
One Battle After Another in Hollywood: Why Gen Z Has Abandoned Cinema and What It Says About American Culture
Keen On America
Why One Battle After Another Succeeds
They analyze Paul Thomas Anderson's film breaking into political discourse and resonating across the cultural divide.
25 movies and 0 hits: itâs been a particularly rough quarter for Hollywood. But as I discuss with the cultural commentator David Masciotra, itâs actually been a pretty strong quarter in terms of movie quality. From Paul Thomas Andersonâs âOne Battle After Anotherâ and Jennifer Lawrenceâs astonishing performance in âDie My Loveâ to a glitteringly bald Emma Stone in âBugoniaâ and Ethan Coenâs âHoney Donât!â, Hollywood is producing high quality, relevant material. One problem, however, is that Gen Z has abandoned cinema. Another is that Hollywoodâs penchant for movies dominated by memorably uncompromising female leads like Stone and Lawrence might be out of step with a broader culture still imprisoned by a nostalgia for a dominant masculinity. Perhaps thatâs why âOne Battle After Anotherâ, featuring Leonardo DiCaprio as a pathetically redundant Sixties radical, is the one hit of the season. And it may also be why the excellent Springsteen biopic, âDeliver Me From Nowhereâ, featuring a clueless Bruce trying to find himself by recording âNebraskaâ, was such a flop. No, men donât matter, either in Hollywood or in life. Even when they do.
One Battle After Another (Paul Thomas Anderson) The seasonâs sole commercial success ($70 million) works because it satirizes everyone. DiCaprioâs incompetent â60s radical provides comic relief, but itâs Chase Infinityâs cynical Gen Z daughter who steals the film (even if Gen Zâers have given up going to the movies). Andersonâs Pynchon adaptation makes absurdity central to American identity, both then and nowâthe villainous Christmas Adventures Club in golf attire perfectly capturing MAGAâs ridiculousness.
Die My Love (Josephine Decker) Jennifer Lawrence delivers an astonishing performance confirming sheâs among Hollywoodâs greatest actors. The film died at the box office despite critical praiseâperhaps because audiences resistant to female-dominated narratives wonât show up even for exceptional work like this. Her assertiveness and complexity highlights exactly whatâs missing from contemporary male performances.
Bugonia (Yorgos Lanthimos) Emma Stone continues her fearless run in this cultish, visually striking film. Her performance demonstrates creative risk-taking unavailable to todayâs male leads. Jesse Plemons plays the archetypal basement-dwelling conspiracy theoristâmasculine id of our internet age. Its commercial failure suggests audiences arenât ready for cinema that interrogates rather than celebrates American mythology.
Honey Donât! (Ethan Coen) Coenâs lesbian B-movie homage to film noir, which David Masciotra loved, deserved better than its catastrophic box office. Margaret Qualleyâs detective becomes a feminist hero fighting idiotic patriarchy without losing entertainment value. Set in Bakersfield and focused on religious hypocrisy, it feels both familiar and innovative. Its death proves even clever, relevant films canât entice Gen Zâers back to the movies.
Deliver Me From Nowhere (James Mangold) The seasonâs most revealing failure. The film captures Springsteenâs Faustian bargainâtrading artistic integrity for superstardom, making âNebraskaâ his final serious work before âBorn in the USAââs commercial conquest. It depicts fierce masculine anxiety through Bruceâs mentally ill, violent father and his own depression. Yet it bored audiences with its introspective approachâultimate proof that even films about masculine crisis canât reach audiences imprisoned by nostalgia for an imaginary American masculinity that never existed.
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