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I'm tired of people complaining about remakes and reboots. Original movies are released every week. If you care enough to complain, you should care enough to keep track of what movies are coming out and not rely on marketing to tell you what to see. Nobody is making you see remakes and reboots. Millions of people are seeing them so clearly, they are appealing to millions of people. If people would stop seeing them, Hollywood would stop making them.
Ah, but the production money doesn't flow to many original movies, but almost always gets invested in existing franchises. The result is a bunch of original movies that would have been better if they'd had a bigger budget. Add to that the issue of marketing: no one is going to the film that doesn't advertise, have guests on talk shows, and gets limited distribution. The big studios have contracts with the theaters and tiny films are frequently relegated to art houses.
Lastly, I don't think it is fair to ask people to do homework on which movies to watch. I mean, I do that, but I'm a freak that way. Most people don't have the time, and they aren't looking for the next Citzen Cane, they're looking for a light escape from a difficult week. Ideally, people would follow a critic that has tastes similar to their own, but in the fractured world of the internet, that gets hard. There are too many voices and they rotate in and out too often to figure out who's currently matching your tastes.
People are ultimately choosing to see remakes and sequels. If it was really a huge problem for the majority of moviegoers, they'd go see original movies. Anyone who cares enough to complain should care enough to do research.
Almost a third of Americans who could vote don't -- either by not registering at all or registering but not casting a ballot. Do you really think people who don't have the time to vote -- people with jobs and/or kids at home -- want to "do research" for their down time? They aren't 'going' anywhere. They flip on the boob tube and catch whatever has made it to cable/free-streaming. Then they are disappointed because they liked the first one and this new one is so bad by comparison.
I'm retired, so I do research, and while I'm not the one complaining, I DO sympathize with the complainers that don't want to invest as much time as I do on inspecting the lineage of a film and what might make it worth viewing.
I've seen interesting remakes and sequels -- like just this week I rewatched Fassbinder's original The Bitter Tears of Petra von Kant because I hadn't yet seen Ozon's remake, Peter von Kant, where the main characters reverse sexes. There's more crossovers with those two directors and I care about it, so I watch all those. What I didn't see was all the Spidermans, Batmans, and Marvel movies.
I might complain but the real result of studio shenanigans with a publicity is I rarely goto movies. If a movie is an expensive splurge, having to work at it is much less appealing
Actually now that my kids are off to college and I’m in a good spot financially, I did briefly consider becoming a regular moviegoer for the first time in my life. Too much work for the expected entertainment value though