Tagged: film
Doctor of Movies’ Top Ten of 2025
As an observer of the film industry, a reader of articles and listener of podcasts, there seemed to be a lot of doom and gloom around in 2025. IP serialisation is still very much the name of the game in Hollywood, but while family-focused blockbusters like Zootopia 2, A Minecraft Movie and the live-action remakes of Lilo & Stitch and How to Train Your Dragon performed strongly, new instalments in the previously bankable Marvel Cinematic Universe, Jurassic World, Avatar, Mission: Impossible, and Wicked all failed to gross as much as previous entries. We had Trump’s announcement that tariffs were going to be introduced on movies made outside of the US and the uncertainty about how that would work and what it would mean. There is the question of what the pending sale of Warner Brothers to Netflix means for the future of both the studio and the theatrical and physical media releasing of their films. And then, of course, there is the continued uncertainty about what impact the increasing prevalence of generative AI will have on the screen sectors. All good fodder for the glass-half-empty types.
Continue readingDoctor of Movies’ Top Ten of 2024
It felt like a quieter year for the movies in 2024. While global box office takings appear to have increased, 2024 cinema didn’t have a Barbenheimer-style pop culture defining moment – despite the promotional teams for Wicked trying very hard to fabricate one. What the global box office does speak to is a cinematic landscape that continues to shift and change in search of its position in the new entertainment landscape. Existing IP remains the key strategy, with Red One and IF the only films in the top 25 grossing films in the world that are not sequels, remakes or adaptations. We saw the continued decline of the superhero movie after two decades as the dominant blockbuster force, with the second year in a row of only two superhero movies – Deadpool & Wolverine (which was ok) and Venom: The Last Dance (which was not good) – cracking the global box office top ten. Family animation showed that it is still the most dependable performer, with Inside Out 2 and Moana 2 performing strongly and Despicable Me 4 and Kung Fu Panda 4 doing solidly (Inside Out 2 also showed that Pixar is still very much a drawcard when Disney doesn’t shoot themselves in the foot by sending them straight to Disney+). Wicked confirmed that the non-animated musical genre has returned as a legitimate blockbuster form, while Joker: Folie à Deux (which I kind of liked)showed that if you are going to make a sequel that is openly antagonistic to the audience that made your first film a massive hit then you probably shouldn’t inflate the budget with massive salary raises.
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