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[return to "Casual Viewing – Why Netflix looks like that"]
1. Argona+I3[view] [source] 2024-12-28 10:27:22
>>exitb+(OP)
It’s just slop par excellence. I’ve been watching a number of movies with my wife over Christmas. Everything is so bland, repetitive and ‘design by committee’. It goes further than merely announcing what the characters are doing (in that new wannabe Die Hard movie we hear that they are expecting a baby three times in 5 minutes), you just know there are certain metrics used for every genre of movie accounting for every minute: “if it’s an action film with no action scene in the first 10 minutes then the audience loses interest”. They are all so soulless.

And this is fine when you realise that Netflix replaces direct-to-video movies and not that of cinema, as much as they refuse to admit.

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2. raverb+Q5[view] [source] 2024-12-28 10:53:50
>>Argona+I3
Honestly I can't blame them if current audiences have the attention span of a puppy golden retriever

The one use case I wanted to see for AI is "tunable" contexts for videos. If this is your first time, watch the whole thing but if you need less context just edit it so it skips over the obvious parts

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3. stevag+M6[view] [source] 2024-12-28 11:06:34
>>raverb+Q5
I would love to see movies come in many different flavours. Long, short, dial up the violence, or down, etc etc.
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4. pastur+yv1[view] [source] 2024-12-28 22:53:25
>>stevag+M6
This was actually something that was tried with music in the early 90s, by Philips and Sony with the CD-i. The musician/producer Todd Rundgren made an album specifically for this format called "No World Order" where the songs were all broken up into "modules", so to speak, and the user could configure them however they'd like.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD-i

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_World_Order

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