rings route. Do an initial release in theaters with a shorter cut, and save the full length cut for a special edition home video release.
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Another aspect of Murphy's Law: when you run to the bathroom to unload the coke you drank, that's when the movie gets interesting.
I guess all you guys have a sign that says: (Score:2, Funny)
KIDS: STAY OFF THE LAWN!
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It's all a bunch of teenagers kicking the back of your seat and smacking gum and talking on phones. I'll pass.
YMMV, and it all depends on where you go. Go to a shitty theater in a shitty neighbor? Then you'll get a shitty experience.
I for one avoid those, and take my kids to really nice ones. This is one of my favorites in the western (better) part of Broward County, FL, which is build as a theme park (see image [eprkc.com]). My kids go crazy there.
My kids went in awe when I took them to watch Kung-Fu Panda 3 and Finding Dory. Sure, they can (and will) watch them again at home in DVD, but they love going out and eat a "
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If that was the only problem, I'd probably go more often, but that's not my normal experience. Where I go, the other patrons are fine. It's the theater that bothers me.
My main problem is the theater's continual attempt to convert everything about the experience into advertisements and money. The ticket-seller is unsatisfied that I'm only paying for a movie, and wants me to sign up for a free loyalty card. The hallways and ceilings are lined with cardboard cutouts of celluloid heroes, pitching movies I n
Re:Movie theaters (Score:4, Insightful)
There are 18+ movie theaters. They're basically all that's worth going to anymore.
I'll second that. The food and drink they serve may be over priced (but you don't have to eat or drink), but the larger seats and leg room and lack of annoying kids is a huge draw card.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:4, Insightful)
Hmm... and I can have all that an non-overpriced food at home, along with no parking fee and the movie actually pausing whenever I want to take a piss (at a toilet that's not smelling like a sewer and where I don't have to wait for 10 minutes for my turn)... so what exactly is the benefit?
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Hmm... and I can have all that an non-overpriced food at home, along with no parking fee and the movie actually pausing whenever I want to take a piss (at a toilet that's not smelling like a sewer and where I don't have to wait for 10 minutes for my turn)... so what exactly is the benefit?
Well if you really want to see a movie on its release date there are not many legal options.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:4, Insightful)
This is pretty much the topic of this whole thread.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:5, Interesting)
> Each movie studio would like to "break the oligopoly" of the theaters,
Yeah, right. If that were true, then the studios would EMBRACE online streaming instead of trying to hold it back in every conceivable way.
Hey dinosaur studios, here's an innovative idea: Try releasing one of your good films to online streaming FIRST -- even with a rental price, like on Amazon. And maybe several of you do the same. Then let's see if the theater owners come begging to you to show at their theaters first. Choosing where to release your movies first is not anti-trust, it's just good business. Getting with the modern age. Advancing into the 1990's, etc.
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I remember something about the Goose and the Gander having compatible ports, where no adapter is required to use the same cable on either one. Or something like that.
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I have 2 years worth of science fiction magazines that I haven't had time to read, along with at least 3 ebooks in the Lost Fleet Beyond the Frontier series. I have no problem with waiting for a movie to get to Netflix so I can watch it in the comfort of my own home. Who really has to see a movie on it's release date?
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Well if you really want to see a movie on its release date there are not many legal options.
I don't care if I watch a movie on it's release date or a year later. The content is still the same. Plenty of films I haven't seen- I don't have to see new ones the day they are released.
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Well if you really want to see a movie on its release date there are not many legal options.
I don't care if I watch a movie on it's release date or a year later. The content is still the same.
Star Wars. The content changed, sadly. Took a few years though.
But in general, yeah I don't get why theres any particular incentive to see a movie on its release date.
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Who cares about "legal" options? Although I admit most cams are of poor quality, some are actually quite decent.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:4, Insightful)
> Who cares about "legal" options?
Uh, those with morals and who have respect for others.
But go ahead and keep pretending it is your property.
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The highest form of morality IS obeying laws whether they are just or not. NOTE: The laws could be legal or spiritual.
Resorting to ad hominems only makes you look insecure and childish.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:4, Insightful)
That's so true. When slavery is legal, it would be immoral to help slaves escape. When the law insists on segregation, it would be immoral for a black person to sit at the front of the bus. When the law says Roma must report to the gas chambers, it would be immoral to not report or to help someone not report.
So many immoral people.
The importance of the release date (Score:5, Insightful)
Well if you really want to see a movie on its release date there are not many legal options.
First off, you're exactly right. If you want to see something the minute it's released, that's the only way to go.
So I'd like to offer another thought. What's so great about that?
Seriously. What's so great about having something the minute it's available? We put a lot of importance on that for some reason. The 2017 Chevys are out early, the latest Star Wars film was just released, Apple just made a phone that is 2% faster than their last one.
Why do we care?
Perhaps that's the thing we should be examining. The theater isn't a barrier to seeing a movie, they're a barrier to seeing a just released movie. That movie you want to see will be the exact same movie a week or a month or a year from now. And you have plenty of legal avenues (and far cheaper ones, and far more pleasant ones) than going to a theater.
Maybe the real problem is instant gratification, and our dependence on it.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:5, Funny)
It's all part of the movie magic! The theater experience. You wouldn't want to get less than you paid for.
And let's not forget being treated like a criminal before admission into the dignity of the theater experience. And 45 minutes of ads.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:4, Insightful)
In Savannah GA 16 years ago there was a "dinner and movie" type theater. Casual seating. They served beer and light food like nachos, burgers and wings. The wait staff would walk around in the dim room keeping your beer full. Great concept! I first saw the Matix there. I wish more theaters would do this. /commercials/. Really. I paid my $12 for the movie already, do I have to watch commercials as well???? And thye wonder why people just aren't going to the movies any longer?
You know what gets old? sitting thru 20 minutes of previews and
Re:Movie theaters (Score:4, Informative)
And to the operators of those theaters that have been remodeled in the last few years, No. Putting recliners in your same dirty, noisy theater isn't going to help. Get serious about what you're selling (an experience) or get serious about finding a buyer for your property.
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Re:Movie theaters (Score:5, Funny)
Paul Ruebens, is that you?
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There are 18+ movie theaters. They're basically all that's worth going to anymore.
I thought those places went away once the Internet started hosting porn.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:5, Insightful)
Movie theaters had their reason to exist when they offered an added value over what you could have at home. That ceased to exist. Big screen? Have it. Dolby 7.1? Have it. 3D? Glad I don't have it. What else is there?
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"Movie theaters had their reason to exist when they offered an added value over what you could have at home."
The demise of video game arcades and video rentals outlets like Blockbuster may be a foreshadowing of the future of movie theaters. That said, its still a good place to go for a date if you don't want to talk and sit in the dark together.
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Frankly, if I want to invite someone to a dark play for a date, I have a basement. I'm European, and I'm kinda traditional...
But seriously. Yes, movie theaters will probably eventually go the way of game arcades. Less the video rental places, but the arcades. Some arcades actually survived by offering non-standard games that you can't simply play at home on your XBox and PS4. Games with special controllers or display system. Games that required lots of room to play them, or games that are only fun if you ca
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How? If I knew, I wouldn't write it here but instead sell an idea like that...
Most arcades are now filled with things like fake motorcycles which would be cost prohibitive for the home user. The movie theatre is trying this with things like dbox but in order to really create an experience that can't be had at home it really needs to be more like the virtual rides where 8-10 people get into a device that moves with the movie. The problem with this is that in order for it to be more than just a gimmick it needs to be integrated with the movie which requires the movies to plan for thi
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They, too, can survive if they specialize on gimmicks and experiences that cannot be simply created at home.
A few weeks back I went to see "Godzilla Resurgence" (the latest Japanese Godzilla movie) in Tokyo. I saw it at the Toho Cinema in "4D." This involves vibrating your seat, shaking it around, blowing air and mist into your face, flashing lights, smell generators, and a whole host of gimmicks. I had fun. It was also the kind of thing I need to do exactly once in my life. The ticket cost around $35. More to the point, though, while it seemed like a great idea for a Godzilla movie, there is a really short list
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That said, its still a good place to go for a date if you don't want to talk and sit in the dark together.
Regal Cinemas and Chill.
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I've got the big screen and surround sound at home which I like just fine, but there are at least a dozen movies each year that I'd like to watch on a 60 foot screen rather than a 60 inch screen - I don't because per movie it's not worth the expense.
Right now I go see maybe 1 movie per year in theaters (consistent since 2010). If I drop $20 each time I go, then "Big Screen" is only getting $20/year from me.
If they were to cut the cost per movie in half I would probably go once per month on average. I used
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I've got the big screen and surround sound at home which I like just fine, but there are at least a dozen movies each year that I'd like to watch on a 60 foot screen rather than a 60 inch screen - I don't because per movie it's not worth the expense.
Right now I go see maybe 1 movie per year in theaters (consistent since 2010). If I drop $20 each time I go, then "Big Screen" is only getting $20/year from me.
If they were to cut the cost per movie in half I would probably go once per month on average. I used to go twice per month before the costs tripled in my early twenties. That would increase their yearly revenue from me by 600%. Seems like a good business decision to me...
Guess we are lucky in my small town of under 10,000 (possibly a tad over 10K countywide).
We have what they call Tightwad Tuesday, where all shows are $6. And since a movie's first night showing here is always on Friday, that gives us a weekend plus change to check reviews (the Rerolled forum is often pretty accurate) to determine if we want to spend the $12 for two of us to see it on the big screen, or wait for either Netflix or Redbox (the latter of which we need to start using soon before all these coupo
Non-technical added value (Score:4, Interesting)
Movie theaters had their reason to exist when they offered an added value over what you could have at home. That ceased to exist. Big screen? Have it. Dolby 7.1? Have it. 3D? Glad I don't have it. What else is there?
I know that this is slashdot and that we like to focus on features, but for me the value proposition of movie theaters resides in their selection. This is probably irrelevant for you if you just want to watch the latest blockbuster but if you are interested in independent movies, having an independent theater whose owner has a vision of what makes movies interesting beyond $$ is priceless.It's like going to an independent record shop where the owner will have a selection of the new records he likes, and not proposing just the mainstream music.Some of the movies may challenge at first, but they will expend your vision of what movies can be and what kind of stories can be told.
So basically, I let the owner of the theater do the selection for me, not based on my preferences, not based on my previous viewing history, not (entirely) based on what she thinks will make him earn the more money, but based on her cinematographic sensitivity and their extensive knowledge of movies. And I pester about the selection sometimes, and sometimes I will feel I have wasted my money on a movie, but I know that those people have brought me great movies I would not have seen otherwise and ultimately it's worth it.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:5, Informative)
> People with AR-15's spraying bullets up and down the aisles?
You're more likely to get hit by lightning while spontaneously getting 3 different rare diseases.
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TBH, your odds of getting 3 rare diseases is higher in a movie theater than in your home.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:5, Insightful)
Not all shootings are equal. The probability of being killed in a terroristic mass shooting in particular is very low, despite the media's obsession with covering that particular type of shooting.
Re: Movie theaters (Score:4, Informative)
These numbers are pretty rough, but annually about 60% of US firearm related homicides are suicide. About 3% of gun deaths are accidents. About 80% of non-suicide homicides are ruled as gang-related. Police kill in the neighborhood of 1200 people per year, criminals or otherwise. Mass shooting deaths, defined as "4+ deaths of people selected indiscriminately in a public place", are vary small. The figures I've seen are between 5 and 75 people per year.
That leaves somewhere around 1000 to 2000 murders.
If only America could address its drug habit and figure out how to employ our young men. Then gang and other organized crime violence would be severely curtailed, and this would be a pretty peaceful place to live.
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I wouldn't go to a theatre that advertises "guns welcome"
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why? your fear is illogical. criminals will bring guns whether there is a sign or not. at least the guns welcome would give any wrong doer pause, and they might consider other people shooting back at them too great a risk.
stop being scared and dependent on signs to keep you safe.
Re:Movie theaters (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Movie theaters (Score:4, Informative)
It's dead, Jim (Score:5, Interesting)
So are buggy whips.
You can put up as big a screen at home as you have room for, and money to spend. It's not even that expensive, especially as compared to the cumulative costs of a movie theater habit.
Once you have a system at home, you no longer have to put up with sitting by strangers breathing various horrors in your general direction; crying babies; talking people; missing sections of the movie because you needed to hit the head; incredibly expensive and limited "snacks"; spilled sodas running over your feet from behind; seating not specifically chosen by you (and frankly, unlikely to be comfortable); lack of privacy; interference from people using cellphones (or conversely, your inability to use one if you need to); being tied to the theater's schedule; being deluged with ads from every business with an ad budget and no way to mute the obnoxiousness; waiting in line; dealing with the weather; being unable to re-cue the movie to see something you didn't quite catch; dealing with a watch-once-per-huge-cost experience.
If you put some (not a lot of) effort into it, you can have much better theater seating than you're going to get out of 99.9999% of commercial theaters (reclining, soft, blanketed, your SO snuggled up right next to you with out an armrest in someone's soft parts, perfect viewing position every time.) Great sound is easy too. "Largeness" is primarily about resolution and seating distance, so it's really more tricky to get right if you want to please a larger number of viewers. If you are most concerned about you and your SO, for instance, you can set thing s up very easily so the same amount of your visual field is covered, you have excellent resolution, and fabu sound. Going bigger is always awesome, but it's important to understand that the main benefit is the ability to seat and similarly gift a larger number of viewers with equivalent high resolution.
Theaters, near as I can tell, offer only the following:
o a place to take a date that's public, so they have a safety net re you climbing all over them in an unwanted fashion
o an action that is expensive, which can make a date feel like you consider them worthy of same (raise prostitution arguments here, I won't argue.)
o a largish screen, presuming you don't beat them at that game (which takes foresight and money in terms of home spaces)
o about 90 days (at present) one-upsmanship on home viewing timing; that, of course, is wholly artificial -- but quite real.
o higher resolution in some theaters, however this is almost always hugely compromised by non-sharp imagery. Some CGI does show this off, presuming you are seated at the correct distance to the screen, which isn't by any means a given. Even seating at optimum distance with just 1080p isn't all that easy to get right -- there's pretty much just a few feet, depth-wise, where normal visual acuity and that kind of resolution meet and derive full benefit. Likewise, there's only a small set of rows / seats in a commercial theater where you'll actually get the benefit of even higher resolution, presuming the movie actually uses such resolution.
...If those points aren't valuable to you (they aren't to me, at all) then the theater is now effectively a buggy whip. I haven't been to a movie theater in almost ten years (pretty much since projection systems dropped into a range where I decided they were doable.) And you know what? Although my system is moderately expensive, to the point where it blows most people's minds, based on the number of movies we own and have watched, many multiple times, I have saved a huge amount of money, which I then get to put into other things.
I understand the theater business owners' desire to preserve their business model. But I think the writing is on the wall. And I really think that a society that attempts to artificially protect someone's particular business model is making a mistake at any le
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Movie theaters are part of Americana.
Movie theaters were part of Americana.
FTFY. Technology has rendered it obsolete, we're basically at hte mercy of arbitrary exclusivity agreements now.
...what about the drafthouse?.. (Score:2, Insightful)
...it's the only place i'll watch films anymore; they innovate and do a wonderful job of it...
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We have a Cinema Grill near our house. Awful food and drinks, old chairs, and below average theater. But it was the first in the area to offer an alternative to just rows of traditional seating...I think even before stadium seating made it here.
A Regal theater several years ago added motorized recliner stadium seating. That's typically the theater we go to now. Ton of space, chairs you can set to exactly the angle you want, and even if someone has their cell phone screen on you don't notice it because you'r
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I can get rid of that at home. Easily. Pause the movie, yell "get the fuck out of here if you want to talk", wait for them to leave, resume playing.
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Or I could just yell that, and then rewatch whatever it is when I'm sleeping on the couch that night.
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Beer, cocktails, a full menu with the kitchen to back it. Also, reserved seats that you can pick in advance, and a strict no phone policy that they actually enforce. Definitely worth a look [drafthouse.com].
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propylene glycol Sorry, I have an allergy to it if you would like to fog up a public place don't expect me to be there. They also put it in some hair care products I tend to stay away from them they cause a rash.
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For the vast majority of us who don't have a rare allergy to propylene glycol, hair care products, deoderant, and/or perfume the solution seems to be not to bar those things and "don't expect you to be there."
But that is definitely ideal. We could just all watch movies in our own home theaters instead of mass public spaces and you can just watch movies with a friend subset where you won't have a conflict and can enj
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It's not fatal or life threatening just annoying eye and skin irritation people with eczema are irritated by it as well. It's actually very common.
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Why yes, yes they do: http://drafthouse.com/ [drafthouse.com]
I don't have one near but, but the Emagine Theaters near me serve beer, wine, and mixed drinks. http://www.emagine-entertainment.com/ [emagine-en...inment.com]
Might as well break the ice (Score:5, Insightful)
I remember this last time movie theaters came up. I was in the minority because I do consider going to the movies to be a social experience, especially when when seeing a suspenseful or funny movie.
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It depends on the film. If it's a big special effects blockbuster, like a new Star Wars film or something, then yes, going to the cinema can add something to the experience.
For almost anything else, however, home viewing is definitely preferable for me. All too often, there's a film I'd very much like to see but don't want to have to watch in a cinema. Then by the time it's available to watch at home, I've forgotten about it or just lost the inclination to see it.
If the Movie Theater chains are really confi
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I go to the theatre all the time. You just need to go to the right one. AMC Cinesuite is 18+ only, recliners with foot rest and push button for food service. The industry has innovated.
Re:Might as well break the ice (Score:4, Interesting)
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There are movies where the cinema can add to the experience. Mostly Michael Bay movies, where even the obnoxious assholes around you can only add to the experience... ok, snide comments aside, there are certain aspects and elements of the cinema experience that can augment the experience. Like going to a premiere of a long expected movie. Or a great comedy where you can experience the movie and its gags with other people, and where the reaction of other people is actually part of the experience. Or when you
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You don't have to be on some corporation's property to have a "social" experience.
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You don't have to be on some corporation's property to have a "social" experience.
Seriously?
No you don't HAVE to be. You can have all sorts of social experiences in all sorts of places. You know including on "some corporation's property". And yes, the cinema is a social experience.
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The only thing the theaters have going for them is getting the movies sooner. There are boxes that
A biased opinion (Score:5, Insightful)
My understanding from how movie theatres work is that they barely make any money at all from the showing of movies. It is the production studios that take the greatest amount of profits from the movies shown at the theatre. Where theatre's make money is primarily from the extremely unhealthy food folks buy at the theatre. It's why we hear so much about movies from producers that flop because that represents a huge loss. Theatres are not so worried so long as folks still go to the theatre to see movies.
Gas stations use a similar model where most of their actual profits are from non-gas sales. They behave very much like a corner store. The gas that's sold isn't very profitable otherwise.
Re:A biased opinion (Score:5, Informative)
This is a common misunderstanding. Movie theatres make plenty of money from showing movies. It is true that the vast majority (~90%) of revenue from brand new films (typically a film is a 'special engagement' from release through the end of its second weekend) goes back to the studio. However, the studio's take drops rapidly after that point, eventually tilting in the theatre's favor. A large chain with a good film buyer and strategies in place to ensure movies perform as well as possible during an extended run can get their overall 'film rent' below 60%. But, even at 90%, the theatre's box office take isn't "barely any money." The nice thing about tickets is that everyone pays for them, while many customers don't visit the concession stand. When I ran a movie theatre, our average ticket price (which factors in free passes, discounted tickets, matinees, child tickets, etc.) was about $7.50. Our net concession per capita was about $2.40. 75 cents may pale in comparison to $2.40, but it is definitely significant...and this is absolutely the worst case scenario.
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I rarely go to theaters anymore unless it's with the Mrs to see a new Marvel or Star Wars movie. Neither of us like the gum-riddled floors and vomit-infused seats, so we pay a little extra to be in a better environment. I'd wager the theaters operating cost is not significantly higher since you are
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Few films have an "extended" run any more. With a lot of pictures these days, you're pretty much out of luck if you don't remember to get to the theater right away.
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i see some movies in the theater for weeks. with digital projection it's a lot easier to squeeze older movie showings in than dedicating a theater with the old film projector
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that's revenue
you still have lots of bills to pay like rent, salaries, taxes and dozens of others which is why the concessions make money and tickets are a money loser.
No innovation? I wish! (Score:2)
My local theater has been innovating in recent years, contrary to Hastings' claims. Some of the changes have been good, such as the ease in buying tickets before arriving at the theater and ability to pick out assigned seats when purchasing tickets.
But most of the "innovations" are horrible. I don't mind (and would often partake) in food and drink at the theater. But unfortunately it comes paired with in-seat delivery during the movie. Waitstaff walking around the theater is a great way to ruin a movie. Alw
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Sounds like a great opportunity (Score:2)
The same movie (Score:2)
The movie is the same movie (save for small details on what is/isnt cut) in theater vs home. So why pay $12.50/person in theater vs $20/total for home?
The movie theaters need to make it more about the experience than just the product (the movie) itself.
A few local theaters have changed their seating to be 180-degree leather reclining seats. Something that makes the experience a HELL of a lot more comfortable. Some theaters also include Dolby Atmos, if you love amazing sound systems. I've also heard of some
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Post-Economics (Score:2)
While there is much study and discussion about monopolistic behavior, and the formation and maintenance of monopolies, and the dismantling or replacement of monopolies, there is less about the decline and eventual diminishment (to the point of irrelevance) of said monopolies.
The movie industry is facing the disintermediation of several components of the industry. Production is being democratized and decentralized as equipment is cheaper than ever, and even animation is affordable. We will see 4K recording o
It is a Government-created problem. (Score:5, Informative)
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Totally lame and arbitrary and definitely contributes to reduced investment, thus reduced innovation.
It also strengthened the hand of independent movie studios, because the big studios couldn't keep them out of major theaters. This is a good thing.
It strengthened the hand of independent theaters, since.. well, all theaters were independent of the studios now. This is a good thing.
The Hays Production Code took a major hit. This is a very good thing.
The "studios" also no longer own actors who can make movies for any studio. The is also a very good thing.
I'm not really seeing the downside here.
Nonsense (Score:2)
Part of the problem is that small movies, such as many Netflix has snagged from places like Sundance, would be better distributed both at home and in theaters.
Right.
If they collude to face the theaters, it's anti-trust, but if they are the ones to take the first step, their films will get killed.
Baloney. The small films often "get killed" anyway. Put in a modicum of advertising (say, subway billboards) and implement a competent social media campaign, and if the audience exists they will find the film.
Ha
I have no interest in home theaters (Score:2)
They waste space, cost a lot of money and tend to become obsolete quickly. Devotees spend more time playing with their system than they do actually enjoying a movie and I figure I can go out to the movies for a few decades once a week for the money some people put into trying to replicate a movie theatre. It's really almost the Uber vs buying a car in reverse. Why buy a car or a movie theatre when someone else can provide you one on demand for less?
A couch and less than gargantuan screen is perfectly fin
"Flatline" is not "flat" (Score:2)
"The movie theater business has seen flatline revenue, Hastings said".
That's a truly beautiful example of deceptive speech. He meant that revenue has been "flat" - in other words, they are not always getting more money with every passing year. When you think about it, how bad can that really be? Must everything grow eternally, without limit?
But the word he chose to use was "flatline", a medical term for "the continuous straight line displayed on a heart monitor which indicates cardiac arrest or death". (COE
"Innovation"? (Score:2)
Horse hockey. The studios don't own the theatres, theatre companies do, and the studios want an arm and a leg to show the films, and the theatre companies want the other arm and a leg for profit... and the theatres pay the staff from the food and drinks.
The result is, what, it was $20/person last year for an IMAX show of Interstellar. $20 for a MOVIE? And another what, $10? $15? $20? for popcorn and sodas?
Gee, I just don' know why fewer people is going to da theatres....
Movie Makers Strangling Movie Making Business (Score:2)
flash bang glitz that might benefit from a large screen but offset by garbage plot and dialog, not worth paying for so I watch at home
indie-ish movies with good story and plot but don't really benefit from the big screen so I watch at home
Disagree (Score:5, Interesting)
It seems to me that the real problem is the low quality output of the Hollywood studios, combined with their monopoly on the US market.
In Europe you often see films from many different countries/cultures, in the US, its ALL Hollywood monoculture output only.
Everything Hollywood make is totally formulaic and predictable, and the plot has become irrelevant to the eye-candy. Go back to the black and white movies of the 40's/50's. Maltese Falcon, Casablanca, Gone With The Wind etc. Amazing, engaging, intelligent stories.
Now all we get is just endless hybrids of one of 7 or so standard moralized storylines,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
and a bunch of CGI effects. The result is entirely predictable, unimaginative and only truly engaging to people with an IQ of about 80 at most.
Presumably because that's what the studios now believe is the lowest cost/least effort approach needed in order to make something that will probably be profitable, rather than actually good.
Its gotten so bad that a high percentage of American masses seriously think Hollywood Physics is how things actually work in real life.
http://www.informationweek.com... [informationweek.com]?
Re:Disagree (Score:5, Interesting)
Everything Hollywood make is totally formulaic and predictable, and the plot has become irrelevant to the eye-candy. Go back to the black and white movies of the 40's/50's. Maltese Falcon, Casablanca, Gone With The Wind etc. Amazing, engaging, intelligent stories.
Yes, but I bet you're cherry picking a few great movies out of two decades, and there are the other 90% of the movies out at the time that had the same issue that you are complaining about current movies having. Do you have any idea of how many Charlie Chan or Tarzan movies alone were made in that time period? In 50 years, somebody else will be describing the great movies of the 00's and 10's while complaining about their current movies.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
A bunch of that problem your seeing hasn't got anything to do with the U.S. Hollywood studios are making movies that will play in Asia, especially China, to people who may not speak English, so complex plots and dialog don't work very well. CGI works equally good or bad in all countries.
The problem is the Asia movie market has passed the U.S. and Europe in size so U.S. studios are pandering to it to make money
Re: (Score:2)
Preaching to the choir....
Re: (Score:2)
What competition? If anything, Netflix IS the competition to the movie buggy whip business.
Time has passed you by, theaters. You may have a reason to continue existing as a niche product, but for watching "normal" movies, you're superfluous and, essentially, not competitive anymore.
Re: (Score:2)
The last time I went to a big chain movie theater was the first JJ Trek. Before the ads even started the speakers were humming loudly, once the movie started the smallest sounds were like small grenades and the loudest caused the speakers to pop, I half expected to see sparks flying out of them.
Now I go to the alamo drafthouse. The rooms smell a bit funny thanks to all the spilled food, but at least the sound system is decent. The carnivore pizza is pretty damn good though.
Re: (Score:2)
I'd go to the movie theater if they brought the volume back down to what is was 20 years ago. Even with ear plus in, I can't stand the volume -- it physically hurts.
I hear where you're coming from (see what I did there?). However, don't just be so quick to blame the cinemas. It's also a problem with the way the films are mixed. They seem to relish mixing it with the absolute maximum dynamic range possible, so that the quiet bits are really quiet and the loud bits will deafen you.
It's really annoying even at
Re: (Score:2)
Having lived in the US and the UK, unless the UK quality has gone down significantly in the last few decades, the experience in the US at a cinema is a lot less pleasant. The cinema's are dirtier. The patrons less respectful and noisy. More kids at later shows. Cinema's less comfortable.
Maybe it's just where I've lived in the US, but the all-round experience of cinemas over here is a lot less pleasant. It's where nasty, noisy, stinky people go.
Re: (Score:3)
There are headphones......
Re: (Score:2)
For good films on Netflix, get a DVD subscription. The studios have refused to let Netflix have good stream content.