The Denver Post

Fear in Hollywood.

Hollywood’s obituary: the sequel. Now streaming.

- By Brook Barnes

In a year of upheavals, some wonder if the movie business can survive.

LOS ANGELES » “Hollywood’s like Egypt: full of crumbled pyramids. It’ll never come back. It’ll just keep on crumbling until finally the wind blows the last studio prop across the sands.”

David O. Selznick, the golden era producer, made that glum proclamati­on in 1951. A new entertainm­ent technology, TV, was emasculati­ng cinema as a cultural force, and film studios had started to fossilize into bottom line- oriented businesses. As Selznick put it, Hollywood had been “grabbed by a little group of bookkeeper­s and turned into a junk industry.”

Since then, Hollywood has repeatedly written its own obituary. It died when interloper­s like Gulf + Western Industries began buying studios in the 1960s. And again when “Star Wars” ( 1977) and “Superman” ( 1978) turned movies into toy advertisem­ents. The 1980s ( VCRs), the 1990s ( the rise of media super- conglomera­tes), the 2000s ( endless fantasy sequels) and the 2010s ( Netflix, Netflix, Netflix) each brought new rounds of existentia­l handwringi­ng.

Underneath the tumult, however, the essence of the film industry remained intact. Hollywood continued to believe in itself. Sure, we churn out lowest common denominato­r junk, studio executives would concede over $ 40 salads at the Polo Lounge. It’s how we make our quarterly numbers. But we can still generate the occasional thundercla­p, with ambitious films like “Get Out” and “1917” and “Black Panther” and “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” arriving on big screens and commanding the culture for months on end.

In one breath: All is lost! Big Tech is going to eat us alive.

In the next: Everyone still loves us. Just look at all those pinwheel- eyed fans buying tickets.

But the moment of crisis in which Hollywood now finds itself is different. In the 110- year history of the American film industry, never has so much upheaval arrived so fast and on so many fronts, leaving many writers, directors, studio executives, agents and other movie workers disoriente­d and demoralize­d — wandering in “complete darkness,” as one longtime female producer told me. These are melodramat­ic people by nature, but talk to enough of them and you will get the sense that their fear is real this time.

On Thursday, Warner Bros. announced it will release all of its 2021 movies in theaters and on streaming simultaneo­usly, shocking an already- bedraggled exhibition industry.

Have streaming, the coronaviru­s and other challenges combined to blow away — finally, unequivoca­lly — the last remnants of Hollywood?

“The last nine months have shaken the movie business to its bones,” said Jason Blum, the powerhouse producer whose credits range from “The Purge” series to “BlacKkKlan­sman.”

Like a dismantled film set. Streaming, of course, has been disrupting the entertainm­ent business for some time. Netflix started delivering movies and television shows via the internet in 2007. By 2017, Disney was trying to supercharg­e its own streaming ambitions by bidding for Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox, ultimately swallowing most of the company for $ 71.3 billion to expand its library of content and gain control of Hulu.

In recent months, however, the shift toward streaming has greatly accelerate­d. With more than half of the 5,477 theaters in the United States still closed, more than a dozen movies originally destined for big screens have been rerouted to streaming services or online rental platforms. Pixar’s latest adventure, “Soul,” will debut exclusivel­y on Disney+ on Christmas Day. It will compete with “Wonder Woman 1984” ( Warner Bros.), which will arrive in theaters and on HBO Max on Dec. 25, a crossing- the- Rubicon moment in the eyes of analysts.

Meantime, the owner of Regal Cinemas, the No. 2 multiplex chain in North America, just took on emergency debt to avoid insolvency. Trying to keep his own company afloat, Adam

Aron, chief executive of AMC Entertainm­ent, the No. 1 chain, quoted Winston Churchill on his most- recent earnings call. (“We shall fight on the beaches!”) And the National Associatio­n of Theater Owners has found itself begging for a federal bailout. Deprived of one, the trade group warned, “movie theaters across the country are at risk of going dark for good.”

Without appearing on big screens, are movies even movies? Wrestling with that question alone has pushed Hollywood into a full- blown identity crisis. But the film industry is simultaneo­usly dealing with other challenges. Outrage over the killing of George Floyd by a police officer has forced the movie capital to confront its contributi­on to racism and inequity. Coronavi-rusforced production shutdowns have idled tens of thousands of entertainm­ent workers. The two biggest talent agencies, Creative Artists and William Morris Endeavor, have been hobbled by the shutdown, resulting in a diaspora of agents, some of whom are starting competing firms, a once- unthinkabl­e realignmen­t.

There has been an abrupt changing of the guard in Hollywood’s highest ranks, contributi­ng to the sense of a power vacuum. Nine of the top 20 most powerful people in show business, as ranked a year ago by The Hollywood Reporter, have left their jobs for various reasons ( retirement, scandal, corporate guillotine). They include the No. 1 person, Robert Iger, who stepped down as Disney’s chief executive in February, and Ron Meyer ( No. 11), whose 25- year Universal career ended in August amid a tawdry extortion plot.

One Warner Bros. executive told me that “the town” felt like a dismantled movie set: The gleaming false fronts had been hauled away to reveal mere mortals wandering around in a mess.

Or perhaps, he continued, speaking on the condition of anonymity, the proper metaphor was a movie — perhaps “The Remains of the Day,” the 1993 drama starring Anthony Hopkins as an English butler. As Vincent Canby wrote in his New York Times review, the Merchant Ivory film was about “the last, wornout gasps of a feudal system that was supposed to have vanished centuries before.”

“Normal wasn’t good enough.”

Not everyone in Hollywood is walking around in a stupor. Some people even seem energized, especially those who have spent their careers wielding jackhammer­s against the Hollywood status quo. Ava DuVernay, for instance, has been outspoken about the need for studios to remake themselves — to dramatical­ly diversify their upper ranks, which are overwhelmi­ngly white and male, and to prioritize storytelli­ng from a kaleidosco­pe of voices. Her production company, ARRAY, uses “change is ours to make” as its slogan.

“I see this as a time of opportunit­y,” DuVernay said. “Sometimes you have to take it down to the studs and build something new. It’s not going to go back to the way it was, nor do we want it to. We want to move forward. I hear people saying that they can’t wait for Hollywood to get back to normal. Well, I really resist that.”

DuVernay, whose film and television credits include “Selma,” “Queen Sugar” and “When They See Us,” grew more pointed. “Some folks are scared, and I have sympathy,” she said. “But it’s mostly the folks who are clinging to the idea that Hollywood is theirs and it was built in their likeness, and they will do anything to cling to it, even if that means destroying it.

“Theaters aren’t going anywhere, at least not all of them.”

In fact, multiplexe­s may get a post- pandemic bump. Because so many studios have pushed back their biggest movies, next summer’s theatrical release calendar looks like a blockbuste­r heaven: “Black Widow,” “Fast & Furious 9,” “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It,” “Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife,” “Minions: The Rise of Gru,” “Top Gun: Maverick,” Marvel’s “Shang- Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings,” “Hotel Transylvan­ia 4” and “Venom: Let There Be Carnage” ( to name a few). With any luck, studio chiefs say, the newly vaccinated masses will come out in droves, in part because they won’t take the theatrical experience for granted/

In Japan, where cinemas are fully operating again ( the country’s response to the coronaviru­s has kept cases and deaths low), more than 3.4 million people turned out last month to see an animated movie, “Demon Slayer: Mugen Train,” on its opening weekend. One Tokyo theater scheduled a jaw- dropping 42 screenings in one day to meet demand.

“There’s a reason that the Roaring Twenties followed the 1918 pandemic,” J. J. Abrams, the Bad Robot Production­s chairman, said by phone. “We have a pent- up, desperate need to see each other — to socialize and have communal experience­s. And there is nothing that I can think of that is more exciting than being in a theater with people you don’t know, who don’t necessaril­y like the same sports teams or pray to the same god or eat the same food. But you’re screaming together, laughing together, crying together. It’s a social necessity.”

Streaming services and theaters will settle into coexistenc­e, he predicted.

“I think going to a theater is like going to church and watching a movie at home is like praying at home,” Abrams said. “It’s not that you can’t do it. But the experience is wholly different.”

“People change their habits.” But what happens in 2022, once the thrill of mingling together has burned off, studios have worked through their blockbuste­r backlogs and streaming services are stronger than ever?

Will young people — trained during the pandemic to expect instant access to new movies like “Hamilton” and “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” — get into the habit of going to the movies like their parents and grandparen­ts did? Generation Z forms a crucial audience: About 33% of moviegoers in the United States and Canada last year were under the age of 24, according to the Motion Picture Associatio­n.

Most young people will have gone a full year without visiting a cinema by the time vaccines are expected to be widely deployed.

“Yes, there is pent- up demand to see movies in a theater,” said Peter Chernin, whose Hollywood career has spanned four decades. “But people change their habits.”

Chernin, who oversaw the release of theatrical megamovies like “Titanic” and “Avatar” while running Murdoch’s empire from 1996 to 2009, has already voted with his feet. Last year, he aligned his Chernin Entertainm­ent with Netflix, where he has more than 70 movies in developmen­t. The films in which he specialize­s — high- quality dramas like “Hidden Figures” and “Ford v Ferrari” — are a dying breed in theaters. It’s too hard to make money when marketing campaigns start at $ 30 million.

But the audience has also shifted. Sorry, film snobs: Most people seem fine with watching these films in their living rooms ( sometimes, shudder, on their smartphone­s).

“Cinema as an art form is not going to die,” said Michael Shamberg, the producing force behind films like “Erin Brockovich,” “The Big Chill” and, rather appropriat­ely, “Contagion.” “But the tradition of cinema that we all grew up on, falling in love with movies in a theater, is over. Cinema needs to be redefined so that it doesn’t matter where you see it. A lot of people, sadly, don’t seem to be ready to admit that.”

In other words, the art may live on, but the myth of big screens as the be- all and end- all is being dismantled in a fundamenta­l and perhaps irreversib­le manner. Because of the pandemic, the film academy has decided for the first time to allow streaming films to skip a theatrical release entirely and still remain eligible for the Academy Awards, nudging the Oscars closer to the Emmys.

The Oscar race will kick into high gear with the wide release of David Fincher’s “Mank.” Set mostly in the 1930s and filmed in black and white, the film focuses on Hollywood’s romantic heyday — back when pictures were pictures — by telling a story about the creation of “Citizen Kane.”

Critics have been transporte­d. “Time- machine splendor,” wrote Owen Gleiberman in Variety. “A tale of Old Hollywood that’s more steeped in Old Hollywood — its glamour and sleaze, its layer- cake hierarchie­s, its corruption and glory — than just about any movie you’ve seen.”

You can find “Mank” on Netflix.

 ?? Philip Cheung, © New York Times Co. ?? Billboards advertise content by Netflix along Sunset Boulevard in West Hollywood, Calif., on Oct. 10.
Philip Cheung, © New York Times Co. Billboards advertise content by Netflix along Sunset Boulevard in West Hollywood, Calif., on Oct. 10.
 ?? Photos by Philip Cheung, © The New York Times Co. ?? Outside Universal Studios Gate 2, near Los Angeles, on Oct. 10.
Photos by Philip Cheung, © The New York Times Co. Outside Universal Studios Gate 2, near Los Angeles, on Oct. 10.

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