What a dumb thing to say! This isn't at all about "cultural purity"! Quite the contrary! All Hollywood all the time, now that would be "cultural purification"!
It is the maintanence of cultural identity. same difference.
What a dumb thing to say! This isn't at all about "cultural purity"! Quite the contrary! All Hollywood all the time, now that would be "cultural purification"!
It is the maintanence of cultural identity. same difference.
Why?
It seems that they have voted, with their pocketbooks.
And it also seems that they have voted with their ballot slip. So?
Well, I think we were talking about film. But can you name a single successful prime-time TV show on the major networks that is not identifiably American? Just one. Then see if you can find one in the history of American television.You have GOT to be kidding me. Have you taken a look at Saturday morning cartoons lately? It's like half of them are Japanese imports. We're PLENTY receptive to foreign culture. It just needs to be appealing. Some cultures are quite capable of producing appealing cultural products (Japan is one example for TV, Hong Kong is an example for movies, there's countless examples in terms of cuisine), some are not.
The film industry isn't a free market, so this argument fails.The US is very good at producing appealing cultural products in no small part because the production of those cultural products IS a free market with lots of diversity.
Because most of the world is receptive to American culture. Not other cultures in general, importantly, but specifically American culture.Because Titanic was globally appealing. It was a smash hit in India and Japan, for example. But tell me: the Choir may have been a smash hit in France, but was it a smash hit in Japan? Was it a smash hit in India? No. Why? Because it wasn't appealing to them. Don't pretend that the two are equivalent, because they aren't. Titanic may have been junk, but it was junk people all over the world wanted to see. The Choir was not.
I am scratching my head trying to figure out how you got from "budget is in some way correlated with success" to "budget dictates success."One word: "Waterworld".
Big budgets don't dictate success.
Can you name another low-budget film that hit it big without being financed by Hollywood? This looks very much like the exception that proves the rule. Blair Witch was successful because horror movies were almost a dead genre at the time and because the distributor didn't have a competing film to market.You can if you've got something people want to see (note that people wanting to see something doesn't necessarly correlate with it being "good"). Blair Witch, anyone? They didn't guarantee it stayed out of theaters, they latched onto it and propelled it to the top the moment they smelled profit.
Bollywood was precisely what I was talking about when I mentioned local appeal; Hollywood just doesn't make big glitzy musical numbers anymore. It's ridiculous to argue that you could produce a movie for less money (using local talent) than it costs to produce sub-titles or dubs (using local talent).Conversely, production costs are much lower in India, they can produce in the local language without having to dub or subtitle, and their films are much more directly relevant. Bollywood is doing quite fine, they're hardly starving under an oppressive onslaughtof American films.
I can already do that precisely because of protectionist regulations. Protectionism in national film industries isn't new; global free trade agreements are new. What's happening here is the Unesco is sanctioning the continuation of protectionist measures, in the face of globalization. Presumably, there is some critical number of films produced, below which the French film industry would implode due to prohibitive fixed costs, and that's what they're trying to stave off.Can't you already do that? Seems to me that protectionist regulations aren't going to lead to more great French movies, all it will do is ensure the existence of more mediocre and bad French movies. It also seems to me that your number-one complaint is that you're dissatisfied with the consumer choices of your fellow citizens, and want the government to end-run around that to produce your personally desired result.
This was a referendum? If so, I have no critisism at all.
If you define "quality" as "the movie people are most likely to spend money to see", then yes, that is the reason one is played over another. It is a business, after all. That is the whole purpose of the industry: to make money. There are exceptions, of course. Rules almost always have exceptions.Well, multiplexes in Canada have enough space to show two simultaneous representations of the same god awful Hollywood action flick or family comedy. I guess they can spare a view screen or two to show some of the "indigenous" productions.
And Tragicmonkey, if you think "quality" is the main reason why a movie is played over another, I must tell you that you are sadly mistaken.
So everything a representative democracy does is right, and never deserves to be questioned? Cool! I'll keep that in mind the next time anyone here says anything bad about the US.It's called "representative democracy." You might have heard the term used before.
If you define "quality" as "the movie people are most likely to spend money to see", then yes, that is the reason one is played over another. It is a business, after all. That is the whole purpose of the industry: to make money. There are exceptions, of course. Rules almost always have exceptions.
The reason they will use multuiple screens to show the same movie is that the movie is popular enough for them to need to do that. Its all about what people want to see.
So everything a representative democracy does is right, and never deserves to be questioned? Cool! I'll keep that in mind the next time anyone here says anything bad about the US.
Off topic as usual, but would you define 'quality' that way? Literature, music?If you define "quality" as "the movie people are most likely to spend money to see",
It depends on my point of view. If I was part of a film company, then yes, that is how I would define quality. I've got bills to pay, ya know.Off topic as usual, but would you define 'quality' that way? Literature, music?
Virtually every decision and action by every entity (individual or group) has a moral and ethical component.I really don't see how you can argue that moderate cultural protectionism, with a few subsidies and small quotas, is ethically or morally wrong...
Isn't that defining the ability to make money, not the quality of the art? The National Enquirer sells a lot, and is probably making money for the publishers, but does that make it a 'quality' magazine? (I'm going to use the answer against youIt depends on my point of view. If I was part of a film company, then yes, that is how I would define quality. I've got bills to pay, ya know.
Probably.Is the government going to appoint movie-critics to decide which low-budget local films are of sufficient quality to warrant government support?
I see a clear difference. I think it is more like a government determining which free speech gets a subsidy, without limiting anyone else's free speech. Or it is like government museums buying paintings the government considers to be of great cultural value, and allowing anyone to paint whatever they like and allowing them also to sell their work to however wants to buy it.Isn't that a bit like a government determining which free speech is protected?
To some extent, yes. Art is in the eye of the beholder. What is art to one person is garbage to another. Having a lot of people like something does indicate that the art does have some quality that is appealing to a large number of people. No one can tell me what should and shouldn't be "quality art" to me. It is a decision I make on my own. When a lot of people make that decision, it says something about the art's ability to touch people. Of course there are exceptions, there always are. (There are exceptions to that, too). YOU may look at something and think "that's junk", but many others might like it. It doesn't always hold, of course. But it is a factor to consider.Isn't that defining the ability to make money, not the quality of the art? The National Enquirer sells a lot, and is probably making money for the publishers, but does that make it a 'quality' magazine? (I'm going to use the answer against you).
Does quality in arts equal the money made from it?
Which is no longer true free speech, is it?I think it is more like a government determining which free speech gets a subsidy...
"Much higher standard publications". How do you define that 'much higher standard'?To some extent, yes. Art is in the eye of the beholder. What is art to one person is garbage to another. Having a lot of people like something does indicate that the art does have some quality that is appealing to a large number of people. No one can tell me what should and shouldn't be "quality art" to me. It is a decision I make on my own. When a lot of people make that decision, it says something about the art's ability to touch people. Of course there are exceptions, there always are. (There are exceptions to that, too). YOU may look at something and think "that's junk", but many others might like it. It doesn't always hold, of course. But it is a factor to consider.
The National Enquirer is actually on the very low-end when it comes to making money. Much higher standard publications make a lot more.