Yeah, you're right. You're so friendly and congenial to those you disagree with, it's easy to imagine that other Hollywood people higher up in the food chain are equally level-headed.
Lol- if you don't think every studio head/executive appreciates you, you don't know what you're talking about. They want every single one of yours, and everyone else's, dollars.Quote:
People also like to support companies/makers/industries they imaginekind of appreciate them, and anyone right of center knows that these studios, these actors, these executives utterly despise us, so we have better things to spend our time/money on.
20ag07 said:Lol- if you don't think every studio head/executive appreciates you, you don't know what you're talking about. They want every single one of yours, and everyone else's, dollars.Quote:
People also like to support companies/makers/industries they imaginekind of appreciate them, and anyone right of center knows that these studios, these actors, these executives utterly despise us, so we have better things to spend our time/money on.
You'll not find one single studio or executive saying they don't like people right of center.
You certainly will, as you just did, say it's "what you imagine".
Belton Ag said:
Going back to the idea of the lack of A list actors…
I legitimately wonder if the dearth of studio standard bearers plays a role in the downturn of the number of tickets sold.
There are a lot of great actors working, so I'm not talking about a lack of talented actors, I'm talking about there not being many "movie stars" anymore.
Someone on a previous thread called Tom Cruise the "last movie star" and I'm not sure they are wrong. I can't think of any names working today that have the status that Bogart, Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe and John Wayne had. Into the 1970's 80's and 90's you had Clint Eastwood, Harrison Ford, Robin Williams, Julia Roberts and Tom Cruise.
I know a few of these names are still alive and working, but they're not at the level they were, and I'm not sure anyone has risen up to take their place.
YouBet said:Belton Ag said:
Going back to the idea of the lack of A list actors…
I legitimately wonder if the dearth of studio standard bearers plays a role in the downturn of the number of tickets sold.
There are a lot of great actors working, so I'm not talking about a lack of talented actors, I'm talking about there not being many "movie stars" anymore.
Someone on a previous thread called Tom Cruise the "last movie star" and I'm not sure they are wrong. I can't think of any names working today that have the status that Bogart, Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe and John Wayne had. Into the 1970's 80's and 90's you had Clint Eastwood, Harrison Ford, Robin Williams, Julia Roberts and Tom Cruise.
I know a few of these names are still alive and working, but they're not at the level they were, and I'm not sure anyone has risen up to take their place.
Cruise and Pitt are probably the last generations biggest names and they are in their twilight. DiCaprio.
I would say Gosling and Austin Butler are probably the two biggest newer names that I would consider movie stars. Butler probably not at level of Gosling but feels like he's about to be.
Again, as has been made common In this thread, but won't be answered, *exactly* which executives don't "want to know how average people in flyover country think?"Quote:
The vast majority of decision makers in the industry don't know and don't want to know how average people in flyover states think. You'd have to actively wear blinders not to hear and see the contempt the industry has for those outside their weird bubble.
Cliff.Booth said:
I didn't mention anything about you in my post. I was just expressing my view, but as usual, like on 90% of the threads on this forum, you came down from the rafters like Sting to defend Hollywood by acting like what everyone assumes Hollywood people are like.
Cliff.Booth said:YouBet said:Belton Ag said:
Going back to the idea of the lack of A list actors…
I legitimately wonder if the dearth of studio standard bearers plays a role in the downturn of the number of tickets sold.
There are a lot of great actors working, so I'm not talking about a lack of talented actors, I'm talking about there not being many "movie stars" anymore.
Someone on a previous thread called Tom Cruise the "last movie star" and I'm not sure they are wrong. I can't think of any names working today that have the status that Bogart, Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe and John Wayne had. Into the 1970's 80's and 90's you had Clint Eastwood, Harrison Ford, Robin Williams, Julia Roberts and Tom Cruise.
I know a few of these names are still alive and working, but they're not at the level they were, and I'm not sure anyone has risen up to take their place.
Cruise and Pitt are probably the last generations biggest names and they are in their twilight. DiCaprio.
I would say Gosling and Austin Butler are probably the two biggest newer names that I would consider movie stars. Butler probably not at level of Gosling but feels like he's about to be.
Chris Pratt had the look and talent to be on that trajectory, but then he made the fatal mistake of being an outspoken Christian.
TCTTS said:Cliff.Booth said:
I didn't mention anything about you in my post. I was just expressing my view, but as usual, like on 90% of the threads on this forum, you came down from the rafters like Sting to defend Hollywood by acting like what everyone assumes Hollywood people are like.
I was of course talking about your interactions with me as a whole, considering you're never not just as smarmy, mocking, and condescending to me as you claim I'm being to others.
But you can't, if asked, name one single one of who those decision- makers are.Quote:
I stand by my opinion that many Hollywood decision makers and actors have disdain for anyone center or right, but if you deny that, fair enough.
fig96 said:
The next gen of A listers is probably Timothee Chalamet, Glen Powell, Austin Butler, you've also got Ryan Gosling, Henry Cavill, and a few others who are a bit further along.
I'd imagine every generation has said the same sort of things as their stars age out, the difference is that we've got guys like Cruise and Pitt still making action films in their early 60s.
fig96 said:
The next gen of A listers is probably Timothee Chalamet, Glen Powell, Austin Butler, you've also got Ryan Gosling, Henry Cavill, and a few others who are a bit further along.
I'd imagine every generation has said the same sort of things as their stars age out, the difference is that we've got guys like Cruise and Pitt still making action films in their early 60s.
FL_Ag1998 said:fig96 said:
The next gen of A listers is probably Timothee Chalamet, Glen Powell, Austin Butler, you've also got Ryan Gosling, Henry Cavill, and a few others who are a bit further along.
I'd imagine every generation has said the same sort of things as their stars age out, the difference is that we've got guys like Cruise and Pitt still making action films in their early 60s.
Ding, ding, ding.
IMO - aging posters who think that because their moviegoing experiences, viewpoints, and opinions are not the common ones any more then that must mean Hollywood is dying.
A prime example is the thought that there are soon to be no more A-list stars.
I've agreed in previous posts that the movie-watching experience is evolving, as everything does over time. But there's a lot of old-man-shaking-fist-at-clouds posts in these two threads.
20ag07 said:Quote:
The vast majority of decision makers in the industry don't know and don't want to know how average people in flyover states think. You'd have to actively wear blinders not to hear and see the contempt the industry has for those outside their weird bubble.
Again, as has been made common In this thread, but won't be answered, *exactly* which executives don't "want to know how average people in flyover country think?"
Quote:
According to Sheridan, Yellowstone almost never saw the light of daythanks to an unnamed HBO executive who didn't believe in the concept.
As Sheridan recalls, the V.P said, "Look, it just feels so Middle America. We're HBO, we're avant-garde, we're trendsetters. This feels like a step backward. And frankly, I've got to be honest, I don't think anyone should be living out there [in Montana]. It should be a park or something."
Belton Ag said:FL_Ag1998 said:fig96 said:
The next gen of A listers is probably Timothee Chalamet, Glen Powell, Austin Butler, you've also got Ryan Gosling, Henry Cavill, and a few others who are a bit further along.
I'd imagine every generation has said the same sort of things as their stars age out, the difference is that we've got guys like Cruise and Pitt still making action films in their early 60s.
Ding, ding, ding.
IMO - aging posters who think that because their moviegoing experiences, viewpoints, and opinions are not the common ones any more then that must mean Hollywood is dying.
A prime example is the thought that there are soon to be no more A-list stars.
I've agreed in previous posts that the movie-watching experience is evolving, as everything does over time. But there's a lot of old-man-shaking-fist-at-clouds posts in these two threads.
If this is directed at me or my posts, then you completely and fundamentally misunderstood what I was aiming at.
Hell, most my examples were of people who lived and died before I was even born. So not coming from some kind of longing for my youth.
20ag07 said:
Was Yellowstone ever a movie? No it was not.
So why would it enter the chat?
Only a complete moron cannot see the damage done by the woke echo chamber that is Hollywood. Tom Cruise is the only one remaining that can make a good movie.AggieOO said:Brian Earl Spilner said:
https://texags.com/forums/13/topics/3551309
Called it.
but you didn't blame it on woke liberals. That's the texags way.
It's not the same.Quote:
because to people that aren't in the industry, or film geeks like yourself, its really all the same. And I believe i read yellowstone was orginally pitched as a movie, but who knows.
Name them. (Ya'll never do.)Quote:
To support your point there's also the inadvertent politics that come into play like the fall out from #metoo which gave 7-8 years of ridiculous action movies with women in the lead roles.
20ag07 said:
What did you see a woman cast in that a man should have been?
Name those.
(Apparently there were 50, shouldn't be hard to toss out 5).