------ in reality, the only superhero movie that’s playing in theaters right now - and is making a cultural and cinematic impact - is the ONLY superhero movie that has been released this year so far, Besson. There’s only a single Star Wars movie coming out this year, by the way. ---
I don't think it's about the amount of movies but about the amount of marketing. Last years, the 5 highest budget movies were either Star Wars or Superhero. That means that most of the marketing in the movie industry is gonna be aimed to Star Wars/Superhero franchises.
------ But ah yes, to consider fans of these more popular (yet critically acclaimed) movies to be inferior minds ---
Right now, high budget Hollywood movies are really bad. This is last year 10 most expensive movies:
http://www.worldstopmost.com/2017-2018-2019-2020/entertainment/most-expensive-movies-2016-hollywood-bollywood-top-10-list/
There's a good movie, Jungle Book, two OK movies, Finding Dory and Civil War, and that's all. Now go back to the 60s-70s-80s. Which were the movies that stept up as the most expensive movie to date?
Ben-Hur in 1959
Mutinty on the Bounty in 1962
Cleopatra in 1963
Superman in 1978
Rambo III in 1988
Back to the Future II and III in 1989
Terminator 2 in 1991
True Lies in 1994
Waterworld in 1995
Titanic in 1997
The Lord of the Rings in 2003
Even though not all of them are great movies (cough, Rambo III, cough), most of them are AMAZING pop-corn movies. Ben-Hur or Superman or Terminator 2 or Titanic or Lord of the Rings are not exactly Cahiers du Cinema movies or Cinema du Auteur.
Before 2005, high budget movies used to be (not all, but many of them) amazing pop-corn movies. Then, it went down. I don't know whether Superhero genre is to blame. I don't know whether Hollywood becoming a political preacher is to blame. I don't know whether the whole US decline is to blame. Who knows the cause? But yes, it's happening.
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