I just want to have a discussion about this. All of the remakes and reboots hollywood has done throughout its history have always been a way of just making money by putting all the money on “sure” bets, things that producers already know people like because they were successful before, but there’s something exceptionally soulless about the Disney reboots.

There seems to be no true desire to introduce a new generation to stories they weren’t familiar with, but instead a desire to just rewrite disneys entire catalog to be presented in a new aesthetic. It’s a homogenization of film to a single set of techniques and looks. Capitalism is directly strangling creativity and it’s being successful enough that it’s seemingly never going to stop. I mean. They’re rebooting movies that aren’t even 20 years old yet at this point. There are people in college seeing promos for reboots of movies their parents took them to as kids.

It’s creating this environment where we’re all stuck in this moment that already passed. The media we consume now was written in response to events that happened already, have passed us by, and can no longer be addressed. Any attempts to make new media that meet our current moment are stifled by studios who just… Don’t care.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    I feel you.

    It isn’t that I’m against the idea of remakes and reboots. Especially for technology improvements that can make a given story work better. But when a company is just rehashing their old material as a cash grab, and that’s what Disney does, why bother? They never give a new take on things in any useful way. They don’t really reimagine the old stories into a new version, they just retread their previous version of a fairy tale. Even when it was a new fairy tale, like the Lion King.

    Which, it isn’t like the Lion King was exactly all-new, but it was at least an original Disney version of those ideas.

    Tangent aside, Disney has the money, the people, and the draw to create film history the way they gained their reputation as a film studio. But they don’t. And it’s just sad.