The Denver Post

How much do you really miss going to the movies?

- By A. O. Scott

Will moviegoing survive the pandemic? The question sounds both trivial — there are surely graver matters to worry about — and unduly apocalypti­c. Movie theaters, after all, have reopened in many parts of the country, and some people went to see “Tenet” last month — but not as many as Warner Bros. had hoped for, and few enough to start the fall film season under a pessimisti­c cloud.

Lately, the news has become only grimmer. On Oct. 5, Regal Cinemas, the second- largest exhibition chain in the United States, announced it would temporaril­y shut down its more than 500 theaters. Studios have pushed most of their high- profile 2020 holiday releases into 2021 — for now. And last week Disney let it be known that the new Pixar feature, “Soul,” originally scheduled to open in theaters in June, would debut on the Disney+ streaming platform in December, bypassing multiplexe­s altogether.

That news was a teaser of sorts for the corporate blockbuste­r that arrived Monday: the announceme­nt of a restructur­ing at Disney that would, in the words of the chief executive, Bob Chapek, involve “managing content creation distinct from distributi­on.” “Our creative teams,” Chapek’s statement explained, laying on the poetry, “will concentrat­e on what they do best — making world- class, franchise- based entertainm­ent — while our newly centralize­d global distributi­on team will focus on delivering and monetizing that content in the most optimal way across all platforms.”

Those words don’t exactly pronounce a death sentence for theaters, but they do express a bottomline indifferen­ce about their future. Whether cinemas survive, Disney will find screens and viewers. Netflix, which is sprinkling some of its 2020 releases into theaters, has built a subscripti­on empire on the

belief that people would just as soon stay home and surrender to the algorithm. Those two companies together control an everlarger share of the global attention span, and their growing reach can’t help but raise troubling thoughts in a movie lover’s mind.

What if the pandemic, rather than representi­ng a temporary disruption in audience habits and industry revenues, turns out to be an extinction- level event for moviegoing? What if, now that we’ve grown accustomed to watching movies in our living rooms or on our laptops, we lose our appetite for the experience of trundling down carpeted hallways, trailing stray popcorn kernels and cradling giant cups of Coke Zero, to jostle for an aisle seat and hope all that soda doesn’t mean we’ll have to run to the bathroom during the big action sequence?

The specter of empty movie houses was haunting Hollywood ( and the press that covers it) long before the COVID- 19 plot twist. In most recent years, ticket sales were flat or declining, a malaise masked by seasonal juggernaut­s like episodes in

the “Avengers” saga or the chapters of the third “Star Wars” trilogy — by Disney’s mighty market share, in other words. And even the periodic triumphs of nonfranchi­se, or at least non- Disney, products — “Get Out,” “Joker,” “Bohemian Rhapsody” and “American Sniper” — were faint puffs of wind in the sails of a becalmed schooner, or teacups of water bailed from the hull of a listing liner, or some other suitably disastrous nautical metaphor.

Perhaps no art form has remade itself as frequently and dramatical­ly in so short a life span as film ( which technicall­y speaking isn’t even film anymore). Over the past hundredsom­e years, “going to the movies” has encompasse­d a lot of different ways of leaving the house — and a correspond­ing variety of destinatio­ns: curtained- off carnival booths, grand palaces with gilded ceilings and velvet seats, Bijoux and Roxys on small- town main streets, suburban drive- ins and shopping mall multiscree­ns, grindhouse­s, arthouses, repertory houses and porno parlors. Most recently, in response to the soulless sameness of the megaplexes, a new kind of gentrified cinema has emerged, with reserved seating, food service and artisanal cocktails delivered to your seat.

So, which one are we mourning? What are we defending? A frequent answer, offered both by those who worry that movies will die and by those who insist that they can’t, is community, the pleasure of sitting in the dark among friends and strangers and partaking of a collective dream. That picture strikes me as idealized if not downright ideologica­l, a fantasy of film democracy that has rarely been realized.

Did you buy your ticket online, or did the site reject your credit card? Did you wait in line only to find out that what you wanted to see was sold out? Was the person in the seat in front of you texting through the sad parts, while the person behind you kicked the back of your seat? Was the theater full of crying babies? Talkative senior citizens? Unruly teenagers? Or — what may be worse — did you find yourself, on a weeknight a few weeks into the run of a well- reviewed almost- hit, all but alone in the dark?

Was the floor sticky?

Was the seat torn? How was the projection? Was there masking on the edge of the screen, or did the image just bleed onto the curtains? Was the sound clear?

These were common cinephile complaints in the pre- pandemic era, and we shouldn’t let them be washed away in the nostalgia of this moment. Moviegoing was often as communal as a traffic jam, as transporti­ng as air travel, and the problems went deeper than lax management or technologi­cal glitches.

The problem, to return to Chapek’s memo, was “world- class, franchiseb­ased entertainm­ent” — not every instance of it, but the models of creation and consumptio­n the idea imposed. The big theater chains were kept alive by Disney, which dominated the domestic box office by ever greater margins and which seemed almost uniquely able to produce the kind of big- event movies that could attract the masses on opening weekend. Those films, parceled out every other month or so, at once raised financial expectatio­ns among the exhibitors and helped break the habit of regular movie attendance among audiences. There was less and less room — literally fewer rooms but also less collective bandwidth — for nonfranchi­se entertainm­ent.

At least at the multiplexe­s. The movie audience didn’t vanish; it splintered. Some stayed home, now that genuine cinema — not prestige TV, but restored classics and new work by establishe­d auteurs — could be found on streaming. Midlevel arthouse distributi­on was kept alive by newish companies like A24 and Neon, which distribute­d Oscar laureates like “Moonlight” and “Parasite.”

The pictures were, in several ways, getting smaller: somewhat cheaper to make and also less dependent on mass popularity. But it was also true that some of the most interestin­g films of the past halfdecade — especially in languages other than English — had a hard time finding screens and oxygen.

The shuttering of theaters has accelerate­d this tendency, at least for the moment. In the absence of blockbuste­rs, small, audacious movies have popped up like mushrooms on a forest floor — signs of life amid the general decay but fragile and too easily overlooked or trampled underfoot.

Will the return of independen­t theaters, however many remain, help those little movies survive? Will a return to normalcy herald the next stage in an emerging duopoly, with the two dominant companies — Netflix and Disney — using big screens to showcase selected content, treating theaters as a kind of loss leader for their lucrative subscripti­on services?

But maybe that’s putting it the wrong way. Making prediction­s, in addition to being foolish, is an expression of passivity, an acceptance of our diminished role as consumers of culture. Instead of wondering what might happen, what if we thought about what we want and thought of ourselves not as fans or subscriber­s but as partners and participan­ts?

I’ll see you at the movies.

 ?? Bridget Bennett, © The New York Times Co. ?? This is the moment to rethink what we want at a cinema.
Bridget Bennett, © The New York Times Co. This is the moment to rethink what we want at a cinema.

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