Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Tinseltown's tin ear
Tinseltown's tin ear
Apr 5, 2026 9:36 AM

A recent slide in movie attendance suggests a film industry crisis of major proportions, but pop culture potentates seem reluctant to confront it. In May of this year, a USA Today/CNN/Gallup poll showed that fully 48 percent of American adults say they go to the movies less often then they did in 2000. For 19 consecutive weeks, including the heart of the summer 2005 blockbuster season, the motion picture industry earned less (despite higher ticket prices) than it brought in during the corresponding period the year before. Projections of ticket sales for all of 2005 indicate that the public will occupy at least eight percent fewer seats in movie theaters this year than in 2004 – an alarming performance at a time of population growth and a generally robust economy.

To explain the bad news, USA Today ran a lengthy analysis under the mournful headline, “Where have all the moviegoers gone?” Reporters Anthony Breznican and Gary Strauss quoted numerous insiders speaking optimistically about new attempts to rekindle the old romance: “The lures include providing high-tech eye candy through 3-D, digital projection and IMAX versions of movies. … Stadium seating, which improves views, is just now ing standard. Other theaters are opting for screenings that serve alcohol to patrons 21 and older.” Revealingly, none of the studio honchos talked about reconnecting with the mass audience by adjusting the values conveyed by feature films –replacing the industry's liberal posturing with a more diverse, balanced, or (perish the thought) patriotic perspective. Innumerable callers to my radio show have expressed resentment at the partisanship of top directors and stars. No one has plained about the lack of 3-D, digital projection, or alcoholic beverages at concession stands.

It's not enough, either, to explain audience alienation with cavalier references to “mediocre movies.” Anyone who reviews films for a living can tell you that most movies have been mediocre for a long time, several decades, at least. Something changed between 2004 and 2005 to cause a sharp, sudden drop-off at the box office, and an obvious factor that entertainment insiders refuse to consider is their own activism during the 2004 election. The show business establishment embraced Senator John Kerry's campaign with near unanimity and bashed President Bush with unprecedented ferocity. Despite the best efforts of entertainer activist and their political associates, a majority of American voters cast their ballots for George W. Bush this past November. If only a small minority of those 62 million GOP voters – say, 20 percent – reacted to Hollywood's electioneering by staying away from the local multiplex, that alone would account for the decline in ticket sales in the months immediately following the president's re-election.

An additional element that may help explain 2005's missing moviegoers involves another bitter controversy from 2004, this one over The Passion of the Christ. That movie earned a startling $370 million at the domestic box office and drew in religious-minded patrons who had for years shunned movies altogether. Amazingly enough, however, no major feature film in the months since the release of The Passion has attempted to speak to that energetic, faith-based audience. The Walt Disney Company hopes that churchgoers will flock to the theaters this Christmas season to see The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, the lavish new adaptation of the beloved Christian allegory by C.S. Lewis. That promised deliverance remains speculative, but if the theory proves true, it will say a great deal about Hollywood's real problems.

The refusal to recognize ideological considerations and a “values gap” as major elements in Hollywood's box office collapse reflects the trendy leftism that remains the reigning faith in Tinseltown. The tendency to emphasize material solutions characterizes liberal thinking on a wide range of policy issues – from out-of-wedlock births (provide birth control devices and abortion on demand), to crime (more gun control), to poverty (more welfare), to terrorism (more anti-poverty aid). Above all else, it is this blindness to the philosophic dimensions of major challenges that renders the Hollywood Left unable to reconnect with a skeptical mass audience.

After all, the American people aren't stupid, and they're not all apolitical; many – at least a third – are even self-consciously conservative in both politics and values. Ironically, a new attempt to address the most deeply mitments of ordinary Americans might help the entertainment elite to create the sort of timeless artistic expressions they say they so desperately wish to contribute.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
The Court and the Separation of Power
  Under Chief Justice Roberts, the Supreme Court has demonstrated a willingness to enforce the Constitution’s separation-of-powers principles. This is welcome news for those who think that aspects of the administrative state run afoul of important constitutional lines separating the federal government’s three coequal branches. But not everyone has found the Roberts Court’s separation-of-powers jurisprudence to be cause for celebration.   A...
Is Iran Ready for a Nuclear Deal?
  Historians may well treat the year 2024 as the most politically consequential year in the Middle East since 2003, or even 1979. Over the past 12 to 15 months, a series of major events, each of which would have been heralded as a major development on its own, have together flipped the strategic board, changing the political trajectory of the...
What Makes American Education Exceptional
  Vivek Ramaswamy’s much-discussed Christmas X post reflected several questionable assumptions, but it was right to link a cultures highest aspirations and its education. One could be forgiven for watching the children’s movies popular in 1990s America and drawing the conclusion that what we most wanted was a life of ease, security and spontaneity—akin to the self-indulgence of an ancient tyrant....
The Constitution and Federal Spending
  The new Department of Government Efficiency informs us that the federal government, through its Agency for International Development (AID), has been distributing taxpayer money for condoms in Gaza, DEI in Serbia and Ireland, and transgender stage productions in Columbia and Peru. (A longer list is here.)   These revelations should renew questions about what constitutional limits there are on federal expenditures....
Faith in Action
  Saturday, February 22, 2025   Faith in Action   “What good is it, dear brothers and sisters, if you say you have faith but don’t show it by your actions? Can that kind of faith save anyone?Suppose you see a brother or sister who has no food or clothing, and you say, ‘Good-bye and have a good day; stay warm and eat...
Color
  In just one month, there has been a massive reset of civil rights politics in the United States that will reverberate for decades. We are still waiting to see how this is going to take precise shape in the context of higher education. Among the Trump administration’s many DEI-related executive orders, none yet outlines a detailed program to address progressive...
A Constitutional Rule on Federal Spending
  The new Department of Government Efficiency informs us that the federal government, through its Agency for International Development (AID), has been distributing taxpayer money for condoms in Gaza, DEI in Serbia and Ireland, and transgender stage productions in Columbia and Peru. (A longer list is here.)   These revelations should renew questions about what constitutional limits there are on federal expenditures....
Dirty Windows or Blurred Vision?
  Dirty Windows or Blurred Vision?   This devotional was written by Jim Liebelt   Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye? —Matthew 7:3   I read a story about a business owner who constantly complained about the dirty windows of his competitor’s store, directly across the...
A Prayer for Boldness to Share Your Faith with Your Neighbors
  A Prayer for Boldness to Share Your Faith with Your Neighbors   By: Emma Danzey   Bible Reading:“Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no commandment greater than these.” - Mark 12:30-31   Read or...
How to Stay Calm Under Verbal Attack
  How to Stay Calm Under Verbal Attack   By Kelly Balarie   Bible Reading:   “Where there is strife, there is pride, but wisdom is found in those who take advice.” – Proverbs 13:10 NIV   Just because it can be said, doesn’t mean it should be said.   Friends, in my mind, I know this statement is true, but it is a whole other...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved