now they’re making a live action moana in 2025. it hasn’t even been 10 years, disney is lowballing so hard with these lifeless remakes. hopefully ariel flops bad enough that they change their minds.

  • Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    It’s infuriating how many of the biggest media releases these days are either re-release, remakes, or very stale additions to long standing franchises.

    I hate how much Hollywood is relying on pre-existing stuff, it’s incredibly lazy.

    • dustyData@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      They keep starving or burning out the actually creative writers, so no one wants to make new stuff for them.

      • MercuryUprising@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Not just that. There used to be a time when producers took risks. They were the ultimate arbiter if something got made or not, and they would sometimes gamble it all on a total roll of the dice, but because of it we got multiple generation defining films (like the Godfather or Star Wars to name a few).

        Now companies like movie studios are massive and the power is no longer consolidated like that, and a board is much less keen on taking a gamble, so they take safer risks. How do they know what’s safe? Well there are all these statistics that they’ve paid for, and those statistics have told them:

        Previously existing IPs have a guaranteed audience.

        So they just keep rehashing the same thing because its a “guarantee.” While I may not like the new DIsney movies, and think that Lion King (2019) is a fucking abomination, it is a) the highest grossing animated film of all time, b) the 7th highest grossing FILM of all time, and c) has a bigger box office than the original lion king by almost double.

      • dustyData@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The story might not have been original, but it was the first feature length animated film. It was revolutionary and original at the time. It was a feat of innovation when a lot of people said that animation was a cute trick but wasn’t good enough to hold an audience attention for longer than 10 minutes. The “animation is cinema” debate has been going on for as long as cinema has been a thing.