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The big picture : the fight for the future of movies / Ben Fritz.

By: Fritz, Ben [author.]Publisher: Boston : Eamon Dolan, 2019Description: 320 pages ; 21 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volume001: 43896ISBN: 9781328592743 (pbk.) :Subject(s): Sony Pictures Entertainment, Inc | Motion picture industry -- California -- Los Angeles -- History -- 21st century | Motion pictures -- United States -- History -- 21st century | Media StudiesDDC classification: 791.43 FRI LOC classification: PN1993.5.U65 | F75 2019Summary: The stunning metamorphosis of 21st-century Hollywood and what lies ahead for the art and commerce of film Ben Fritz chronicles the dramatic shakeup of America's film industry, bringing equal fluency to both the financial and entertainment aspects of Hollywood. He offers us an unprecedented look deep inside a Hollywood studio to explain why sophisticated movies for adults are an endangered species while franchises and super-heroes have come to dominate the cinematic landscape. And through interviews with dozens of key players at Disney, Marvel, Netflix, Amazon, Imax, and others, he reveals how the movie business is being reinvented. Despite the destruction of the studios' traditional playbook, Fritz argues that these seismic shifts signal the dawn of a new heyday for film.
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Book MAIN LIBRARY Book PRINT 791.43 FRI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 2 Available 113572
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A Los Angeles Times Bestseller

Winner of the Best Non-Fiction Book Prize at the 2018 National Arts & Entertainment Journalism Awards



"Ben Fritz crafts an electrifying and essential book that carefully chronicles how Hollywood tradition is collapsing and new models are fueling the future. A must-read."--Ava DuVernay, director of A Wrinkle in Time, Selma, and 13th



The stunning metamorphosis of twenty-first-century Hollywood and what lies ahead for the art and commerce of film



Ben Fritz chronicles the dramatic shakeup of America's film industry, bringing equal fluency to both the financial and entertainment aspects of Hollywood. He offers us an unprecedented look deep inside a Hollywood studio to explain why sophisticated movies for adults are an endangered species while franchises and super-heroes have come to dominate the cinematic landscape. And through interviews with dozens of key players at Disney, Marvel, Netflix, Amazon, Imax, and others, he reveals how the movie business is being reinvented.



Despite the destruction of the studios' traditional playbook, Fritz argues that these seismic shifts signal the dawn of a new heyday for film. The Big Picture shows the first glimmers of this new golden age through the eyes of the creative mavericks who are defining what entertainment will look like in the new era.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The stunning metamorphosis of 21st-century Hollywood and what lies ahead for the art and commerce of film Ben Fritz chronicles the dramatic shakeup of America's film industry, bringing equal fluency to both the financial and entertainment aspects of Hollywood. He offers us an unprecedented look deep inside a Hollywood studio to explain why sophisticated movies for adults are an endangered species while franchises and super-heroes have come to dominate the cinematic landscape. And through interviews with dozens of key players at Disney, Marvel, Netflix, Amazon, Imax, and others, he reveals how the movie business is being reinvented. Despite the destruction of the studios' traditional playbook, Fritz argues that these seismic shifts signal the dawn of a new heyday for film.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • A Note on Sources (p. ix)
  • Introduction: Groundhog Day - How Franchises Killed Originality in Hollywood (p. xiii)
  • Part 1 How Hollywood Got Here
  • 1 The Odd Couple: Lynton and Pascal's Glory Days at Sony (p. 3)
  • 2 Reality Bites: How Everything Went Wrong for the Movie Business (p. 21)
  • 3 Inception: The Secret Origin of the Superhero Movie (p. 37)
  • 4 Revenge of the Nerds: The Rise of Marvel Studios (p. 53)
  • 5 Spider-Man: Homecoming-Why Sony Gave Up Its Most Valuable Asset (p. 75)
  • 6 Star Wars: The Decline of the A-List (p. 83)
  • 7 A Star Is Born: Netflix, the New Home for Movie Stars (p. 101)
  • 8 Frozen: Why Studios Stopped Making Mid-Budget Dramas (p. 111)
  • 9 Trading Places: How TV Stole Movies' Spot atop Hollywood (p. 125)
  • Part 2 Where Hollywood Is Headed
  • 10 The Terminator: Disney, the Perfect Studio for the Franchise Age (p. 143)
  • 11 The Producers: Creativity Meets Franchise Management (p. 165)
  • 12 The Shop Around the Corner: Amazon Saves the Indie Film Business (p. 187)
  • 13 Apt Pupil: China's Shifting Relationship with Hollywood (p. 201)
  • 14 Field of Dreams: Studio Defectors and the Future of Nonfranchise Films (p. 221)
  • 15 The Last Picture Show? (p. 231)
  • Afterword (p. 243)
  • Acknowledgments (p. 257)
  • Notes (p. 261)
  • Index (p. 279)

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

If Bob Woodward and Michael Lewis cowrote a book about the movie business, it would probably look a lot like this one. Wall Street Journal reporter Fritz explores the dramatic changes in Hollywood's financial landscape over the past 15 years through the recent fall from grace of Sony Pictures. Much of the author's inside information came from reading thousands of private emails made public in the 2014 cyberhack on Sony, adding a sense of both intrigue and exploitation to his story. What executives at Sony failed to do was realize the culture of entertainment on a national and -international scale had shifted toward a demand for serialized and superhero-based films, with studios such as Warner Bros. and Marvel beating them to the punch. With new players Netflix and Amazon creating brilliant dramatic content, and TV reaching new heights of quality programming, the days of the old models are gone. VERDICT A revealing portrait of the current state of the business of Hollywood, written with a journalist's ear for making complex material clear and engaging.- Peter Thornell, Hingham P.L., MA © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Publishers Weekly Review

For anyone wondering why the current output of Hollywood is so dissatisfying, journalist Fritz (coauthor of All the President's Spin) has a simple explanation: greed. Drawing in large part on the hacked emails of Amy Pascal, the Sony Pictures chief with a reputation for nurturing talent and championing mid-budget adult dramas, Fritz succinctly lays out the economics behind the current dominance of big-budget franchise movies over smaller, character-driven films. Nowhere is this more evident than in the diverging fates of two studios, Sony and Disney. Pascal's Sony, which from the 1990s onwards emphasized "mid-sized interesting movies" such as Jerry Maguire and As Good as It Gets, increasingly found in the 2000s that this formula could not compete with even one franchise movie-Disney's The Avengers alone grossed $1.5 billion. Fritz also recounts the rise of Marvel Studios, Amazon and Netflix's embrace of the smaller films that major studios now ignore, and the role of Chinese investors in keeping Hollywood afloat. Pascal emerges as an almost tragic figure, someone "who had lost herself" or at least "a place for people like her" in today's Hollywood. Fritz's book is a fascinating behind-the-scenes glimpse at the forces that determine what gets played at the local cineplex. Agent: David McCormick, McCormick Literary. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Booklist Review

Fritz, who covers the film business and media companies for the Wall Street Journal, covered the much-publicized hacking of Sony's emails in late 2014. Now, using those emails as a jumping-off point, he examines the current state of the movie business. What's happened to the movie industry in the twenty-first century, he asks, that has sent so many studios into panic mode? Is the current trend toward franchises and cinematic universes (hello, Marvel) a good thing or a bad thing? Is there still a place on the big screen for modestly budgeted original properties? To what extent is the current golden age of television making big-screen filmmaking difficult, even, perhaps, irrelevant? Although the book looks at the movie business as a whole, its focus, driven by the emails, is on Sony, and it becomes a kind of up-close look at the downfall of a studio and its executive, Amy Pascal, whose contract was not renewed after the hack. Like Steven Bach's Final Cut (1985), about the fall of United Artists after the release of the phenomenal flop Heaven's Gate, this is a quintessential look at moviemaking gone wrong.--Pitt, David Copyright 2018 Booklist

Kirkus Book Review

How the superhero movie saved Hollywoodfor now.In November 2014, a cyberbreach at Sony Pictures Entertainment released thousands of emails. Wall Street Journal entertainment industry reporter Fritz (co-author: All the President's Spin: George W. Bush, the Media and the Truth, 2004) believed that these emails/documents "could be the core of a much bigger storyone about the changes in Hollywood and why we get the movies we do." He first focuses on Sony's senior executives, financial records, and films, unveiling a new Hollywood in which "franchises and brands dominate, original ideas and stars are marginalized, and TV and film have swapped places in our culture and our economy." Thanks to additional interviews, the author is able to bring us right into the Sony offices to listen to executives grappling with what film to make next, why the last one failed, which actors to pass over, and what they can do to make money for their investors. As Fritz shows, Sony made many bad decisions, and even though they did well with Spider-Man, Sony's highest-grossing domestic release ever, they were late to catch the franchise train other studios were riding to the bank with the Avengers, X-Men, Iron Man, and Star Wars. Fritz shows how studios responded to the income drop in DVD sales brought about by internet piracy and the rise of Netflix and Redbox. The international market was exploding, and China, which had vast financial influence in the studios, was at the top. The author explores the "extraordinary" rise of Marvel studios, the rise and fall of many former A-list actorsWill Smith, Adam Sandler, Tom Cruiseand the stunning rise of TV's smart series shows, like Breaking Bad, "better than anything most movie studios have made this century."Although the book sometimes bogs down under the weight of so much information, for those looking for inside scoops on the hidden relationships among movie studios, movie development, and choosing actors, this book is a treasure house. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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