there are anons on this board, right now at this very moment, that unironically doubt Jim.
>>215498736His blue pocahontas stuff is getting old, won't make a billiard
>His submersible is light and nimble. He never sleeps. He says that he will never die. He descends in light and in shadow and he is a great captain. He never sleeps, Stockton. He is descending, descending. He says that he will never die.
>>215498736>yfw the next Avatar makes 2 billion, again
>>215498736It doesn't matter how much money his films make or how well done are his film from a filmmaking craft point of view. They're culturally irrelevant. He's giving people what they want, not what they need. His films are an example of how you don't make culture. Sadly, he's not the only one director like that, and film industry is also not the only one branch of culture where this is happening.
>>215498736I don't, my body is ready
>>215498736Not me. I have faith in him.
>>215499286fuck you mean "make culture"? they're just movies nigga. enjoy the show.
>>215498736Not listening to Jim could get you crushed at the bottom of the ocean. You should listen to Jim.But still not watching his blue native space cat movies.
>>215499286Anon... It’s impossible to create anything "culturally relevant" in this era. The entertainment industry produces far too much content (films, TV shows, video games, YouTube, Twitch, social media bullshit) compared to the 1990s. Back then only cinema dominated people’s minds. Today, everyone in the world has a screen in their pocket and access to millions of hours of content at any moment.All popular (and critically acclaimed) successes today are just supernovas that shine very brightly for a very very short time, only for the world to almost immediately forget them after "consuming" them. That was the case with every Marvel movies which all grossed over a billie before COVID. It’s also true for a flick like EEAAO, which is the most awarded movie in cinema history (LMAO right?). The same applies to video games, TV series, and music. A total overdose of content, where everything is both brilliant and mediocre at the same time.There will never again be a great cinematic masterpiece that people will remember for centuries like 2001, Apocalypse Now, The Godfather, or Jurassic Park. Every movie now is doomed to be lost in time, like tears in the rain.