• glimse@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Clever…but it isn’t the burn he thinks it is lol

    Scorcese was talking about the art of film and this dude is flexing finances. We know, man. The shallow, mass-appeal of your films make a lot of money. There’s nothing wrong with that but Scorcese wants to see more ART get made, not cash machines.

      • glimse@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It’s just ironic because that’s literally what Scorcese is criticizing the industry for doing… Valuing profits over everything lol

        • canthidium@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, true. I just feel like MCU movies are still art. Filmmaking is art. Kids watching MCU movies look at them the same way people looked at Star Wars back in the day. They are transported to another universe and feel good for a couple hours. That’s art, IMO, whether that was the goal or not. But I’m just confused at everyone taking Joe Russo’s silly tik tok as this hardcore clapback like he was really putting up a serious contrasting argument. Maybe I’m wrong, but it just came off like a silly joke to me.

          • glimse@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I agree that not every film has to be high art but Scorcese is saying (and I agree) that we’re in a slump of high art because of films like the post-End Game MCU. They have completely taken over and not necessarily because they’re great and people want to watch them - the push from these studios is actively suffocating high art films. People see movies regardless and there’s way fewer art-focused ones.

            If others are like me, it’s because they’re cringing a bit at the irony. It’s a clever reply but completely missing the point.

            Also, though not my main disagreement…Marvel is so profitable in part because they pay VFX artists next to nothing for their work. So it’s like saying “yeah you make art, but check out how much I exploited the working class!”

            [Edit] added “in part” to the last paragraph. I’m not foolishly claiming that VFX slave wages are the only reason they’re popular and profitable!

            • canthidium@lemmy.worldOP
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              1 year ago

              I agree that not every film has to be high art but Scorcese is saying (and I agree) that we’re in a slump of high art because of films like the post-End Game MCU. They have completely taken over and not necessarily because they’re great and people want to watch them - the push from these studios is actively suffocating high art films. People see movies regardless and there’s way fewer art-focused ones.

              Yeah I definitely agree that “high art” is stifled, but that’s always been the case from what I’ve seen. It may be more nowadays, but theaters always went towards the money makers. I think there’s more high art out there than ever, but of course it’s hard to find.

              If others are like me, it’s because they’re cringing a bit at the irony. It’s a clever reply but completely missing the point.

              Ah, yeah I can see that.

              Also, though not my main disagreement…Marvel is so profitable in part because they pay VFX artists next to nothing for their work. So it’s like saying “yeah you make art, but check out how much I exploited the working class!”

              Yeah, good point there. I went to college for VFX, but ended up switching to graphic design instead and I’m kinda glad I didn’t end up at a VFX studio.

              Good points overall and I definitely agree. But I also think Russo wasn’t looking that deep. He was just giving a tongue-in-cheek response, but then again, that is an issue on its own not addressing the systemic issues outside of this little friendly banter.

              • glimse@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Yeah I definitely agree that “high art” is stifled, but that’s always been the case from what I’ve seen. It may be more nowadays, but theaters always went towards the money makers. I think there’s more high art out there than ever, but of course it’s hard to find.

                The amount of stifling is at levels we haven’t seen since vertical integration laws were passed unfortunately. But we’re slowly coming out of it now thanks to the popularity of studios like A24! Barbie was a big deal, too.

                The only two top-grossing movies in the past 25 years that weren’t built off an existing IP have been American Sniper (2014) and Avatar (2009). If you look at the prior 25 years, it’s almost the exact opposite

                • canthidium@lemmy.worldOP
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                  1 year ago

                  studios like A24!

                  Oh my favorite studio ever. I’m worried about their pivot to more mainstream stuff they announced though.

                  • glimse@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    Me, too. Hopefully they continue to produce the stuff they became famous for alongside the bigger films