a16z Podcast - Marc Andreessen on the State of Film and Hollywood
Episode Date: October 17, 2025Hollywood is going through a major cultural and creative reset, and Marc Andreessen thinks it’s long overdue.In this episode of Monitoring the Situation, Marc joins Erik Torenberg and Katherine Boyl...e to dissect the past decade of filmmaking, from the rise of “the message” in every movie to the return of genuine comedy and art. They cover the post-woke shift in Hollywood, the financial collapse of the streaming era, and why AI could spark a renaissance for a new generation of independent filmmakers.Marc also shares his favorite recent films (and the ones he thinks aged terribly), why Edington might be the first true “Capital-A Art” film in years, and how AI could democratize storytelling the way digital cameras did in the 1990s. Stay Updated: If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to like, subscribe, and share with your friends!Find a16z on X: https://x.com/a16zFind a16z on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zListen to the a16z Podcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bC65RDvs3oxnLyqqvkUYXListen to the a16z Podcast on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/a16z-podcast/id842818711Follow our host: https://x.com/eriktorenbergPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Stay Updated:Find a16z on XFind a16z on LinkedInListen to the a16z Podcast on SpotifyListen to the a16z Podcast on Apple PodcastsFollow our host: https://twitter.com/eriktorenberg Please note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. a16z and its affiliates may maintain investments in the companies discussed. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I think movies play the role in our culture that myths and legends used to play in ancient cultures
or that novels used to play 100 years ago.
They're the art form that is capable of basically containing and expressing and making permanent
the most important aspects of a culture, a row of civilization.
There were a lot of great films in 2019, and then just a memory hole of what great film has come out since then.
Like something happened in Hollywood.
The scripts that are being written, the types of things that are being made today,
are very, very different than what was happening in 2018, 2019.
Hollywood is changing fast, and for once, not because of a new technology, but because of a
cultural reset.
On this episode of monitoring the situation, Catherine Boyle and I are joined by Mark
Andreessen to talk about what really happened to the movies over the past decade, from the
dominance of The Message to the Quiet Revival of Real Art, Comedy, and Creativity.
We talk about our post-woke cultural moment, the economics of streaming, and why AI could
unleash a new generation of filmmakers.
people with no studio access, no camera, the big ideas.
And we end on the question every creative industry is now asking.
What happens when the tools to make movies belong to everyone?
Let's get into it.
Mark, you've been known to monitor a situation or two.
Welcome to the program.
Eric, how would you characterize me as a situation monitorer?
Extremely eager.
You know, I picture you with...
Thoreau.
Thoreau, I picture you with security cameras,
extensively monitoring, you know.
All hours of the night.
So basically, Catherine Howard Hughes in the pet house, is that the...
Yeah.
You're an elite situation monitor, which is why you're here.
We're so happy to have you.
Well, speaking of movies, I'm watching all the James Bond movies with my 10-year-old,
and we just got to...
Diamonds Are Forever, which is the one set in Las Vegas.
And it turns out the producer, Harriet Saltzman, of the Bond movies,
was a close personal friend of Howard Hughes at the time.
So they set the movie in Vegas
and had all this cooperation from Hughes
and there's actually a huge character in the movie,
but I'm just going to have a spoiler alert.
Blofeld has kidnapped Hughes
and is holding him hostage
and has sort of substituted it in
and is pretending to be Hughes.
And James Bond scales the side
of Hughes' big casino in Vegas at the time
and drops down through the skylight
into essentially Howard Hughes' bathroom.
And the bathroom is literally set up
with like monitors
and like computers
and like typewriters,
an elaborate phone system
and then a single golden roll
toilet paper and pot and drops into it and he's like hmm and i was like that's the perfect bathroom
our new media team has a twitter group chat called monitoring the situation where that's the room
that they want in the office for exactly all the things happen in twitter and did they ask for it to be
the bathroom is that was that part of it yeah that would that be the next uh evolution would that just be
an ad on peter yes okay all right let's proceed mark not everybody knows this about you but you are
extensive movie buff and movie aficionado, and you've been having some commentary
in a group chats lately over some films that you think are worth watching right now and
kind of brought a commentary around what's been happening in films. So why don't you share that
with us? Yeah, so let me start with saying, like, why this topic matters, you know, because
this does matter a lot. So first of all, I'll say, like, I've got like enormous respect for anybody
who does anything creative. And so, like, every time I see a movie, I'm just kind of marbling.
Like, I know what it takes to make one. It's like making a tech startup or something. It's
just like this incredible labor of love and effort and blood, sweat, and tears and everybody's
part. And it's just like a minor.
I think whenever any of these things actually show up as a two-hour executed film.
And I think that's amazing.
And so, you know, none of what we're about to talk about should be considered a knock on filmmakers per se or the people who put all this work into it.
And then the other thing I say is, look, in the last, you know, whatever, five years, decade, 20 years,
there have been a tremendous number of what you could call, you know, highly entertaining movies, right?
And some that I think are like jaw-dropping, right?
So, like, you know, one of my favorite genres, action, you know, the John Witt movies are like, you know, the best action movies of all time.
They're all in the last, whatever, 15 years.
You could name that for a lot of different kinds of movies.
the entertainment factor remains very high.
Having said that, I think movies, and Catherine,
I see if you agree with me on this or not,
I think movies play the role in our culture
that myths and legends used to play
in ancient cultures or that novels maybe used to play
100 years ago, or that maybe songs used to play
or something like that, which is basically,
they're the art form that is capable
of basically containing and expressing
and making permanent the most important aspects
of a culture or of a civilization, right?
So sometimes you'll hear the term,
like there's this term called the Great American novel.
And there's the idea there are these certain novels like the Great Gaspier
to Kill a Mockingbird that kind of capture the spirit of a times
and kind of become immortal through doing that.
And I love novels, but like, you know, the idea that novels do that,
I think is probably at this point, you know, pretty unlikely for a variety of reasons.
You could have a whole separate podcast on that.
But for the last, let's say, at least 60 years and probably 100 years,
like movies have been the way that our culture is able to express itself
in a way that is going to really deeply stand the test of time
where people 100 and 200 and 500 and 500 years from now
we're going to look back and kind of said it was what these people are about.
Catherine, would you agree with that?
Yeah, no, no, definitely.
I mean, I think it was in slow decline, probably the last 25 years.
Probably the 90s was the last decade where everyone watched the same movies
and the Oscars were indicative of, like, what's a great film that everyone has to see.
I would love to hear when you think it started bifurcating,
but it does feel like there's been this sort of bifurcation of if, you know,
maybe you could say the Tarantino films of the last 20 years
were widely watched and mattered in cinematic lore,
but, like, it feels like there was a lot more...
To say it's like the next great American novel
is actually the next great American movie.
That feels like maybe that ended in the 90s.
Yeah, so it's possible.
Although you could also say it is interesting
because as we've discussed in other forums,
it's not that there aren't cultural artifacts
that everybody participates in.
I am told there's this young lady named Taylor Swift
who is apparently extremely popular.
And I am told that other than me,
everybody follows her with a great deal of avid attention,
and I'm told that she has a new, I guess what,
album and movie.
Album?
Album.
Yeah.
And there's a new movie coming out too, I think, right?
I believe.
I remember her breakthrough.
Her first movie was the movie a couple years ago that came out that was so popular her movie.
She had an thing on Netflix that was sort of following her around.
Okay, so, okay, here's something I know about Taylor Swift that you don't,
which is the only time of my life I'm going to be able to utter those words.
She did a famous thing, actually, in Hollywood and the movie industry,
she released, I think, whatever that was.
She released that actually into theaters.
And it was actually very significant that she did that because she cut the deal directly
with the theater owners.
But I think it was a straight 50-50 revenue plate with the theater owners.
And she booked it directly, and it was like a huge release.
It was like on 4,000 screens.
and it was, like, extremely popular.
And, like, a lot of, you know, Taylor Swift fans
and a lot of families with young girls, you know, went to see it.
And I remember it at the time because it went big
the same week that Martin Scraise's movie,
Killers of the Flower Moon, was in theaters.
And if you remember the reviews of,
and Martin Scraze is one of these filmmakers
who's made these mythical movies, you know,
that will for sure stand the test of time.
And so, you know,
Killers of the Flower Moon was a movie that he intended to do that.
And I don't think it did, and we could talk about why not.
But it was this movie about, you know,
it was a period piece set in the 1920s about,
you know, basically the rape and pillage
of Native American missing natural research.
sources by, you know, evil white people.
But it was a three-hour movie, and I didn't see it, but apparently it was extremely
slow, and that apparently it had these extremely long stretches of silence because he was
trying to get across the sense of, like, awe and grandeur and, like, emotional impact.
And apparently what would happen is that that movie would be playing adjacent to the
Taylor Swift movie, and the Taylor Swift movie was so loud that whenever he would go to the
silent part, you would just hear Taylor Swift pounding away on stage.
Probably helps the movie out, probably move on a little bit.
Arguably improved the movie, from what I heard, you know, fell in the missing
soundtrack. So anyway, there are still mechanical issues with reproduction of these things.
So anyway, the point is, we do have cultural artifacts that sort of have almost universal
attention. To me, it's just a question of like, okay, like this was like true art, like with
a capital A is the thing that not only captures the popular imagination, like not only that people
really experience, but also is the thing that actually has the last impact, such that in 10 years
and 20 years and 50 years and 100 years, like people are still discussing it. And then, you know,
maybe a couple of things you can say. One is like as time passes, the sort of most important
cultural artifacts are sort of continuously reinterpreted, right? And so,
the way that it comes across when it's released is not the same way that it comes across
five or ten years later and then 20 years later and then sort of each new generation that
discovers it, you know, maybe interprets it and talks about it a different way. And then so basically
like capital A art is the ability to do that. And so for sure it's true that the audience overall
has fragmented. For sure it's true that like the internet is sucking away, you know,
just enormous amounts of time and attention from movies. It's certainly true that the
business pressures in Hollywood, which we can talk about, you know, are probably more intense
than ever. But it is still true that I think it is still possible to do what we're describing.
And we'll talk about this more, but I think we'd all agree.
Tarrantino, you know, was able to do this with Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, not that recently.
So, anyway, maybe I can say, I still hold up this possible.
I think this is the thing that the best filmmakers in the world in the country really ought to be able to do.
Would you agree with that?
Or do you think it's too optimistic?
I hope.
I'm a little more pessimistic than you that I do think Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is the last
American movie.
But for different reasons, probably.
Like, I think not only what, you know, it's like, again, like Tarantino is, you know,
I think he has one more film in him, as he says, but that was really his final opus, right?
Like, the penultimate film, that was what he had been kind of moving towards.
And I think he said his last film is going to be a much kind of scaled down, smaller sort of film when he decides to do it.
But, like, I think there's something about 2019 in particular.
There were so many great films in 2019.
There was 1917.
Parasite won the Oscar, stole it from Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, in my opinion, but still was, like, a decent film.
Like, there were a lot of great films in 2019.
And then just a memory hole of, like, what great film has come out since them.
something happened with COVID where we stopped going to the theater,
and it does kind of map to that, you know,
no one goes to the theater anymore,
but it's also like something happened in Hollywood,
which I know we want to get your take on what happened in Hollywood
because it does feel like the scripts that are being written,
the types of things that are being made today
are very, very different than what was happening in 2018, 2019.
Yeah, so just spend a moment on the state of Hollywood
for people who don't track it, and so there's a bunch of things.
So, yeah, look, the theater business has obviously taken a giant hit
kind of in the wake of COVID.
You know, COVID was like this big, you know,
was this big step down, you know,
because the theaters, you know, were closed along with everything else.
And then there was this, there's been this question of her sense
and kind of how to reengage those audiences
and get them to go back to the theater.
And, you know, that, you know, maybe that's just a secular change
that goes with people being on their phones or whatever.
You know, having said that, it's not quite, you know,
I don't think a complete explanation for what's happened to the art form.
And the reason for that is the length of time
that it takes to actually make a movie, right?
And so the movies that showed up in the theater in 2019
got greenlit in, you know, call it 2015 or 2016.
You know, they got staffed in 2016, 2017.
And then they got executed.
in like 20, you know, basically 2017, 2018.
And then they went through, you know, editing and post-production and so forth.
And, you know, for big movies, that's, you know, that whole process is like a two-year
process.
And then, and then there's the long run up to release with the marketing campaign and, you know,
all the, you know, put the actors on the road and do all the stuff.
And so there's like, whatever, a four-month ad campaign or whatever.
And so, you know, by the time you go through that process, you know, start to end,
it's like four or five years.
And so for once upon a time to show, I don't know exactly when it was greenlit,
but for it to show up in 2019 method, basically,
the making of it, the back story probably starts, you know, no later than 2015.
And I just bring that up, which means the movies that hit the theaters in 2021 started in like 2017, right?
And the movies that are showing up today started in 2020.
Right.
And so the COVID explanation is not sufficient for what we've seen in the last five years because those movies weren't greenlit under conditions of COVID.
Those movies were greenlit under conditions of pre-COVID.
And so whatever changes have taken place, which we can talk about, I think, you know, probably started
around 2015.
And what is your theory around why things really started changing in the 2020 decade of film?
Yeah, so again, let me give, you know, again, sort of maximum, maximum, you know, kind of respect
here, which is, like, there's no question, a couple things.
So just the secular changes.
So one thing is, look, the streaming revolution has had a very big impact.
And the streaming revolution hit Hollywood incredibly hard very positively for a stretch, basically,
through the 2010s because all the companies that were engaged in the streaming wars
started spending just on precedent amounts of money on televisions and shows of all
on shows and movies of all kinds and so there was just a giant blood of money and i would say the
mood in hollywood i don't know whatever eight years ago or something six years ago was you might
even describe as euphoric from a business standpoint just because like i mean the big thing was when
netflix scaled up to the point where they were spending like 20 billion dollars a year on on
content which is just the like this you know this giant budget and everybody else and they were
like you know whatever a dozen streaming companies or whatever all the different platforms that
wanted to compete um and and so that money kind of took off like a rocket and then what's happened is as the
as the streamers are consolidating, as the streaming wars are kind of rationalizing,
that money got pulled back. That was a big, you know, kind of financial blow. And then the other
thing that streaming did that has really affected things a lot in Hollywood in a very negative
way, which is streaming cut off the financial upside to the films and TV. And so films used to
when they were hits, first they would sell a lot of box office. And then they would, and then they
would sell like the television rights or, you know, or ultimately the streaming rights. And then
had this long aftermarket where they would, you know, sell DVDs, you know, videotap rentals in the 80s,
and then DVDs in the 2000s and 2010s. And so if you had a movie that was a hit, like, it could
run. And, you know, it could run for years generating just like enormous amounts of revenue
and cash. And then same thing with TV shows. You know, it used to be a successful TV show,
the line, I think, was six seasons in a movie, where if it got to like whatever 100 episodes
or something, it would interest indication, and then you could sell it for hundreds of millions
of dollars, and there would be all this upside for the people involved in creating it. And what happened
with streaming on the economics of streaming is those forms of upside just vanished because what
happens is the streamers just buy the projects with like a cost plus model a lot of the time.
And so you make the movie and you turn around and you sell it for like a 10% profit margin
to a streamer. And then there's no aftermarket because it's just a tile on the streaming
service, right? And there's no, you know, there's no DVD sales. There's no, you know,
there's no TV syndication rights. Those concepts are irrelevant. You know, the streamer just has
sort of a perpetual right or a 20-year right or whatever to be able to show it at that sort of
fixed fee. And so the upside got cut off.
And that removed, I think, a lot of the economic incentive for kind of the wildcatting thing that Hollywood used to do more, which is to really take, you know, take these chances on things, you know, like Hollywood used to work a lot like the venture capital model, which is, you know, you put 10, you know, you put 10 lines in the water, you get, you know, you get four bites and you get maybe one, your grand slam. And, and, you know, if it works like that's a spectacular model, but you, the grand slam has to be able to scale economically in order for that to happen and that's been cut off. So, so, so that, that did not help. And then, and then there's the big thing.
capital B, capital G, capital T, the big thing that happened, of course, which is Hollywood,
being on the vanguard of culture, got hit by the thing, the cultural change of the last
decade, like, incredibly hard.
And, you know, we've talked a lot about how tech, you know, got hit by that incredibly hard,
and Hollywood got hit by it in a very intense way.
You know, nobody's ever quite figured out the right way to talk about this, you know,
sometimes you say things like wokeness or whatever.
you know, in the 60s, I would have called it the new left.
There's actually a term,
it's actually my favorite term for it in Hollywood
is there's a YouTube channel called Critical Drinker
where he's a movie reviewer
is quite funny.
And the Critical Drinker has been documenting
basically the thing that hit Hollywood
and he, in, I would say, quite scathing terms
this whole time.
And what he calls it is, he calls it The Message.
And it's the message with a capital M.
And it's actually really funny because for a long time,
people who watch the Critical Drinker,
He would never actually define what the message was.
You know, he would basically just say, you know,
this movie has been affected by the message, right?
And of course, and you guys are more laughing
because, of course, you already know what the message was.
Everybody knows the message was, right?
All white people are racist.
All men are, you know, sexist.
You know, everybody's a transphobe.
And you just go, in America's, you know, a force for evil in the world, right?
And you just go, like, right down the list of, like,
everything that, you know, everything that you would expect, you know,
from the last decade.
You know, America's, you know, an insidate fascist regime.
Like, just the entire package.
you know, basically, you know, like whatever's on the front page
the New York Times that day, right?
Just the message.
And so, you know, movies transform themselves, you know,
very large percentage of movies that could have been great, you know,
you know, in some alternate world could have been these great works of art,
just basically became in some form political propaganda.
Or you could, if you wanted to be more generous,
you could say that, you know, those will be the lasting artifacts of this last decade, right?
Which is historians will look back and they'll be like, holy, you know,
holy lord, like these people were.
really like rafter on the axle on like a bunch of political issues like my you know my goodness um
and so they got hit hard by that and then the other and then that that led to in hollywood you know what
can only be described as a reign of terror um and this is something that occasionally hollywood
figures will talk about this in public although very rarely because they you know it's a very
sensitive topic still but um you know if you know people in hollywood you know basically is through that
through the especially the last you know eight years you know they just they felt like if they made
one misstep on, you know, casting or on the details in the script or use of words or the themes
of a movie or anything, you know, they just felt like they were in danger of just like a lightning
strike from, you know, from, you know, from the sky, just like striking them dead on the spot.
Like, you know, and they had like friends, you know, everybody in Hollywood had like friends
whose careers just got like completely detonated, you know, at one point, you know, in one unpredictable
way or another. And again, people have different opinions on this and you could argue it was
it was long needed or whatever, but like it, it became, it became a thing.
And it, like, it basically changed the process of, like, how projects were selected.
It changed the process of, you know, you have, but who made projects.
It changed the process of staffing.
It changed the process of screenwriting.
It changed, it changed, it changed acting.
It changed, you know, aesthetics.
It changed, like, almost every aspect of, of how these projects get executed.
And I just go through that because I think that, I think that's changing again right now.
Like, if you talk to the same people in Hollywood, what they'll tell you basically is, you know,
It's basically this year that the fever has broken,
and there's a bunch of indications for that,
and we're entering kind of the sort of post-message, you know, kind of era.
And, you know, we don't know what era we're hanging into.
Maybe there's a new message or something,
but there's a phase shift that's underway.
But that phase shift is going to take time,
because it takes time to make movies, right?
The movies that are greenlit today, right,
are not going to come out, you know, until like, whatever, 20,
It's like 2027, 2028, soonest.
And so we're in this, like, liminal period or this interstitial period
where for the next, like, three years, we're going to get, like, a thousand movies
that have, like, the message, and they're all going to act like the message is, like,
brand new and fresh, and nobody's ever heard it before because they, you know,
they all pretend that this is, like, some big revelation that, like, all white people are racist,
right?
Like, every movie.
And there's going to be, like, a thousand more of those the next three years, and they're just
going to land, like, an absolute thud, right?
Because it's just like, if you wanted that message, you got it, right?
You already saw a thousand movies to set you, like, the next thousand movies don't contribute
to that, right?
And just to knock on one, and he's a brilliant filmmaker, but I just saw the new Paul
Thomas Anderson movie, one battle after another.
And it, like, it's literally like a time capsule.
It's like a 2022 time capsule.
It's literally like time froze in 2022.
And in 2022, this movie would have been like, oh, my God, like this movie is like,
got the message, right?
just like everything about it.
We could spend hours just on this movie.
And it lands today, and you're just watching you, you're just like, wow,
that was a weird time.
Like, oh, my goodness.
I want to put more about this movie because I think it was Brett Easton Ellis who came out
and was the first person, you know, because it's getting all the Oscar plot.
It's like, it's definitely in line for the Oscar, right?
And he came out, he's like, it feels musty, right?
And I should get the actual, like, language he used because it was much worse than that.
But he said, it's like a musty film.
It's exactly what you said.
It's 20-22, like this was green-lit.
at a very different time, and now it's come out
and, like, the world's moved on.
And so I'm curious, like, do you think that we're still
going to pretend these movies are great,
even though they don't match with our time?
Or is there going to be sort of a three-year period
where we are allowed to say, actually, like,
that doesn't make any sense anymore,
and, like, maybe that movie shouldn't have been made?
Yeah, so this is, it's a, it's a complicated scenario.
So just on the movie itself, the movie itself is actually,
and it's quite, like, I quite enjoyed watching it.
I quite enjoyed watching it, just for ironic reasons,
but just also watching it of like how this happened.
Like, and there's a bunch of reasons.
And, you know, and again, the filmmakers, one of the, you know,
one of the great filmmakers of the era, Paul Thomas Anderson,
you know, he made there will be blood and he made, you know,
Boogie Nights and like all these, you know,
by the way, right there will name two movies.
Buggy Nights and there will be blood or two movies that are like in the,
they're going to be in the Hall of Fame of the Art Forum
where it's like, you know, 100 years from now,
people are going to be like, wow, you know,
that's what that culture was about.
And so he's, he is one of those guys.
And clearly that's what he was going for in this movie.
it is a weird movie in that it's it's partially based on a famous Thomas Pynchon novel called Vineland
which is Thomas Pinchin's movie is Thomas Pinchin's novel basically about the it's essentially
I mean it's essentially bailed through whatever but it's basically like about the days of rage
you know the Brian Burrow book or the you know the weather underground you know basically the violent
social revolution you know basically from the far left in the 60s and then sort of what happened
in the aftermath of that and so like that that's the theme of the novel but it's very much a novel of and about
the 1960s. It's not considered, you know, most people don't consider it maybe the best
pension novel, but like it's a good mid-tier one, and it's in the pantheon. And it turns out it
had been Paul Thomas Anderson's favorite novel. He'd been trying to make a version of it for
20 years or whatever. But what he did basically was he kept the very basic kind of plot
framework set up, but then he completely updated it for the message, right? And so, like,
it has like, it has a whole, like, it has this whole, basically it's a racial, you know,
it has a whole racial kind of plot structure to the whole thing. And, and, and,
and sexual in ways that are fairly amazing,
but that are completely based on the current moment, you know,
circa 2022.
And so it's a little bit like the 1960s.
It's like the, it's like the, it's like the early 2020s filtered through the 1960s.
And so it's just a little bit odd with that.
Arguably, it is kind of salient to our times because I think if you were to retitle
the movie, you would just title it Antifa, the movie.
Like it's like a full-throated celebration of basically violent social change.
violent social revolution, like, and it's completely unapolit, like, I'm going to spoil. I'm going to spoil it.
Spoiler alert. By the end.
Spoiler alerts for monitoring the situation. Everyone's already seen it here, so.
So it's a two hour and 45 minute movie that I went, by the way, and I went to the theater and I paid
full price and like, I smuggled in my snacks and like the whole thing. I guess they're the whole thing.
And I'm like, he's such a brilliant filmmaker. I'm hoping it's a subversive movie, right?
And so I'm kind of hoping that the whole thing is like, by the end, he's like, really like,
he's like, okay, like these weather underground people who like went in the run for 20 years and destroyed
their lives and like you know we're always you know basically just like you know crazed privileged
children like raging out against their you know they're basically their parents and blowing shit
up and killing people and this the whole thing was a giant mistake and i was kind of hoping that
that would you know that would be kind of the way that you could tell the story no no he's just like oh
no that was great like that was fantastically good these people are amazing like they're they're
these are the myths and legends of our time he clearly wants to make these people into mythical
figures and then at hand and then if he it's just very clear at the end he's like yes and i
completely endorse to support all of this.
And this is exactly what, you know,
these are the role models that children should have,
and it's fantastic, right?
And so, you know,
this is one of those movies.
We're in a perverse way, maybe it stands to test in time that way,
where it's just like, wow, these people had like,
these people are constructed to mythos,
you know, by, by, by, by, by, in which violent robbery and like,
violent robbery and murder basically is great, right?
Like, it's wonderful, right?
And so, you know, maybe that's, you know, I don't know,
maybe it's like reading Emma Goldman, Goldman,
Emma Goldman Essays a century later or something.
is just like, wow, these people kind of really got carried away.
But, like, you know, it's not what it could have been.
Anyway, this is the, okay, so one is, it's out of time, although, you know, hopefully
won't become more relevant.
And then the other is, again, the business aspect of it, which is, you know, being a great
filmmaker, you know, this is the one that he got, like, the real budget for, so this is, like,
a much bigger budget than any of the other movies that he's made.
And with that, he was, you know, the cast is, like, just incredible.
Like, so it's, you know, Leo DiCaprio and Sean Pan and Ben, Benito del Toro and, like, all these
amazing, you know, actors and actresses.
But as a consequence, I don't have the numbers at the top of my head, but, you know,
it was estimated it cost something under order of $200 million to make.
And then it's more money on top of that for, you know, for advertising.
The challenge, and then, you know, it's got Leo, and, you know, by the way, he's fantastic
in it, very entertaining, but by the way, what, again, a spoiler alert, one of the things
about the message, it's got the message.
So the Leo character, I don't know, plays one of these basically, he's a bomber
basically in hiding for like 18 years or whatever
and he's got his daughter, the daughter of his
his lover was this, you know,
great like basically, you know, violent
revolutionary in the era. And
they've been in hiding for 18 years and he's like completely
fried his brain on like, you know, drugs and alcohol.
It's just like, you know, he's completely blown out as a person.
He spends the entire movie running around like in his bathrobe,
like, you know, basically completely, you know,
basically high.
And if you actually watch the movie carefully all the way through,
it actually turns out, nothing he actually does at any point in the plot
ever actually matters.
Like he plays no actual wrong.
role in the plot. And so it's this like incredible performance. And it's incredibly, it's
incredibly, you know, a dynamic and entertaining performance. And the movie, the movie's going
to sell do well overseas as a result of that because people love Leo. But like, again, it's
consistent with the message. Of course, the white male lead can have no actual role to play in the
plot. Like it is, you know, that's definitely not allowed. Like in the climax, he literally
shows up at the end of the climax and just like, I'm here. And like, it's like all over, right?
like everybody's dead like it's all it's just done um so so anyway it's going to do reasonably well
because because you know because it's still going to lose like a hundred hundred and twenty million
dollars are you know the estimates that i'm hearing which is you know a pretty pretty big loss
um you know for for a for a movie like this the the fear in hollywood always is when there's when
there's a movie that loses that much money what you know will the executive green green light new
original movies um and you know so hopefully they drove hopefully the lesson is drawn from this is you know
basically it's, you know, is the, is the Braddie's
Nell's point, which is the, what is, what do you say, the fussiness or the,
musty, he said it's a musty film.
Mustiness, yeah.
Hopefully the conclusion is don't make movies that are going to be musty when they're
released, right?
Like, you know, you didn't have, you know, you didn't have to green light the
thousandth movie with the message in 2022, like that was a choice, you know,
so maybe don't do that anymore, you know, but, you know, but maybe it's time to move on.
Let me highlight the movie on the other side that I think is very underappreciated
and I think has, you know, you can say maybe at best right now
is becoming a cult classic.
It's just not that big of a hit,
but, like, I have hopes for it,
and I hope it becomes one of these mythic movies,
which is Eddington.
And let me start by asking,
have you both at this point seen Eddington.
I haven't.
Okay, but you're in for a treat.
So, so my opinion, my opinion, personal opinion,
Eddington is the first capital A art, art movie.
I feel like I've seen since once upon time in Hollywood,
and I think it clears the bar.
And I start by saying it's not a perfect movie.
you know, there, you know, there are things about it that I'm, you know,
I'm for five years from now or whatever,
even the maker of the movie might look back and say, you know,
could have known things differently.
So, but, but it's like, it's, it's, like, it has the opposite of the musty feeling.
It has the feeling of, oh, I'm actually finally seeing on screen real people again.
Like, finally.
Like, real people set in the real world, doing real things where you're just like, wow.
Like, that I'm actually seeing the world that we've actually spent the last five years living in.
And it's the first movie like that that, that I've seen.
a long time. And specifically, it's the first movie, and it's amazing that this is the case,
even with the timescales that we're talking about. It's the first movie in which, like,
the George Floyd riots actually happened. It's the first movie in which COVID actually
happened. It's the first movie in which social media actually happened. It's the first movie
in which wokeness actually happened. It's the first movie in which Trump actually happened.
And this is why I started having the reaction to the movie that I'm having, which is just like,
it's the only movie in which any of those things
actually happened in the universe of the movie
because like I don't know you tell unless I miss something
like every other movie that's come out
that's been significant of the last five years
like it's as if none of that ever happened
and my explanation for that is
these are all the hot button issues that if you screwed them up
in Hollywood you got your career destroyed right
so if you if you said the wrong thing about COVID lockdowns
or vaccines if you said the wrong thing about Trump
if you said the wrong thing about the Floyd riots
if you said the wrong thing about wokeness,
like your career gets obliterated.
So we have like a generation of creatives
who basically just like got taught
do not touch the stove.
And the autour who made Eddington,
it's an artur movie.
This guy, Eric Astor, who's this young Artur,
a very talented guy.
He basically was like,
I'm just going to grab the stove with both hands.
And I'm just going to like hold up for your life.
And it's like a roller coaster ride
through every crazy fucking thing
that happened in the last five years.
And I was just like,
howling with laughter.
I put this way.
me and the other four people in the theater
who are watching it, we're just like,
wow, it's amazing. It's finally happening.
Other bright side of this, too,
is that it's not unknown actors, right? It's
Joaquin Phoenix, Emma Stone.
And what's really
interested about, as you said, like, there's most
movies try to kind of gloss over social media or things
where it's, like, actually hard to depict it on a screen.
Like, there's nothing really interesting about looking at your phone.
But, like, getting a COVID-nostral test
is actually, like, very funny.
And I know, like, the trailer begins with, like, pulling up in this, like, old car and getting the nostril.
It's just, like, it's just, like, a funny thing.
And so it's, like, it's good that some of these more, like, absurd things that have happened in the last couple years.
Like, they're actually very cinematic.
And they should be put on, like, they should be put, like, great filmmakers should be showing them because they're so funny.
Yeah.
So I'll do a couple, again, or I'm going to blow through the spoilers.
Yeah.
So the opening scene is, Joaquin Phoenix.
Vikings plays this basically, this crusty sheriff of this small town in New Mexico called Eddington,
which actually kind of reminds me the town I grew up in
and the key thing for the thing is Eddington
like there's just nothing in the town
like it's like 600 people
it's just like the streets are empty the stores are empty
I mean it's like a town that was empty before COVID
right and then the lockdowns hit
and then it became even more desolate
but like there's nothing happening
and you can just walk around and there's nobody there
and so Joaquin Phoenix plays the sheriff
who's like this crusty unconstructed
and he's not really a Trump supporter per se
but he's like this sort of crusty
you know kind of traditionalist you know kind of guy
He's the kind of guy who just really does not want things to change that much.
And, like, everything is changing around him.
And it starts in, it starts in COVID.
It starts on, like, April of 2020.
And he's sitting in his pickup truck in the middle of nowhere,
and he's, like, eating a sandwich or whatever.
And this other truck pulls up next to him.
And it's these, you know, it's set in New Mexico.
So there's these, the town that he's in are adjacent to these tribal lands.
And so these two young, young, you know, Native American cops pull up in a pickup truck next to him.
And they're like, you know, they're like young and, you know, let's say cooler than he is.
and they're like they and they're both wearing their masks right and and literally they're like
rolled down your window and he rolls the window and literally they're from their pickup track
into his they're like you have to put your mask on right and you know this like literally it was like
for me it was like you know it was like you know the heaven has opened the angels are singing
i'm finally seeing a capital m movie like this and you know like he's a brilliant and so like he
he gets across, like, in one look, the feeling that I think we've all had for the last five
years, which is, like, we're like, oh, fath, fuck.
And that's just the opening scene.
And then it cascades through all the COVID, and then it cascades through.
And then, you know, spoiler alert again, or spoiler, it cascades through the Floyd,
so the Floyd riots hit midway through the movie.
And then all the, and then, you know, the, of course, you know, the local high school,
it's like, you know, the local high school is like 100% white, you know, it's New Mexico.
And, you know, and then the white kids basically become, like, obsessed with racial justice.
even though they literally don't run any black people.
And they start, like, basically having, like, full-blown riots, like, you know, in the main street and, like, breaking store windows and, like, wrapping everything.
And there's one black, there's one black person in town who's the sheriff's deputy, who's a military vet.
And he's just like, what the hell?
Like, like, why do I have to defend the grocery store from the white kids, like, trying to burn it down on my behalf?
like what the fuck anyway so so so the whole movie is like that and then maybe maybe just one more
thing about it there's just hysterical eric this is a good time for you to take a drink of water because
you're going to love this part um it's a good for the spit take out what um Pedro Pascal is in it
um and at first you think if Pedro Pascal plays the mayor and at first you're like oh this is
going to be a clear setup uh where you know what key finnis is like the retrograde right winger and pier
and you know Pascal's like the voice of reason it's like no no he's Gavin Newsom like 100%
Pedro Pestal is playing down.
What does he do?
I don't even want to like
it's it's I don't even want to like
I don't even intend to bad mother Gavin
I'm just saying like or just every
other politician, whatever is your
idea of a politician who's like Gavin Newsom like
Pedro Pascal, Peter Pascal plays him
and just like could not be
looking down on the the
sheriff character with more contempt
like just absolutely just like you know
and vice versa and then basically what happens
is that you know they effectively so that
So the sheriff gets frustrated by the whole thing, the lockdowns and everything.
And so he decides to run for mayor, and so then it becomes a fight, you know, between the two of them.
Which, by the way, it's just the beginning of the movie.
Like, it then gets actually quite a bit more elaborate after that.
But the big thing about it is it's just, it's like a full, it's just like an absolute full frontal examination from top to bottom.
And like it pulls in, like, Catherine, it doesn't have, it's interesting.
It doesn't have a lot of like, it doesn't have like a lot of on-screen graphics of like people on social media,
but it does have this recurring thing, which again, is just, it's incredible,
how rare this is in movies, or maybe other filmmakers haven't figured out how to do it,
which is these characters live in a world of social media.
And so he does this great, like, when a character in this movie wakes up, he rolls over
and he checks his phone.
Right, like it's our world.
And he does, I think, a very good job of showing the interleaving back and forth of how people
are, and again, this is like a, you know, rural town in middle of nowhere.
People are living this, you know, this double life that we all now live, which is we've got
our in-person life and then we've got our online life, and there's this, you know,
question of which one is more real.
And this is the first movie I've seen that actually just...
And it doesn't incorporate that.
Like, it's not social media of the movie.
Like, that's not what the movie's about.
But it just kind of shows naturally
how the nature of reality has changed around that
and then how it influences real-world behavior.
As anyway, so I can't recommend it highly enough that.
Isn't Emma Stone's character, like, taken by conspiracy
that she finds online or, like, what is her role in the movie?
Yeah, well, so this is part of the...
So, at this point, I'm, like, grabbing the stove
with both hands also, like...
She plays like the upper middle class white woman who's just, like, wrapped with anxiety.
And this is like, this is the plot arc.
Like, she's just like, she's like incredibly, deeply unhappy.
And so, yeah, so she gets locked into, like, online conspiracies.
And then there's this whole thing.
I don't even, I don't even want to spoil the thing that happens with her because it's quite,
it's quite something.
And it's quite a plot arc of its own.
But, you know, she has her own kind of parallel life that kind of unfolds through this.
I guess she's, because she's watching, he finishes his husband.
And he loves her and has absolutely.
no idea what she he has absolutely no clue what's going on in her head like he like married to her he
loves her she's clearly extremely depressed she's clearly extremely anxious he has no ability whatsoever to
understand her communicate with her and then her you know her mother you know her mother she's you know very
close with her mother her mother keeps showing up you know lives in town just and just fucking hates him
and just is like staving towards him and he's like what you know what's you know what's doing my best i can't
read her mind like i don't know what's going on and so you know it's got that you know it's got like a whole it's got like a
it's got like a whole arc there um and then and then it's got another one more it's got the uh there's
there's the there's the in the little in the little high school um there's a there's a there's a very
attractive you know black black high school girl uh who basically like becomes like completely
committed to social justice um and it's going on and she's got like all the you know patriarchy
she's got all the talking points like she's you know she's ready for her you know sociology degree um
and then all the all the like boys and men like orbiting around her basically like become obsessed
Like, there's a white male high school kid who just, like, is, like, just generally oblivious,
and he, like, has a thing for her.
And so, like, he starts reading Angela Davis, like, in an attempt to basically become
attractive for her.
And anyway, so, like, and he starts spouting off about white privilege and the whole thing.
Does it work?
Because that's always the question.
It doesn't work.
It doesn't work.
It doesn't work.
the purposes that he
it doesn't work for the purposes that he
intends it for, but he, let's say
he ultimately, yeah, he has a very
successful, I would say, plot arc of his own.
Yes, he actually plays, plays a major role in the,
he goes in his own journey and plays a major role
with the end of the movie.
Anyway, so it's just like, it's one of these movies and, you know,
people have, like, you know, different critiques of it
and it's a little bit of a, you know, I don't know what they call, like a shaggy
dog story where like, as the movie goes, like,
increasingly crazy things are happening
and things get kind of, you know,
they get kind of deranged in sort of a way that, you know, is, you know,
you can argue is like truly reflective how deranged things got,
or you could say, you know, maybe he gets a little bit carried away.
But like, it's just, it directly, it's such, it's such direct engagement with our times.
And in me, it was just like, wow, I'm actually seeing on screen our world as opposed to these,
this sort of man, either this manufactured view of a world that doesn't exist
or this sort of manicured view where these topics have just become untouchable.
And so anyway, so my hope is it's the beginning of a wave of, like, there's so much material.
You know, this is the old Tom Wolfe thing, which is like, most Tom Wolfe's term, he said,
what was it the, his term, is the eight billion feet, or what was this term, like, the massive humanity?
He had this term where he's like, like, Tom Wolfe always had this point of view, you know,
the great novelist, journalist.
The most interesting topic in the world is like the human race, right?
Like the collective behavior of eight billion people on planet Earth is like the most
interesting thing in the world.
And, like, the 8 billion people in planet Earth are always getting up to, like, the craziest shit.
And, like, if you want to, like, write great fiction, he was always telling people who wanted to write fiction.
He's like, if you want to write great fiction, you want to go out and you want to be with the people and you want to actually observe what's happening.
And it's so crazy that if you just, like, write it down, you know, that's how you, that's how you, that's how you like write the great American novel.
Like, that's what you do this.
And so when he did bonfire of the manities, he immersed himself in Wall Street.
And when he had a man in full, he immersed himself in, you know, Atlanta real estate.
And when he, you know, he did all that, you know, back to blood, he immersed himself in the Miami, you know, the Miami culture.
and, you know, he would go do this.
And, of course, you know, his critique was, you know,
the new generation novelist,
they sit in their apartment at Brooklyn, you know,
you know, with their type, right,
and they introspect, right?
And that's why there's no more great American novels.
And so, like, Ari Aster is like the film,
he's like the filmmaker who got that,
I don't know if he ever got, you know,
read Tom Wolf or not, but like, where he, he understands that.
He's like, oh, go immerse yourself in what's actually happening
in real life and translate that.
And he's, he was, I don't know,
uniquely able to do it uniquely able to get away with it i'm hoping he's the beginning of a wave of these
and you know they don't it doesn't all have to be about covid or the floyd rise or whatever there's
many many other topics you could do but like you know there should be a great there should be a great
movie for every basically significant social cultural thing that happens um and and and that and there's
those opportunities are just laying all there's like hundreds or thousands of those opportunities
just laying on the ground right now you know for for for the creatives who can go pick them up and again
if by the way every creative writing this or hearing this is going to say yeah is it no
no shit, but, you know, well, the studios green lighted and pay for it.
And that's, that would be my other hope, which is, you know, some combination of the Boulder
executives at the streamers and at the studios, you know, example, you know, David,
Alson, you know, who's clearly very, very, you know, brilliant guy, you know, taking over Paramount
and maybe, maybe buying more studios.
Like, you know, guys like him are in a position to green light an entirely new generation
of movie that could be both commercially successful and could be true art.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, so I guess is it your view that, like, we'll have this, like, five to seven-year
window of musty films that people, like,
kind of pretend are decent, but then, like, we kind of get the Eddingtons as well where you're
going to see things open up again. So we'll have this sort of, like, nice period of weirdness.
Like, I actually think looking back 50 years from, you know, 50 years from today, it'll be fun
to look back at these films and be like, that was wild, that that was what we were talking
time. So I, but your view is that it is going to open up, that there will be more Eddington's,
there'll be more extremes, and it's not just going to be one battle after another, kind of
the message. Yeah, so just quickly, one more thing.
You know, one battle after another.
So the critics are rapturous about this movie, right?
And so if you read Rotten Tomatoes, the critics are, you know, it's like 98% or whatever.
And the critics are just like, this is like the most brilliant movie of all time.
You just completely captures, you know, yes, this is like the ultimate chronicling of like America's dissent in of being, you know, the Fourth Reich.
Like, you know, this is, yes, this is like absolutely glory.
Yes, absolutely revolutionary violence should be glorified.
Like the critics are like all in, right?
And, you know, the movie critic community has like gone hard in on this, just like, you know,
just like so many other creative communities,
and so they're all in.
By the way, this movie,
I don't know if it's going to,
but it wouldn't be surprising
if it sweeps the Oscars, right?
It's just like, you know,
the best, the best movie ever made.
You know, and, but now it's just going to be like
everybody, everybody who has been out been through this,
you know, spend cycle for the last eight years is,
you know, and people are on to it, you know,
including the audience.
And so I, and I think even the people participating
in kind of what is already kind of an orgy
of kind of hyper-exaggerated critical admiration
are probably all realizing that they're,
you know, fundamentally being dishonest.
But, you know, like, so, so,
So, Catherine, to your point, like, yeah, that machine, like the sort of the message machine,
like, that machine is continuing to spin for now.
It's just very clear that, like, there's just, like, there's just, like, smoke and parts flying off of it.
Like, it's just, like, you know, it is, it is going to, it is going to rattle to a stop.
And then if you, if you talk to people in Hollywood, basically what they'll tell you is,
by the way, independent of people's politics, what the sort of, I would say,
sharp people in Hollywood generally all say is, yeah, the cultural fever has broken.
You can now make, you can now get movies greenlit today that you could not get green lit two years ago.
specifically, and this is amazing, then this is good, but, like, you can have comedies again.
Like, they actually say, by the way, they say this.
Like, they're like, we can now make comedies again.
You can have funny movies.
Right, because to have funny movies, you need to poke a sacred cows, right?
Like, the thing that makes comedy funny is, like, when it's, when it's, like, subversive,
when it, when it, like, you know, when it touches a nerve, like, that, that's, you know,
that's what great adult comedy is.
And, you know, you just could not make a funny movie for the last eight years.
Like, it was impossible.
It was way too risky.
But what they're saying now is that you can.
And then maybe the other signal indicator, Catherine, of what's happening,
which is Mel Gibson finally got Greenlit to do his sequel to Batch for the Christ,
which is the resurrection movie, which he's making right now.
At least my friends in Hollywood are like, yeah, that never would have happened.
Like, that never would have happened under a Kamala administration.
That never would have happened without the election result.
And again, these are not even people who are pro-Trump.
It's just, okay, like, the national mood is shifting.
Yes, Mel Gibson, of all people,
people being, like, one of the clearly great filmmakers of our time.
And, you know, having all of the issues that No Gerson has, like, yes, that guy should get to make a movie.
And specifically, that guy should get to make that movie.
And that's an example of what I'm talking about, is that that's possible this year in a way that it wasn't before.
And the other thing, I think yesterday, Young Washington came out, the trailer, which Joel Studios,
which, again, is not Hollywood, it's based in Provo, but has proven that they can make very successful films
for a different pocket of the country that actually likes patriotism.
But I think in some ways, like the Top Gun success story,
yes, it's nostalgia, but the fact that it did so well at the box office
shows that there is an appetite for totally different content.
Like 50% of the country would love to see movies that are patriotic
or about something, you know, a biopic in history
that's really interesting about George Washington.
So I think in some ways it's like there is sort of this business case too
of, wow, like 50% of the country that's been starved for the country,
content they want will actually pay to go to the theater and maybe we should support them.
Yeah. To that end, Mark, do the executives appreciate the Rotten Tomatoes phenomenon or just
how distinct sort of the, yeah, with the critics or even their own staff are from the actual
audience? Yeah, so they live it. They live it. And so like I said, like for the last eight years,
it's basically been a reign of terror. Yeah. Because these critics and like who the people these critics
represent, like had the power of life and death over people's careers. And then they know the critics
kind of went nuts. But, you know, this is the problem.
with, you know, there's not that much they can do about it, right?
The critics were able to succeed in their own field.
You know, it's just like everything else that happened in media.
The critics were able to succeed in their own field by kind of going arbitrarily wild.
And then, you know, there was basically nothing that if you're a movie student executive,
there's really nothing you can do about it because, you know, what do you do about it?
If you ignore them, they, you know, they attack you.
If you engage with them, they attack you.
If you attack them, they attack you back.
And so, you know, there's been very little to do.
And then, you know, the critics are not, well, okay, so that's been happening.
And, you know, in Hollywood, like Silicon Valley and like every other industry, like, there is insularity to it.
And so, you know, there's a self-referential thing. And so when, you know, when the mood, when sort of opinion shapers, you know, move against you know, it becomes a real problem. And in Hollywood, you know, people get fired, you know, people get fired kind of knows that at some point they're going to get fired. People get fired off for projects all the time. When people get fired, by the way, after projects in Hollywood, like they may not, you know, they may not eat. They may not get another job for five, you know, for two years or five years or ever. And so, you know, it's, it's a high tension environment.
And so, yeah, I think they don't understand that.
By the way, I also think that, you know, especially the sort of, you know, the boomer executives, the Gen X executives, you know, they'll also tell you the same thing you'll hear, you know, that you heard in the valley and in Washington and elsewhere, which is, wow, the young staff is really radicalized, right?
And so, you know, so they're also afraid of their young staff.
And then by the way, you know, these are mostly public companies.
They're also afraid of their boards.
The boards are afraid of the public shareholders.
You know, the public shareholders radicalized.
And so it's a, it was a very similar phenomenon to what happened in tech, which is kind of this,
this sort of collective, I don't know, like wildness or, you know, kind of, you know, kind of
this, this intensity thing, you know, kind of happened. And, and, and, and, and, and it really
couldn't be openly discussed for a long time and probably still can't. Like, they probably
still really can't talk about it in the public. A few of them are starting to, but like, not
really. So for the most part, the conversations are kind of in the background. But again,
but against that, it's just like, okay, that's, that's broken a bit. And part of it also is just
the business, the business, you know, the kind of business aspect of it, which is, I mean,
the classic is, you know, the big moneymaker in Hollywood for the last 20 years has been superhero
movies. And let's just say, coincident with the beginning of the message is the, you know,
the results in those movies collapsed. Right. And so, and like at some point, you know,
they need to go sell some movie tickets. Like, you know, at some point they need to deliver
revenue. And I think they've gotten, I don't know, the message of the message, which is, you know,
if all you are is on board with the social trend, right, especially Catherine, to your point,
especially when that social trend gets old
and it's no longer, you know, occurant.
Like, you can't run a public company based on reviews, right?
At some point, butts do have to show up in seats.
And so I think that's also kicked in.
And so the financial pressures, they're very painful.
Right now, they're probably not helpful.
I don't know, the financial pressures in Hollywood are,
it's hard to say because on the one hand,
when there's financial pressures in Hollywood, of course,
the argument is fewer movies get greenlit,
and then the executives become more risk-averse
than the kinds of movies are ruling green light.
But I think it also means that they are also less willing to
greenlight projects that are being greenlit only for political reasons or only for
social cultural reasons or only out of a sense of fear. And so I don't know exactly how that
balance is, but hopefully things get more exciting. By the way, of course, the other big topic
in Hollywood is AI. Yeah, so that's the, you know, that's the 800-pound thing. And, you know,
and to their credit, they're, you know, say they're highly aware of it. They're highly alert
to it. And then, by the way, there are a bunch of filmmakers, including some folks that I know
that are, like, super excited.
And so there are, including some, like,
I know of, like, two, like, A, triple A list, like,
director, filmmakers, you know, top-end people
who are, like, very excited about what's possible
and are going to fully embrace it.
And there's a bunch of other people
who are, you know, very excited.
And so there's going to be an embrace by at least part,
but there's also, you know,
there's a lot of, you know,
Hollywood has always had kind of a fear-driven reaction
in new technologies, and there's some of that.
And then, and then there is this attachment
in Hollywood,
It's actually very acute.
There's this attachment of, like, AI politics to, like, woke politics.
And so if you're still super woke, you're also, like, super anti-AI.
And there are these, like, basically, it's basically, like, the woke activists have picked up
AI is the new thing that they're going to agitate about.
And so, and they're mounting basically already, like, pressure campaigns on the studios
to, like, basically vow to never use AI.
And at least so far, the studios to their credit are like, no, we're not going to do that.
Like, we're, you know, the studio, so far, I think the studio executives have all been
consistent, which was like, look, we've always used technology.
You know, the movie camera itself is technology, special effects.
Like, we've always used technology, you know, videotapes, DVD, streaming.
These are all technologies.
You know, every movie has CGI, you know, like that's, you know, one of my little fun facts about
history of movies is Tron.
Tron was the first, there's a big sequel for Tron that's out this week.
The original Tron was 1982 from Disney, and it was the first movie that had integrated use
of computer graphics, which was the big thing at the time.
And as a consequence of that, Tron was disqualified from the officer.
because they cheated by using computer graphics.
Right? Right. And so, you know, to go from that world to the world in which every movie has
CGI, and for the most part, you don't even know that there's CGI in it. You just see a romantic
comedy, and they're using CGI to do all kinds of things in it, and you don't even notice,
and it's just taken completely for granted. And so, like, I think the studios, I think I understand
that. I think they're going to actually embrace that enthusiastically, but there's going to be this,
there's going to be this, like, at least there's an attempt to, like, gin up a moral panic around it
and try to, you know, basically keep it out.
And I don't think it's going to work
because I think the economics are too compelling.
But anyway, but then the other thing with AI
is, of course, AI is going to be super helpful
to existing filmmakers.
But the other thing is AI for sure,
and we see this especially in this last couple of weeks
with the new version of SORA
and a lot of these other new things that are coming out.
AI is going to make a whole new kind of filmmaker
possible to exist for the first time,
which is the filmmaker with no visual skill, right,
or access to a set or to a camera
or to actors, but with an idea.
Like, people are going to be able to make, you know,
it's going to start with shorts and animated things and so forth,
but it's going to work its way up to full movies.
And so, you know, people with a, people,
people who otherwise would be limited to only being novelists
or being maybe people who do graphic novels,
but our creative geniuses are going to be able to actually make full movies with AI.
And again, I think that's a reason for, like, profound optimism.
I think we're going to get, like,
completely new kinds of, you know, basically film and entertainment
from people who otherwise never would have been able to access the medium.
And I think that also is, I'm very positive on that.
Can we end because you brought it up on comedy?
I know you saw an gun or the new naked gun film.
What was your thoughts on, is comedy working?
Does it have to be nostalgic for it to work?
But maybe tell us a little bit about that film
and whether it's a reason to be positive on comedies in the future.
Yeah, so I thought naked gun I thought was actually a little bit of a minor miracle.
So for a couple of reasons.
So one is, look, it's a sequel to movies from like 40 years ago.
And so, you know, how many people even remember the original naked gun movies?
It actually turns out a lot of people do.
They're beloved movies.
But also, it turns out, like, you can make an, like, it's great.
It's a great comedy.
It's like a fantastic comedy.
It's very funny.
It worked.
It worked commercially.
It worked statistically.
It honored the original material, but it was also like deliriously loopy in its own way.
I highly recommend it.
It's very funny.
But actually, it strikes at that point.
It also, like Edenton, it's also a post-message movie.
And this is actually, and maybe this is a reason for optimism, which is, again, if you go back through the timescale, like that thing was green-lit no later than 22, probably in 21.
So at the height of every movie has to have the message, that that movie was still green-lit, and it got all the way through it out the other side, and there's not a trace of it in it in it.
And so, like it's a pure comedy.
It's a pure comedy.
It's like the original movies.
It's a pure comedy.
It's a pure absurdist, you know, kind of modern three-studges style comedy.
Liam Neeson of course plays against type
and it's of course a brilliant comedian and just kills it
and then Pam Anderson
you know the great icon of you know 1980s
femininity
you know it's her big it's her big you know starring role
and she just like absolutely is just fantastic
like she's just like absolutely kills it
she's hysterical and she's just like there as a person
and like she's not you know she's not wearing you know she's just like
you know she's just like full woman
in natural form
and it's great.
And, you know, and it's, you know, it's like there's any, there's, there's no, there's no, you know,
there's none of the casting, let's say, you know, aspects that kind of cause problems,
you know, there's none of the, there's no script, it's just, it's just like an extremely
well-executed, like it very easily could have been made in 2012 or in 2008 or in 2002.
No, look, it doesn't, you know, it doesn't move the artistic ball forward, right?
It's a very well-executed example of a genre, but it, but it is a movie that it was, it was somehow,
able to escape all of the traps that all of these other movies have gotten into
and was able to make it out and to be a big commercial hit.
And again, I think the executives are very encouraged by that.
The audience is still there for that.
I'll just give you the, it doesn't really have any racial politics or whatever,
but it does have, it did have one thing, which is for people who haven't seen it,
it was famously a movie originally that one of the major stars of it was O.J. Simpson,
playing a character named Nordberg, who got into all kinds of unlikely trouble.
And so they do this scene where I'll just spoil one thing
because it was extremely funny.
So Liam Mason plays the son of the original, you know,
main guy, Leslie Nielsen in the movie.
So Frank Greben and then Leslie,
Liam Neeson plays Frank Grubin Jr.
And then Liam's sidekick plays the son of Leslie Nielsen's
sidekick from the original movie.
And then there's a young black guy on the team.
And, you know, normally in a movie,
it's like, okay, of course,
there's like a young black guy on the team.
but they do it really well,
which is they've got the,
out in the hallway of the police station,
the movie, they've got Leslie Nielsen's photo up on the,
you know, he passed away,
so they got his photo up and,
and Les,
and Liam Eason does this thing where he,
he like, kneels down and he's like,
oh, you know, father,
I'm trying to live up to your, you know,
expectation and trying to be a great police officer,
and he's, like, sobbing,
and there's tears in, you know,
and next to it is like his sidekick with the sidekick's photo,
and he's like, oh, father, I miss you so much,
and I want to be a great cop.
And then there's, you know, the black kid,
and he's looking up at a photo of OJ.
And he just,
and he just looking at the camera and he just goes,
Perfect. Perfection.
Absolutely perfect.
Yes.
So, yeah, comedies are good.
By the way, let me put in a plug for one more movie.
Have either of you guys seen Fantastic Four?
No.
Probably not.
Fantastic Four is the most pro-family movie.
in Hollywood since I can't even remember.
Catherine in particular, I think you'll be astonished.
It's incredible.
What's that?
It came out.
It came out this summer.
It came out this summer.
It came out this summer.
And Marvel, just for context, it's one of the new Marvel,
one of the new Marvel tent pole properties.
And the Marvel machine, you know, did incredibly well from like Iron Man in 2008
through Avengers Endgame and like whatever, 2020.
But for the last five years, many of the big Marvel projects have not done well.
both the TV shows and the movies, and, you know,
you can, again, you could argue different reasons why,
but, like, critical drinker would tell you
it's because they became consumed by the message.
Fantastic for it's, it's, it's, it's, and it's like a, you know,
it's like a diverse cast, it's got, it's got like a lot of the,
lot of the modern stuff in it. But, however, Anne,
it's like, it's just like a hundred percent pro-family in like a very,
actually quite deep and moving way. And so, again, again,
it's just, it's a little bit like, wow, they greenlets this thing in 20.
And, you know, maybe again, maybe this reason for,
maybe I'm actually too, too cynical, maybe in 20,
Maybe in 2022, the filmmakers already realized what was happening.
And so maybe they actually had, like, their own version of the underground movement
where they're like, all right, it's time to start planting the seeds
for what is going to come out of this whole thing when sort of the panic subsides.
And you can say, like, fantastic for us.
It's like a true audience-pleasing blockbuster from a studio that has been obsessed with
a message that comes out and doesn't have a trace of it in it at all.
And furthermore, it's like it's like 100% above.
I wouldn't say it's like, it's not, I mean, it's a, it's a,
superhero movie, so it's not like a political.
I wouldn't say it has like political content per se, but
it's like 100% pro-family in a way that's very touching.
We'll put it on the list.
Do you think...
By the way, your kids will love it.
Your kids will love it.
I took my 10-year-old, and he was like, yeah.
He doesn't react emotionally to things, but he was like as close to crying in a movie
as I've ever seen him.
Wow.
Do you think Atlas shrugged or the Fountainhead could get made today, and do you think
there'd be an audience for it?
You know, it's funny.
Yeah, it's funny.
It's so funny, especially Outlet's, like, Alice Shrug has become,
Al-Shrug, you know, people who don't know,
it's the sort of famous Iron Rann novel.
It's kind of her most successful novel.
It's the novel that basically, it clearly is like a great mythic American novel.
Like, it clearly, it clearly clears that bar that we were talking about earlier.
You know, it's, it is one of the great American novels.
You know, it's of a time in place, which is sort of the, you know,
the sort of 1950s, but it's written in a way that can be kind of deliberately timeless.
It's actually kind of, it's actually got interesting as written because it kind of,
it's like obsessed with railroads
in the one hand, which makes it kind of look back to the
1800s, but it also has
science fiction elements. And she kind of did
that, I think, deliberately, so that it would kind of have this
timeless kind of at, she's really talking about
the movie, it's a novel as the great
novels, it's a novel about people and the
behavior of people. And so, but she does this thing where she kind of
abstracts the specific content of it in order
to kind of try to make it timeless, and I think it works
quite well. And the fountain head is
another version of that. The Atlas
Shrug basically is about, is about
is about broadly, it's about, it's about American dynamism.
It's American dynamism in the movie.
It's about industrialization and progress and science and going to the stars and, like,
you know, achieving great things and, you know, and the shape of societies that do that.
The fountain head is more about, I would say, artistic achievement and artistic purity.
And it's sort of similarly evocative.
And so both those novels are, you know, high up on the list of novels that will be very influential, you know, in 100 years.
both of those novels have been absolutely stately hated by every, you know,
good cultural commentator and critic for the last, you know,
basically since they came out, like just, and those novels are just attacked
in, like, the most vicious possible terms.
Like, absolutely, absolutely.
In fact, famously, Famously, Whitaker Chambers,
the reform communist reviewed Atlas Shrug for National Review
when it came out of the 1950s, and he basically called her a Nazi.
In National Review, Whitaker Chambers,
who became his famous right-winger, basically calls Iron Rans.
a Nazi, and Rand, of course, being a Jewish refugee from Russia.
He said the novel quote,
has the whiff of the gas chamber about it.
Right? And so, like,
which, by the way, it doesn't.
But anyway, very unfair, unfair.
But anyway, it's like your diversion
to the rotten tomato scores of the critics
versus the, versus the audience.
Like, everybody who's read Atlas Rugg, like, loves it.
And everybody who's, like, criticized her for a living
just fucking despises it, right?
Just, like, completely despises it.
And so, and what's interesting about it,
and maybe this is the importance of the novel is,
Eric, to your question, like, that, that aspect of it
has, lives today.
So, like, anybody today who, anybody today who,
every time I've ever talked to anybody who's read Atlas Shrugged
in the last five years, they're like, wow,
it's like the novel about the world we live in.
Like, it's, it's like, oh, I know that guy,
and I know that guy, and I know that guy,
Eric knows what I'm talking about.
Like, these are all people, right?
Like, these are all people, these are all
archetypes of people, we know who these people are,
We know what they're doing.
It's just, it's amazing how receptive it is, you know, 60 or 80 years later,
like how primal she made it, that it has that relevance.
And by the way, it's tremendously entertaining,
and it's like this frouling narrative and it's incredible characters.
And so, yeah, like, it very clearly ought to be a three-part movie or, you know,
at a huge budget or ought to be like an eight-season, you know,
10-episode, 80-episode total, you know, lavish HBO show or something.
But, like, the cultural, like, the cultural overlay of that,
like what it would take in Hollywood to do that
and the level of attack that you would come under,
the level of savagery that you would encounter
if you're the executive or the actor or whatever.
I mean, it would be every bit as intense today
as it was in the 1950s when the novel came out.
And so, like, that would be the great,
like that would be the indication
like we're in a really different world.
I talk to some folks in Hollywood about it.
They all know it.
They all understand this.
They all know the novel.
They're all very familiar with it.
They all, by the way, love the idea of doing things
that have preexisting brands and audiences built in,
you know because that that really reduces the risk but like they if you really talk about it
it's a little bit like at a hot stove you know step away and by the way and again it's very
striking that a novel from like whatever in 1953 can still be generating a hot stove reaction in
2025 you know it's pretty amazing and the flip side of that is because it's such a cult classic
that people would come out and drove like it would you know it would uh it would make a lot of noise
in a good way it would be the it would be the silicon valley version of the Minecraft movie right like
you just be like, yep, we're all going.
Yeah.
But, you know, I don't know, maybe it's not a big enough audience or whatever to, you know,
maybe that's not a big enough cult classic thing.
But, like, by the way, it sells.
Like, you know, it's one of the best selling novels of all time.
It sells, you know, enormously well today.
It sold well basically since it came out, you know, it's, it sells far better.
I mean, it's one of these things.
It sells, it'll sell far more copies this year than any well-reviewed novel, you know,
that the New York Times Book Review talks about, right?
And so, and yet it is just like, it is so completely politically,
that it's like off the map.
Yeah, so that would be the ultimate test.
I would love to see it happen.
I, yeah, I don't know.
And by the way, this may be the answer here.
Maybe this is the AI, right?
Maybe the answer here is AI.
Maybe what we need is the AI system where you keep the novel in and it makes the movie.
You know, which, by the way, first, you know, now that I say that, like for sure that's
going to happen.
And so, you know, maybe that's actually the answer.
Yeah.
Yeah, we were laughing outflin about how someone was using SORA to make like a something
that we thought was better than South Park.
And so it'll be interesting to see if a whole new crop of filmmaker
sort of democratizes the industry a little bit,
that it's not just Hollywood, but it's people from all over
and studios don't have this sort of monopoly over creation
of high-quality stuff.
So, yeah, we'll see.
Yeah, so South Park actually, let's close up closing this,
but just briefly at South Park, South Park was very much like what you're saying
with AI filmmaking right now, but in 1993.
So I remember when South Park, the original South Park came out.
the original software came out in 1993
and it was significant. It was the first internet viral video
ever. It was the first video
and this was like pre-streaming, pre-Youtube,
pre, you know, years before all of that. And so it literally
distributed at the time, it was literally
it was like QuickTime movie.
It was Apple's QuickTime video format
and it was a downloadable thing. And like if you wanted to download
on a modem, you had to like leave the modem on for like an hour or something
to like download this thing. And what it was was it was a digital
scan of a video Christmas card.
So there was an executive in Hollywood at the time
that wanted to make his friends a special kind of Christmas card.
And so he hired these two, basically scrappy young,
you know, basically film students, Matt Stone and Faye Parker,
who had no credits and, you know, they were just, you know, kids and had done anything yet.
And he hired them to, and he basically said, make the most offensive,
basically like three-minute video Christmas card you can possibly imagine.
And so, and with these kids, it was a technology at the time.
What they did was that camcorders, digital camcorders are brand new.
So they used digital camcorder.
But then they did stop motion.
They had no money.
So they did stop motion animation using little cardboard cartes.
using literally construction paper characters.
And so the reason the characters look like they do
is because literally in the original thing,
they were cut out of construction paper,
and they were literally moved by hand frame to frame.
And then the two kids did the voiceovers.
But it was from the very, it was the same characters,
Cartman and Kyle and Stan and Kenny, right?
And in South Park, which is the town that these kids grew up in.
And then it was a three-minute Christmas card,
and it was Santa Claus versus Jesus.
And Santa Claus versus Jesus ended up in a full kung fu fight.
you know, complete with, like, blood and, like, body parts, right?
And so it was like this.
It was like, you know, max, it was intended to be like maxly offensive in it,
but it was like, it was like really, it was really funny.
And so somebody got then, literally it was sent out on videotape, right?
It was like pre-dvd, right?
So it sent out on videotape.
And somebody actually scanned the videotape, which is actually hard to do.
And then it went super viral on the internet and became big.
And so it's an example of, you know, that everything I just described,
the camcorder, like that was the AI of its time.
It left these kids who had no access to, or no,
knowledge even necessarily of like traditional animation production methods to do this.
By the way, when those kids actually then got their, they then actually, you know,
South Park is like a full studio now.
You know, it's been tremendously financially successful.
They now have a complete state of the art studio production facility.
And what they've used it for is they've used it to hyper-optimized computer models of
the optimal recreation of the aesthetics of the construction paper.
And so if you watch South Park episodes today, you see actually the characters have,
there's actually a depth to the animation that shows the layers of the construction paper.
It's all produced digitally today, but they've used stated-air digital tools to reconstruct the physics of construction paper, you know, 30 years later.
And so, yeah, so they were able to do that.
And then obviously, you know, they were maybe the most successful, like, animation duo of the last 30 years.
And yeah, I think the AI thing is we're right on the tipping point of that.
And your point, like maybe we actually just saw the first one.
It's so, let's say, toxic that it's hard to recommend that people watch it.
Yeah, yeah, but it is, it is, it is a, it's for sure a South Park caliber level thing created in AI by somebody who didn't use any of traditional, you know, they didn't use any, they didn't use any traditional, you know, they didn't use any traditional, you know, techniques you use for animating anything. It was created entirely with SORA, scene by scene. And yeah, it's just as a, as a, as a, as a demonstration of technology, it's just, it's obvious that that moment has now arrived. I, and to your point, Eric, like, I do think, for example, I think there's now actually a new form of political propaganda.
at Luce in the World, which is, you know, basically the custom-produced, you know,
basically South Park-ish, you know, kind of, you know, video series. And AI is going to make
that so easy for people to do that you're going to be able to do, you know, anybody in any,
you know, any electoral race is going to be able to hire some kid, you know, to do things like
this. And so it's going to be like this. It's like, I don't, decentralized satire or something
like that. And so, yeah, the moment has arrived, the, their art forms just again.
On that note, we got to let you go. But this has been a fantastic episode of monitoring the
situation. Thanks so much for coming on, Mark.
All right, fantastic.
Situation monitor.
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