The world of cinema has been shocked by the incredible box office bomb ofBabylon.The $5.3 million in profits thus far is a staggeringly low number considering the film’s estimated budget of $80 million. Production spared no expense in recreating, or rather re-imagining,the roaring twenties and the golden ageof Hollywood. Trailers tease a hedonistic but liberated cast of characters as they make their way through the treacherous but thrilling landscape of the film industry.

No film is everyone’s cup of tea, but a box office failure of this magnitude is not typically seen in a film starring popular names like Margot Robbie, Tobey Maguire, and Brad Pitt, to name a few. Perhaps the star-studded cast is the very reason why the film hasn’t succeeded, with a plethora of big names to mask a shoddily constructed world and storyline. On the other hand, the film may well have been well executed, but rather suffered as the victim of poor marketing and a dying theater experience. What could have led this sort of project to under perform in this way?

Nellie passed out on the floor

Movie Premise and Stars

The IMDb page for Babylon describes the film: “Decadence, depravity, and outrageous excess lead to the rise and fall of several ambitious dreamers in 1920s Hollywood.” The film follows a range ofsilent film stars in 1920s Hollywoodas they adjust to the demise of their art form and the rise of sound films. One of the main draws of the film is the unrestrained displays of extravagance and debauchery in which we find the characters indulging. One of the very first sequences is the planning of an outrageous bacchanal, where we meet Margot Robbie’s character of Nellie LaRoy. This immediately establishes the sort of characters and scenery we will be immersed in, and that this will not be a story about righteous working class people. It’s possible at this juncture that we will not be encountering very likable characters, or may be rooting for people that are objectively heavily flawed anti-heroes.

The stars of old Hollywood at the center of the drama watch as their stardom rises and falls, be it in a scandalous blaze or in fading away into irrelevance.Along with Margot Robbie’s Nellie, the film stars Brad Pitt as Jack Conrad, Tobey Maguire as James McKay, Phoebe Tonkin as Jane Thornton, Olivia Wilde as Ina Conrad, and Samara Weaving as Constance Moore.

Tobey Maguire Babylon

Related:Why Television’s Third Golden Age Is Here

Marketing Tactics

Related:The Best Black and White Musicals of Hollywood’s Golden Age

What This Says About the State of the Film Industry

The wicked irony ofBabylonis that life has imitated art. A film about the demise of a sort offilm star in a changing industryfailed on account of the demise of a sort of film star in a changing industry. In the era of streaming platforms, people have become well-adjusted to watching unlimited content from the comfort of their homes for a monthly rate that is equal or less to that of a singular movie ticket. Television movies are no longer mid-budget showings, but fully funded and imaginative creations. Think of the recent release ofGlass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery. This movie was released directly to Netflix, and received relatively little marketing from the streaming platform. When a movie fails at the box office, it is prematurely shuffled away to one streaming platform or another, such asBlack Adamalready being found on HBO Max.

It seems that the only way to draw audiences into theaters is to promise larger than life action and effects that cannot be fully enjoyed from a smaller screen and without surround sound. Films must also now have significant fan bases that come together for the occasion of a screening, wherein fans feel like the theater experience alone is as exciting as the film’s content. This can be seen in the draw that so many Marvel movies enjoy. The most recentSpider-Manfilm,Spider-Man: No Way Home, saw crowds cheering, hollering, laughing, and crying all together. Perhaps the promise of something new is not enough to pique interest, and audiences want the assurance of a shared group experience pertaining to something they already know and love.

Diego Calva Babylon

The shift from the big screen to the home screen has changed the nature of an actor’s work. The divide between television actors and film stars grows ever more narrow as both find themselves in the employ of the same studios and with the same budgets. In some ways, and much like inBabylon, the idea of a Hollywood movie star as we know it is disappearing before our eyes.

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