The American film & entertainment industry



"Hollywood has lost touch with their audience a long time ago."

- John Ratzenberger. Yes, really.

"Hollywood doesn’t even care about us anymore, the only thing that they care about now is money."

- Keanu Reeves

"Why wouldn't a movie try to be great? Every movie should try to be great! If you're gonna have an opportunity to make a good movie, make one!"

- Chris Stuckmann, on Hollywood not caring about making good movies anymore

As far as the film (and entertainment in general) industry goes, the American film industry is the worst offender of extreme greed and preachiness.

The American film industry is well known for creating an amazing amount of cinema every single decade, some good, some bad, and some in between. However, with everything good, there is always a downside. Over the last few decades, the film industry itself has become synonymous with the stereotype of an unbelievably greedy corporate business: obsessed with money, continuously milking franchises, crushing dreams, and botching the outcomes of products from genuine creativity.

From 2001 onwards, the industry's habits grew worse and worse, as later adopted even worse habits along the way, like pandering to certain groups rather than audiences and running certain franchises into the ground, though these habits got even worse beginning with the late-2010s where these are shown to be much more obvious to audiences than ever before.

Also, while TV series are occasionally going to be mentioned here, this is mainly going to focus on the film side of things.

Bad Qualities

 * 1) To write down the main problem on paper, it outright panders and/or sends an over-preachy message to both sides of the left and right. In fact, many films have become overly preachy about their political themes to the point where they may even become political propaganda. The fact that the entertainment world has become so over-politicized on the last couple of years is very worrying, as Hollywood has turned from a well-respected, nice, and kind-hearted industry into a selfish, immature, and greedy business that’s obsessed with money.
 * 2) Many pointless reboots/remakes/sequels/spin-offs/adaptations for the sake of so-called "diversity" (e.g. Ghostbusters, Men In Black: International, Charlie's Angels, A Wrinkle in Time, etc.) instead of creating fresh new and completely original stories with women or POC as main characters or adapting media which have these types of people, to begin with.
 * 3) In fact, there are just as many pointless reboots/remakes/sequels/prequels/spin-offs/adaptations in general, and this is true even long before 2016, proving Hollywood's severe lack of general creativity.
 * 4) *Many Hollywood movies from 2010 onward were based on already existing media rather than being freshly original, some examples are:
 * 5) **Adaptations of romantic/dystopian teen novels or just books in general: Twilight, The Hunger Games, Percy Jackson, Maze Runner, Divergent, The Host, The Mortal Instruments, The Fault in Our Stars, Me Before You, The Kissing Booth, After, etc.
 * 6) **Superhero movies: the MCU and DCEU
 * 7) **Famous musicians biopics: Get on Up, Bohemian Rhapsody, Rocketman, Stardust, Respect, Love & Mercy, Nina, Miles Ahead, Nowhere Boy, Jersey Boys, Elvis
 * 8) **New installments/sequels/spin-offs/reboots/remakes
 * 9) **Video game adaptations: Pokemon Detective Pikachu, Sonic the Hedgehog, Uncharted, Angry Birds, Werewolves Within, Rampage, Warcraft, Ratchet & Clank, Mortal Kombat, the Resident Evil films (though this one can be excused, as they have only become successful in recent years).
 * 10) **Cinematic universes which only purpose was to cash in the MCU: Universal's Dark Universe which was canceled right after The Mummy, the DCEU, the Monsterverse, The Conjuring Universe, Hanna Barbera's Cinematic Universe, and Sony's failed Amazing Spider-Man saga which never saw anything other than one sequel, a bad one.
 * 11) Two words: Executive meddling, considered by many to be the ultimate sign that a movie will suck. Executives have interfered with the creativity and making of films before (Ghostbusters II, Aladdin, Toy Story, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Airplane!, Back to the Future), but this has become more and more commonplace as time has gone on. In most cases, executive meddling only causes the movie to become really bad. Some examples include:
 * 12) *Many of the DCEU films failing because no one else behind the movies seem to care about what they're adding into paper.
 * 13) *Spider-Man 3 including Venom only to please the fans.
 * 14) *The entire backgrounds of Alien 3 and 2015's Fantastic Four.
 * 15) *Suicide Squad changed its original tone to make it more like popular comic-book movies of the time (mainly Deadpool and Guardians of the Galaxy).
 * 16) *Scooby-Doo going from an R rating to a PG-13 rating to a PG rating.
 * 17) *Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker resurrecting Emperor Palpatine, which many people agree it's what essentially ruined the film.
 * 18) *The Cat in the Hat having a lot of cringeworthy, unfunny, and inappropriate humor for kids.
 * 19) *Chicken Little turning into a fractured fairy tale to ca sh in Shrek's formula and success.
 * 20) *Slender Man became a generic shockfest.
 * 21) *Scoob! was recast with big-name celebrities for the Scooby-Doo and Hanna Barbera characters, although it still got Frank Welker as Scooby-Doo. Another instance of executive meddling would be how the film is portrayed as a crossover that is only used to build up the Hanna Barbera Cinematic Universe instead of just being a movie about Scooby-Doo.
 * 22) *Shrek the Third being an inferior sequel letdown with bad elements compared to the first two Shrek films.
 * 23) *Sony forcing set-ups for the Sinister Six movie in The Amazing Spider-Man 2.
 * 24) *Phil Lord and Chris Miller got fired from Solo: A Star Wars Story four months into shooting.
 * 25) *Cars 2 turned out to be a movie about espionage instead of racing that depicted Mater as the protagonist instead of Lightning
 * 26) Some movies have become hated for being too discriminatory (racist, sexist, ableist, homophobic, etc.), which, for the SJWs' case, contradicts any claims of justice:
 * 27) *Scarlett Johansson played a whitewashed version of the main character from Ghost in the Shell, this ultimately gave her a bad reputation.
 * 28) *2016's Ghostbusters, 2019's Charlie's Angels, 2019's Black Christmas, MIB International, Moxie, and Birds of Prey have become infamous for being misandrist films disguised as feminist movies.
 * 29) *Sia's 2021 film Music, which is outright ableist to the autistic community. It even depicts Music in blackface, proving that Sia is also racist.
 * 30) *Pocahontas, The New World, Gone With the Wind and Django Unchained have not aged well due to their inaccurate portrayals of slavery and white colonialism.
 * 31) *Still today, most movies portray non-Americans as either uncivilized, ignorant, uneducated, and still living in the past in modern-day or as evil terrorists or criminals, especially African people in the former and Arabs as well as all Eastern Europeans (with the exception of Greeks) for both.
 * 32) *While those films have become infamous for correct and justifiable reasons, others have become hated for pathetic reasons:
 * 33) **Good movies like Green Book, Amistad, The Help, Glory, Freedom Writers, Hairspray, The Blind Side, The Last Samurai are now infamous for featuring the "white savior" complex (which is when a POC has a problem and a white person helps them) which is not actually racist but SJWs hate it, in fact, the term was made up by SJWs, similar to the fake "POC fetish" trope of a white person falling for a POC. This complex is problematic, we know but that doesn't make those films necessarily bad. In fact, when you think about it, the idea of the complex is not really wrong, it's the way those movies play it that makes it look bad but the idea of a white person helping a POC is not racist, it's just that SJWs come up with this labels only because they're usually not pleased by anything; literally: If a white person helps a POC it's a "white savior" for them and if a POC helps a white person it's a "magical negro" for them.
 * 34) **The movie Joker, while awesome, earned a bad reputation for the character "being an incel", which resulted in multiple people on Film Twitter poking fun at the film's fan base and even SNL made a skit making fun of the movie itself.
 * 35) **Several people on Letterboxd have started to look down on the movie Boyhood simply because they feel the need to compare it to Moonlight, due to both films having similar concepts. Just because Moonlight pulled the concept better doesn't mean Boyhood is necessarily bad. Other people reject the movie due to being infamously way too popular when it came out and due to its long runtime.
 * 36) Many actors/actresses/directors/producers etc. in the industry have become hated because they have been known to either be overly preachy about their political/religious/general worldviews, to being rude to their fans or everyone else, to supporting questionable people/ideologies to being hypocrites about what they believe in, to even being outright criminals. Especially when you consider that many of them currently behave like rabid and passive-aggressive maniacs on their social media. While they are human like us and, as such, share many of the same flaws, and while at least the majority of them aren't really malicious and might actually be insecure about how others feel about them (hence them behaving this way in the first place) or were raised into thinking that way beyond their control, there are quite a few who actually do it out of spite. There are a plenty of them were sadly affected by this, some unfortunate, yet not so surprising, examples being Armie Hammer, Chelsea Handler, Amber Tamblyn, Steven Seagal, Rose McGowan, Lena Dunham, Rosanna Arquette, Mel Gibson, Kevin James, Cara Delevingne, Michael Rapaport, Chevy Chase, James Corden, etc., and even the more likeable ones such as Seth Rogen, Robert De Niro, Mark Ruffalo, Letitia Wright, Sophia Bush, Julia Roberts, John Cusack, Tessa Thompson, Danny Glover, Scarlett Johansson, Elizabeth Banks, Paul Reubens, Will Smith, T.J. Miller, etc., whom, despite their charm and charisma, still tend to be controversial from time to time.
 * 37) *And look, the issue is not that they like being political; in fact, some celebrities like Arnold Schwarzenegger actually managed to have a fairly good involvement on politics; but the problem with most of them nowadays, is that they literally seem to have no life outside of being political! They also take it way too seriously, and instead of using their political views to help people, most of them use the political agenda to push their ego and use the "activism" as an excuse to their actions on social media. Hell, if you check their social media accounts, like those of Mark Ruffalo, Milla Jovovich, Piper Perabo, Debra Messing, Sophia Bush, Jane Fonda, or John Cusack, you'll see that it's literally everything they talk about!
 * 38) *They're hypocrites:
 * 39) **They condemn sexual abuse and harassment but they ignore the fact that they covered Harvey Weinstein and collaborated with Woody Allen.
 * 40) **They condemn racism yet some of them made racist remarks/jokes early in their careers and have been easily forgiven.
 * 41) ***Think about this: Roseanne Barr was justifiably cancelled for writing a racist tweet; yet, Sarah Silverman has literally worn blackface, dressed up like Hitler live on TV, and mocked Britney Spears' breakdown. How come she hasn't been cancelled yet?
 * 42) ***Speaking of racism, some of them will complain and protest about how racism exists but will completely support racism in China, best example would be Disney and John Boyega where the former would fire some cast for old racist tweets while the latter protested for BLM; yet, Disney removes black characters from Chinese posters of their movies.
 * 43) **Plenty of them have participated in several political PSA's in which they promote the "every vote matters" message; however, on their social media they constantly insult, ridicule, vilify and make fun of people who disagree with their political views which gives the idea that your vote only matters when you're on their side. Which is a terrible moral.
 * 44) **They're easily offended by dark humor but love "woke progressive" humor. In fact, comedians like Ricky Gervais, Dave Chappelle, and Bill Burr (who are known for their dark comedy) have been criticized and tagged as unfunny and out of touch, while progressive comedians like Billy Eichner, Sarah Silverman, W Kamau Bell, Hannah Gadsby, and Lilly Singh are constantly praised by them no matter what.
 * 45) **They're against capitalism; however, they ignore that they've become rich thanks to it, accept Oscars and major awards, and let their projects be produced by millionaire companies like Disney, Warner, Universal, Amazon, or Netflix.
 * 46) **They're against abuse but almost all of them supported Amber Heard after she abused and framed Johnny Depp.
 * 47) **They've boycotted Russia and supported Ukraine, which is a good thing of course, but most of them support attacking the Middle East and act that it's different.
 * 48) **They’re very sexist but neatly all of them supported Molly Ringwald after she sexually assaulted and tried to kill Will Arnett’s ex-wife, Amy Poehler.
 * 49) *They treat social activists like the Obamas, Yashar Ali, Tamika Mallory, Linda Sarsourourur, Gloria Steinem, Cecile Richards, Shannon Watts, or Greta Thunberg like literal gods, thus ignoring their flaws.
 * 50) *In plenty of situations they've proved that they can't take criticism.
 * 51) *Many of them tend to side with SJWs and woke bloggers mainly to hide their controversy.
 * 52) *Some of them don't really respect their fans; in fact, sometimes they treat them as their personal army.
 * 53) *They're willing to go as far as disrespecting the dead: When Rush Limbaugh passed away in 2021, several famous actors (mostly from the US) celebrated his death; sure, Limbaugh was a bad person, but with this they seem to be no better.
 * 54) Speaking about China, due to the Communist Party's rule about what is allowed or not allowed in the film many film companies tried to pander to them by cutting out or adding pointless scenes just for money for Chinese box offices. More info shown here.
 * 55) One of the main reasons the film industry went downhill is because many celebrities and big names in the industry were revealed to be absolute monsters. Or at the very least, narcissistic jerks with a god complex who see everybody else as beneath them. Some examples include:
 * 56) *Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby, Roman Polanski, Kevin Spacey, R. Kelly, Ian Watkins, Brett Ratner, James Toback, Bryan Singer, John Lasseter, Steven Seagal, Jeffrey Jones, Dan Schneider, Victor Salva, Aries Spears, Tiffany Haddish, Kyle Massey, Ansel Elgort, D.C. Douglas, Stephen Collins, Allison Mack, Gary Busey, Mark Salling (who committed suicide before being tried for his evil crimes), Jared Fogle, Julia Vickerman, Chris Savino, and John Kricfalusi were revealed to be rapists, pedophiles, perverts, and sex predators.
 * 57) *Drake Bell, who attempted to endanger a 15-year old girl with sexually explicit text messages; which is ironic given what character he played on his hit debut with Josh Peck on Nickelodeon (However, he doesn't count as either a pedophile or a sex predator, since he wasn't charged with any sex crimes; but he did plead guilty, so that counts). Even his former co-star, Josh Peck, was absolutely disgusted by this, and because of his actions, the planned Drake & Josh reboot was canceled, thus ruining the show's legacy for good.
 * 58) *Amber Heard, who physically and mentally abused Johnny Depp while playing victim and accused him of being the abuser; yet, Depp got punished for being abused by being removed him from all his future roles, thus destroying his reputation while Amber got away with it as of now. The most hypocritical thing about her is that, before the truth about her was revealed, Heard used to pose as a progressive and woke feminist activist speaking against gender abuse and promoting human rights to the point where she even became a women's rights ambassador for the ACLU (and she still is).
 * 59) **Fortunately, as of now in 2022, the world finally started to realize Heard's true colors after Depp put her on trial for the defamation he's been suffering in recent years because of her, which she thankfully lost. Likewise, the world has also begun to support Depp and apologize to him.
 * 60) *Alec Baldwin, who got away with murder on the set of Rust (although it was justifiably accidental thanks to incompetent on-set weapons handlers and all blames on him have since been revoked).
 * 61) *Joss Whedon, who has been revealed to be a toxic and abusive person to work around, as revealed by the people who worked with him on the sets of Justice League and Buffy. As with Amber Heard, Whedon also used to be a self-proclaimed feminist who constantly preached on social media, also making him a hypocrite.
 * 62) *Actor and director Mel Gibson who gained a bad reputation for his anti-semitic comments and overall being very aggressive towards people. However, he has improved in more recent years, becoming a nicer person and even being remorseful about it.
 * 63) *Sia, who has a very poor relationship with Maddie Ziegler, who at one point, was an underaged child at the time, and a complete stranger by the way, and was also forced by Sia to star in her movie which insults the autistic community, and openly supports controversial groups like PETA.
 * 64) *Michelle Williams who through her infamous 2020 Golden Globe speech, revealed that she had an abortion only to get a role in a show. Now we get that it's her right to choose, but why would you go through something like that instead of giving the part to someone else and also brag about it as if it was the smart thing to do?
 * 65) *Ezra Miller who, by now, has essentially become a criminal and has done a lot of heinous stuff over the last months; including choking and assaulting women, attacking couples in Hawaii, grooming a teenage girl, supplying an underaged girl with LSD and marijuana, and deleting their Instagram account after taunting authorities via memes. It's gotten to the point were several DC fans reasonably want him to be replaced in the upcoming The Flash film or have the film itself get canceled.
 * 66) *Chevy Chase, who has an infamous reputation of being a narcissistic bully to all his co-stars and co-workers and always mistreats them by saying either racist, sexist, or homophobic things about them, or by manipulating them. Basically, think his character Pierce Hawthorne from the show Community, except while Pierce's insensitivity comes off as light, bumbling, and not anything too serious, Chevy's is actually on purpose. In fact, here's an article explaining, in great detail, Chase's history of being a terrible person in general.
 * 67) *Then there's Bruce Willis who is known for being a bully in general to everyone on set as well as being difficult to work with and only wanting to come on set on certain days just to film all his scenes - a practice many have called "Bruce Willis days". He also doesn't seem to care about his profession either and seems like he only wants the money, as evidenced by his firing from The Expendables 3 (which then led to his absence) just because he wanted to get paid.
 * 68) *Liu Yifei revealed on social media that she was a communist who supported the police in the Hong Kong protests, and even has the nerve to say "what a shame for them."
 * 69) *Rachel Zegler, who's racist against white people despite being half Polish; saying things such as that "they're all conservative white supremacists", and in response to the criticism of Snow White, she says things like "No, I'm not bleaching my skin" and "You don't usually see Latinas in these stories, and Blancanieves is a big deal in Spanish speaking countries", ignoring not only that it would make no sense for a Latina to be in 16th century Germany especially considering Latino people didn't exist back then, it was the Aztecs), and that by saying "Spanish speaking countries' she's including the very white, European country of Spain, and also trying to make excuses to why wokeness is okay and trying to defend her hypocrisy and straight-up arrogance.
 * 70) *Ever since he got a bad reputation in the industry, Liam Neeson trashed just about every single one of his fans just because they wouldn’t let him kill Arnold Schwarzenegger, as both Neeson and Schwarzenegger hated each other, so Liam thought that the best way was to join The Lego Movie, because apparently, that would help kill Schwarzenegger.
 * 71) *Keira Knightley, a radical feminist who bashed on Disney princesses for dumb reasons; such as Cinderella waited for a "man to rescue her", even though she was not a damsel in distress, she was in no danger, just under pressure, and that's not even touching on the fact that she was a female orphan in 1800s France with zero money, so she was actually lucky Prince Charming fell for her. And the fact that Charming is much more passive than Cinderella, and the whole "Ariel gave up her voice and tail for Eric", then goes to star in a princess movie, The Nutcracker and the Four Realms. Not to mention that she played a literal damsel-in-distress in the first Pirates of the Caribbean movie, making her a big hypocrite.
 * 72) *Ever since The Emoji Movie was about to be released, T.J. Miller trashed his former co-workers from Silicon Valley thinking they didn't do anything to stop Trump. When he joined The Emoji Movie, he thinks that, for some reason, the film will help fight Trump.
 * 73) *Mathieu Brunet (better known as AniMat or ElectricDragon505), who has been exposed for supporting far-left extremists, attacks anyone who is against his views and even goes as far as compare anyone who supports Trump or conservativism to fascism. He used to harbor a deep hatred for Sony, just because he thinks their animated films are "too cartoony", which makes no sense since  that's what cartoons are supposed to do ! (He's toned down the Sony hate since Spider-Verse, but the internet lasts forever). While it's true Sony had a rough edge with some of its films, it doesn't mean that they're a generally bad company, and to makes things even worse, in his review of the Emoji Movie and his 2017 best and worst films, he blatantly said that he wishes for Sony Pictures Animation to go out of business (though he regrets saying this), and numerous times before, he insults the itelligence of SPA workers by saying they can't do anything right. What's worse he is hired as a film critic on Rotten Tomatoes and becomes a voice actor working with the D.C. Douglas who is a pedophile on the internet in the film project The Heart of Them. Much like Whedon and Heard, Mathieu is a self-proclaimed activist that constantly preached on social media that he supports free speech, making him a huge hypocrite.
 * 74) **The other worst thing he did is playing the part of the KickVic movement when he collaborate with Kaylyn Dicksion (also known as Kaylyn Saucedo or MarzGurl), by defaming Vic Mignogna together with allegations of sexual misconducts without proof along with Marchi and Rial which they had successfully did it and unlike the Johnny Depp and Head situation Vic has lost his appeal of his sexual harassment defamation suit and ended up becoming homeless thanks to them makeing them Karma Houdini of their actions for now.
 * 75) *Then there's Alyssa Milano, who is mostly known for being the beloved child star of the 1985 film, Commando, along with starring in Fear from 1996 and in the TV series Charmed. In the mid-2010s, she sadly became a radical and an SJW activist as she's a supporter of PETA,and attacks everything conservative or Republican.
 * 76) *And then there’s Kevin James, who was revealed to be an absolute monster due to his controversial behaviour and sexual abuse. He has became a huge jerk to all of his fans because of this.
 * 77) *Daniella Pineda mocked fans of the original Cowboy Bebop for disagreeing with the new costume and the erasure of Faye Valentine, a woman from Singapore. She says things like 'I'm sorry I don't fit the original Faye character from the anime -- Double-D breasts", "You know, we tried, but the costume kept getting slurped up in my various crevices", (which proves her a hypocrite because she has shown pictures of her in lingerie), and by saying she doesn't look like the original Faye, she is pretty much saying "I don't like Singaporeans, f*ck Singapore! Latina pride, si, si, si!". Compare that to John Cho, who played Spike. His response (not to the costume, but the general dislike of the show) was actually respectful, where he shared his opinion but didn't mock fans for disliking changes because unlike people like Daniella and the producers, he actually gets it.
 * 78) *And then there's Seth Rogen! Yes, the guy is still likeable in most aspects and even still has his charms, like genuinely caring for the causes he fights for (unlike other celebrity "activists") such as combating Alzheimer's since his wife Lauren Miller Rogen has it, and founded the production company Point Grey Pictures (which puts out good or decent movies/shows) and his humor is still sometimes subjectively decent (depending on who you ask), but he has gone downhill recently as he attacks those on social media for disagreeing with his left-wing views, and there's that one time where he called haters of Santa Inc "white supremacists". Thankfully, he's not entirely bad and is just average (in fact, he's still better than most examples), and is still a fairly nice and friendly guy and still has his fans, and even with his flaws can still be mentioned in GQ#15 as an actor who is as "amazing on the screen as in real life".
 * 79) *And practically almost everyone else in the entertainment industry, really, due to either being hypocritical, over-preachy, or at least confusing about their political/religious/general worldviews, acting like cruel jerks on set, being rude to their fans, or even being heinous individuals.
 * 80) **Even non-actors are pretty cruel, as SJWs and trolls online have a problem with cyberbullying actors, with these two examples: Asian audiences who were touchy bullied Constance Wu because some of the roles she had were roles they didn't agree with or thought were too "stereotypical:, and occasionally "not Asian enough", and for a while had depression and suicidal thoughts because of the trolls! Luckily, she didn't kill herself and is back into acting, but that was not okay. And now, alleged "Halle Bailey fans" have been bullying Jodi Benson, the original voice actress, saying her voice stinks, and making up lies and conspiracies about her, and that Halle's gonna be better than her, obviously motivated by Benson being white and not a pop star who auto-tunes her voice (keep in mind that Benson actually supports Halle). What princess actress will they target next? Are they gonna hate on Paige O'Hara because they think her version of Belle's singing voice is too shaky? Are they gonna target Broadway actresses who voiced princesses like Lea Salonga and Idina Menzel simply because they're jealous that they sing with their natural voices instead of using computers, or because they are actually qualified to play a character in a musical movie? Or will a remake of Brave in the future make people complain about Kelly Macdonald sounding "too Scottish" or "like she's speaking gibberish"? Not cool. What is people's problem?
 * 81) Each Oscars ceremony ever since has got arguably worse and dull since 1989 (although they still have their moments, such as Robin Williams performing "Blame Canada" at the 2000 Oscars, B.J. Novak reading his book “The Book with No Pictures” at the 2016 Oscars, Pitbull and Christina Aguilera singing “Feel This Moment” at the 2017 Oscars, Eminem performing "Lose Yourself" at the 2020 Oscars, LOTR: Return of the King winning Best Picture, Troy Kotsur's win, Leonardo DiCaprio's win, Tom Cruise's post-9/11 introduction, Shrek, mh:greatestmovies:Spirited Away, mh:greatestmovies:The Incredibles, Wallace and Gromit, mh:greatestmovies:Ratatouille, mh:greatestmovies:WALL-E, and Spider-Verse winning Best Animation, Adam Lambert and Queen opening the 2019 ceremony, animated characters appearing in the Oscars, Heath Ledger's posthumous win, and Parasite's big victory).
 * 82) Speaking of the Oscars, the Academy has become an extremely idiotic and obnoxious association. There are so many reasons:
 * 83) *The fact that about 75% of the films nominated in the main categories are mostly dramas and have rarely nominated comedies, action, horror, science fiction, or other genres.
 * 84) *They don't recognize stunt work, motion-capture CGI performances, ensemble-cast work, or voice acting.
 * 85) **Hell, Jackie Chan or Tom Cruise could break their backs in their next films and the Academy would act like nothing happened.
 * 86) **Since 2010, they don't give motion capture CGI films a chance to be nominated such as The Adventures of Tintin or Disney's A Christmas Carol.
 * 87) **As for voice acting, it's really a missed opportunity for the Oscars to nominate voice acting regardless if it was voice acting for a hybrid movie or a purely animated film. Yes, it's not the same as legit acting but voice acting, in general, is still a big effort because you are still acting for a feature film. Some examples of actors who would win for best voice acting can include, but are not limited to: Dwayne Johnson in Moana, Mike Myers and Eddie Murphy in Shrek, Shameik Moore and Jake Johnson in Into the Spider-Verse, Robin Williams in Aladdin, James Earl Jones in The Lion King, Jack Black in Kung Fu Panda, Will Ferrell in Megamind, Tom Hanks in Toy Story and The Polar Express, Chris Pratt in The LEGO Movie, Andy Serkis in Lord of the Rings, Benedict Cumberbatch in The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, Scarlett Johansson in Her, Christian Bale in Howl's Moving Castle, Jason Bateman in Zootopia, John C. Reilly in Wreck-It Ralph, Billy Crystal and Steve Buscemi in Monsters Inc., Craig T. Nelson and Jason Lee in The Incredibles, Owen Wilson and Larry the Cable Guy in Cars, Ed Asner in Up, Jeff Garlin and Ben Burtt in WALL-E, Patton Oswalt and Lou Romano in Ratatouille, Amy Poehler and Phyllis Smith in Inside Out, Albert Brooks in Finding Nemo, Jamie Foxx and Tina Fey in Soul, Steve Carrell in Despicable Me, Patrick Warburton in The Emperor's New Groove, George Clooney in Fantastic Mr. Fox, Alan Rickman in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Tim Allen in Toy Story, John Leguizamo in Ice Age and Encanto, Will Arnett in LEGO Batman, Ed Helms in The Lorax, Seth McFarlane in Ted, Gary Oldman in Kung Fu Panda 2, Ralph Fiennes in Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, James Gandolfini in Where the Wild Things Are, Charles Fleischer in Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Liam Neeson in Narnia, Trey Parker and Matt Stone in South Park: Bigger Longer & Uncut and Team America: World Police; the list goes on.
 * 88) *The lack of diversity in the nominees, from people of color to female directors. This doesn't mean that they must be nominated just for being minorities; it means that when they do an outstanding work of film that's worthy of a nomination, they must be recognized.
 * 89) **The Academy also has a problem when it comes to nominating black people that goes far from the #OscarsSoWhite thing: Remember in Bowfinger when Eddie Murphy says that black actors are only nominated or win awards when they play slaves? That's kind of the problem: The fact that many black actors won and were nominated for playing negative stereotypes: Denzel Washington won for playing a corrupt cop, Halle Berry won for playing a drug addict, Lupita Nyong'o won for playing a slave, Mo'Nique won for playing an abusive ghetto mother, Mahershala Ali won for playing a drug dealer. In the year 2019, there were several good performances by black actresses like Lupita Nyong'o in Us or Alfre Woodward in Clemency; out of them all, The Academy nominated Cynthia Erivo for the movie Harriet, in which she plays a runaway slave.
 * 90) ***The worst part is that when there are movies with really original black performances like Straight Outta Compton, Dope, Da 5 Bloods, Do the Right Thing, Blindspotting or Us, the Academy ignores them.
 * 91) *Undeserved and infamous victories in various categories. While many of these films are good, you realize that they didn't deserve the award as their fellow nominees outperformed them on several levels. Some notorious examples are:
 * 92) **The King's Speech for BP over The Social Network, Toy Story 3 and Inception
 * 93) **Green Book for BP and Best Screenplay over The Favourite and Roma
 * 94) **Driving Miss Daisy for BP over Do the Right Thing and Born on the 4th of July
 * 95) **Shakespeare in Love for BP over Saving Private Ryan and Life is Beautiful
 * 96) **Crash for BP over Brokeback Mountain. Even its director Paul Haggis admitted that the movie did not deserve to be rewarded.
 * 97) **Kramer vs. Kramer for BP over Apocalypse Now
 * 98) **Out of Africa for BP over The Color Purple and Back to the Future
 * 99) **Ordinary People for BP over Raging Bull
 * 100) **Dances with Wolves for BP over GoodFellas
 * 101) **How Green Was My Valley for BP over Citizen Kane
 * 102) **Chariots of Fire for BP over Raiders of the Lost Ark
 * 103) **Annie Hall for BP over Star Wars
 * 104) **Tom Jones for BP over How the West Was Won
 * 105) **Around the World in 80 Days for BP over The Ten Commandments and The Searchers
 * 106) **Rocky for BP over Network, Taxi Driver, and All the President's Men
 * 107) **The Greatest Show on Earth for BP over Singin' in the Rain and High Noon
 * 108) **A Beautiful Mind for BP over The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
 * 109) **Chicago for BP over The Pianist, Spirited Away, and The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
 * 110) **Slumdog Millonaire for BP over The Dark Knight, WALL-E, The Wrestler, and Milk
 * 111) **Forrest Gump for BP over Pulp Fiction and The Shawshank Redemption. While Forrest Gump is a fantastic film with a lot of historical influence, both Pulp Fiction and The Shawshank Redemption are more highly acclaimed than ever before, especially since they're both on the top 10 in the IMDB Top 100 List, while Gump is number 12.
 * 112) **Happy Feet for Best Animated Feature over Cars, Over the Hedge, and Paprika. (which is not nominated but still)
 * 113) **Big Hero 6 for Best Animated Feature over The LEGO Movie (despite it won the Academy Award for Best Original Song), How to Train Your Dragon 2, Song of the Sea, and Tale of the Princess Kaguya. Surely Big Hero 6 is good, but the other films that got overshadowed by it have more beautiful and colourful animation and much more better and clever written stories while Big Hero 6 is pretty average and predictable, especially considering its infamous use of the twist-villain trope. Even Schaffrillas Productions admitted that Big Hero 6 didn't meet up when compared to the other 4. Not to mention, these infamous quotes.
 * 114) **Brave for Best Animated Feature over Paranorman and Wreck-It Ralph. While not a bad movie yet Brave is one of Pixar's weaker films next to The Good Dinosaur.
 * 115) **Frozen for Best Animated Feature over Despicable Me 2, The Croods, and The Wind Rises. Despite having its own fans, it has gained a really negative reputation for being way too popular.
 * 116) **Encanto for Best Animated Feature over The Mitchells Vs. The Machines and Flee. Despite Encanto being good, it didn't deserve the award since those 3 presenters (who just so happen to be the live-action versions of the Disney princesses, Cinderella, Ariel, and Jasmine) blatantly disregarded animation as a stupid kids thing which those two films completely defied since Mitchells is supposed to be for  all ages, including adults , and that Flee was made for a PG-13 audience.
 * 117) **Bohemian Rhapsody winning Best Editing
 * 118) **Suicide Squad winning Best Makeup and Hairstyling
 * 119) **Tom Hooper for Best Director over Christopher Nolan and David Fincher
 * 120) **Alejandro G. Iñarritu for Best Director over Richard Linklater and George Miller
 * 121) **Ron Howard for Best Director over David Lynch, Ridley Scott, and Peter Jackson
 * 122) **Michael Caine for Supporting Actor over Tom Cruise, Michael Clarke Duncan and Haley Joel Osment
 * 123) **Gary Oldman for Best Actor over Timothee Chalamet, Daniel Day Lewis, and James Franco (who wasn't even nominated)
 * 124) **Will Smith for Best Actor over Andrew Garfield, Warwick Davis, and Benedict Cumberbatch. And, on top of that, his infamous on-stage conflict with Chris Rock made his victory feel all the more awkward and unearned. Even Warwick Davis, who won the Best Supporting Actor award many times before, admitted that Smith couldn’t deserve his award.
 * 125) **Rex Harrison for Best Actor over Peter Sellers (who actually played THREE characters in Dr. Strangelove)
 * 126) **Marisa Tomei for Best Supporting Actress
 * 127) **Cher for Best Actress over Glenn Close
 * 128) **Sandra Bullock for Best Actress over Gabourey Sidibe
 * 129) **Meryl Streep for Best Actress over Viola Davis and Rooney Mara
 * 130) **Roman Polanski for Best Director (in this case, while his direction for The Pianist was phenomenal, he didn't deserve an award as he had been revealed to be a rapist prior to winning)
 * 131) *The infamous La La Land/Moonlight mix-up. Enough said.
 * 132) *The winners, and also nominees, in the main categories have become VERY predictable. You just have to check who won the golden globe (or previous major award) in the same category and there you have it. To the point where the Best Picture award is now more of a Most-Likely-to-Win Picture award.
 * 133) *Sometimes they come up with ridiculous ideas like the infamous "Best Popular Film" award or having presenters for presenters in the 2020 ceremony.
 * 134) *The infamous moment where The Boss Baby, of all things, was nominated for the 90th Academy Award for Best Animated film caused lots of rage among those that wanted films like The Lego Batman Movie, Captain Underpants, Your Name, Cars 3, and A Silent Voice to get a nomination. Heck, this wasn't the first time a movie with mixed to negative reception got nominated as Shark Tale, Norbit, Batman Forever, Into the Woods, Hillbilly Elegy, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close are also infamous examples of bad movies that received nominations.
 * 135) *There was another infamous moment when The Emoji Movie, which was critically panned from critics, was nominated for the 90th Academy Award for Best Original Song for “Feel This Moment” over “Friends & Family” and “Remember Me”. That award is completely undeserved, especially when it had very negative reception, and Pitbull and Christina Aguilera literally sang it live, FOR GOODNESS SAKE!
 * 136) *It's really common for Disney and Pixar to win an Oscar for the best-animated film thus being predictable as if it's almost like how SpongeBob, most of the time, keeps winning the Kids Choice Awards. While it's true that some of their animated films were well received, there have been fans that demand another film to win thus being disappointed.
 * 137) *Speaking of Pixar, the Oscars have been incredibly rude to Pixar and never gave the company a single best picture nomination. Even though Best Animated Feature awards are good, Pixar would’ve been better if they had a BP nomination for once. Some good Pixar movies like the first two Toy Story movies and the first and third Cars movies should’ve received Oscar nominations, but instead that never happened because of how Hollywood is mistreating Pixar, an animation studio that had traditional heartwarming moments and stories.
 * 138) *Ever since the Kevin Hart's tweets controversy back in 2018, the Oscars when onto 3 ceremonies without a host.
 * 139) *Back in 2019, the academy made the infamous statement that they would be presenting awards during the commercial breaks, they eventually retracted after a massive backlash; now in 2022, they seem to have learned nothing as they didn't presented several craft awards live during the telecast.
 * 140) *Due to their choices of presenters, there are often quite awkward and cringey moments during the ceremonies such as: James Corden and Rebel Wilson dressed as their laughable characters from Cats, Anne Hathaway and James Franco hosting the 2011 ceremony, Sacha Baron Cohen throwing ashes on Ryan Seacrest, basically any time the winner's speech gets interrupted by the music, every time the winner goes politic during it's speech, Brie Larson refusing to clap to Casey Affleck, Seth Macfarlane's awful "We Saw Your Boobs" song, Adrien Brody kissing Halle Berry and then Charlize Theron, Eugenio Derbez' wall joke in 2018, Sean Penn making a green card joke, Jennifer Aniston having to present an award right in front of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt only 5 years after divorcing the latter, Kate Mckinnon and Jason Bateman presenting in 2017, Melissa McCarthy and Brian Tyree Henry dressed as the Best Costume Design nominees, Sam Smith assuming that he was the first openly gay man to win an Oscar (which he wasn't), Gwyneth Paltrow absurdly emotional speech in 1999, Kirsten Wiig and Maya Rudolph "acting" and then "singing" while presenting an award, Jennifer Lawrence attempting to be funny while presenting Best Actor, John Travolta mispronouncing Idina Menzel's name, Michael Moore going on a preachy rant during his speech, Neil Patrick Harris appearing half-naked on stage, Amy Schumer calling Kirsten Dunst a "seat filler", the infuriating moment where Halle Bailey, Lily James & Naomi Scott demoted animation as something "kids enjoy and adults endure", the uncomfortable skit in which Regina Hall called up a bunch of actors to do "PCR tests", Will Smith slapping Chris Rock, that awful rendition of We Don't Talk About Bruno, etc.
 * 141) *Since we mentioned Halle, Lily, and Naomi demoting animation being just a stupid kids thing, it goes to show how hypocritical the Oscars are; as they nominated movies like Triplets of Belleville, Isle of Dogs, Persepolis, The Illusionist, My Life As A Zucchini, The Breadwinner, Loving Vincent, The Wind Rises, and Flee which are all rated PG-13, as well as Chico and Rita and I Lost My Body which, despite being unrated, also count as they’re also adult animated films, and even Waltz with Bashir for Best International Film and Anomalisa for Best Animated Feature which were both rated R. Speaking of that, they also nominated "Blame Canada" for Best Original Song at the 72nd Academy Awards, which came from the South Park movie, which was based on an ADULT cartoon, and Robin Williams sang it live, FOR CHRISTS' SAKE!!!! Not only that, they nominated B.J. Novak’s “The Book with No Pictures” for Best Original Book when B.J. somehow made the Oscars laugh like crazy, when he obviously read his book live at the 2016 Oscars, is that crazy?
 * 142) *The Academy has been criticized for often giving several nominations to films that aren't really that impressive, when those spots could have easily been given to a snubbed film. Some examples being King Richard, Joker, Bohemian Rhapsody, Vice, Darkest Hour, The Danish Girl, American Sniper, American Hustle, The King's Speech, and The Emoji Movie.
 * 143) *Another infuriating reason about the academy is the infamous "Oscars Club" theory, similar to the "secret committees" theory that ran in the Grammy Awards until 2021: It's the fact that various popular names like Julianne Moore, Leonardo DiCaprio, Octavia Spencer, Denzel Washington, Glenn Close, Charlize Theron, Amy Adams, Christian Bale, Nicole Kidman, Kate Winslet, Gary Oldman, Bradley Cooper, Brad Pitt, Mark Ruffalo, Jennifer Lawrence, and even directors like Adam McKay and David O'Russell are nominated out of favoritism instead of actually deserving it; in other words, they get nominations simply because they're the academy's "favorites".
 * 144) **Meryl Streep's case proves this entirely. We know she's a great actress and some of her best performances have been reasonably nominated. However, the Academy seems to literally be obsessed with her as they have been giving her nominations even for average performances like those of Postcards from the Edge, Music of the Heart, Julie & Julia, The Iron Lady, August Osage County, Into the Woods, Florence Foster Jenkins, and The Post. It becomes very annoying and causes you to not take seriously her new nominations due to the several ones that she got them in the past. Even Meryl, herself, has made fun of this.
 * 145) *The academy also has this terrible tendency of rewarding a person, not for the work/performance for which they were nominated, but more to recognize their trajectory and in compensation for the times they didn't win in the past which becomes very upsetting when you consider that they have done a lot better work in other films than the one they're being awarded for, even if they did do a fairly amazing job with the material that they were given and they still had their merits. Let's say this person is a remarkable name in the film industry but has never won an Oscar and all of his fans are very upset over this that they expect him/her to win this time, but he/she doesn't and everyone gets angry, then this person gets nominated once again and gets a huge Oscar campaign rooting for him/her, however, they're not doing it because it's work/performance was truly outstanding, but because they want him/her to win once and for all and become an academy award winner. And that's pretty much what's been happening in recent years as the academy doesn't really award veteran actors for their nominated work but their trajectories overall. Some examples are:
 * 146) **Leonardo DiCaprio: Won for The Revenant, should've won for either The Wolf of Wall Street or Titanic
 * 147) **Gary Oldman: Won for Darkest Hour, should've won for Léon: The Professional or Tinker Taylor: Soldier Spy
 * 148) **Al Pacino: Won for Scent of a Woman, should've won for The Godfather trilogy, Scarface or Dog Day Afternoon
 * 149) **Morgan Freeman: Won for Million Dollar Baby, should've won for either The Shawshank Redemption or The Lego Movie
 * 150) **Kate Winslet: Won for The Reader, should've won for Titanic
 * 151) **Denzel Washington: Won for Training Day, should've won for Malcolm X
 * 152) **Jeff Bridges: Won for Crazy Heart, should've won for The Big Lebowski
 * 153) **Paul Newman: Won for The Color of Money, should've won for Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
 * 154) **Whoopi Goldberg: Won for Ghost, should've won for The Color Purple
 * 155) **Henry Fonda: Won for On Golden Pond, should've won for Grapes of Wrath or 12 Angry Men
 * 156) **Reese Witherspoon: Won for Walk the Line, should've won for Election
 * 157) **Nicole Kidman: Won for The Hours, should've won for Eyes Wide Shut
 * 158) **Julianne Moore: Won for Still Alice, should've won for Far from Heaven
 * 159) **Jessica Chastain: Won for The Eyes of Tammy Faye, should've won for Zero Dark Thirty
 * 160) **Christian Bale: Won for The Fighter, should've won for American Psycho
 * 161) **Cuba Gooding Jr.: Won for Jerry Maguire, should've won for Boyz N' the Hood
 * 162) **Will Smith: Won for King Richard, should've won for The Pursuit of Happiness
 * 163) **Spike Lee: Won for BlackKklansman, should've won for Do the Right Thing
 * 164) **Guillermo del Toro: Won for The Shape of Water, should've won for Pan's Labyrinth
 * 165) **Martin Scorsese: Won for The Departed, should've won for Taxi Driver, Goodfellas, Casino, The Color of Money or Raging Bull
 * 166) **Will Arnett: Won for Million Dollar Arm, should’ve won for The Lego Movie
 * 167) *Their undeserved and infamous snubs, which has been a problem since the Golden Age of Hollywood. Here are some notorious examples:
 * 168) **Jake Gyllenhaal for Nightcrawler
 * 169) **Toni Colette for Hereditary
 * 170) **David Oyelowo for Selma
 * 171) **Ethan Hawke for First Reformed
 * 172) **Lupita N'yongo for Us
 * 173) **Awkwafina for The Farewell
 * 174) **Andrew Garfield for The Social Network and Silence
 * 175) **Malcolm McDowell for A Clockwork Orange
 * 176) **Christian Bale for American Psycho
 * 177) **Jennifer Lopez for Hustlers
 * 178) **Uma Thurman for Kill Bill
 * 179) **Emily Blunt for Sicario, Edge of Tomorrow and The Devil Wears Prada
 * 180) **Charlize Theron for Mad Max: Fury Road and Young Adult
 * 181) **Cuba Gooding Jr. and Ice Cube for Boyz N' the Hood
 * 182) **Willem Dafoe for The Lighthouse, Spider-Man and The Last Temptation of Christ
 * 183) **Alan Rickman for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 and Die Hard
 * 184) **Adam Sandler for Uncut Gems and Punch-Drunk Love
 * 185) **Robin Williams for One Hour Photo
 * 186) **Benicio Del Toro for Sin City and Sicario
 * 187) **Clive Owen for Children of Men
 * 188) **Carla Gugino for Gerald's Game
 * 189) **Eminem for 8 Mile
 * 190) **Emma Stone for Easy A
 * 191) **Delroy Lindo for Da 5 Bloods
 * 192) **Idris Elba for Beasts of No Nation
 * 193) **Tom Hardy for Locke
 * 194) **Samuel L. Jackson for The Hateful 8
 * 195) **Jim Carrey for The Truman Show and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
 * 196) **Steve Carell for Little Miss Sunshine and The 40-Year-Old Virgin
 * 197) **Will Ferrell for Elf and Stranger than Fiction
 * 198) **Zach Galifianakis for The Hangover
 * 199) **James McAvoy for Split
 * 200) **David Thwelis for Naked
 * 201) **Miles Teller for Whiplash
 * 202) **Trevante Rhodes for Moonlight
 * 203) **James Franco for The Disaster Artist
 * 204) **John Cusack for Being John Malkovich
 * 205) **Matthew McConaughey for Interstellar
 * 206) **Stephen Root and Jennifer Aniston for Office Space
 * 207) **Mads Mikkelsen for Casino Royale, Another Round and The Hunt
 * 208) **Mel Gibson and Gary Sinise for Ransom
 * 209) **Zach Braff for Garden State
 * 210) **Shia LaBeouf for Honey Boy
 * 211) **Tobey Maguire for Brothers
 * 212) **Jude Law for The Holiday
 * 213) **Dan Stevens for The Guest
 * 214) **Jodie Comer for The Last Duel
 * 215) **Megan Fox for Jennifer's Body
 * 216) **Lindsay Lohan and Rachel McAdams for Mean Girls
 * 217) **Taraji P. Henson for Hidden Figures
 * 218) **Amy Adams for Arrival and Enchanted
 * 219) **Zooey Deschanel for (500) Days of Summer
 * 220) **Hailee Steinfeld for The Edge of Seventeen
 * 221) **Rachel Zegler for Spielberg's West Side Story
 * 222) **Sienna Miller for American Woman and Factory Girl
 * 223) **Kirsten Stewart for Clouds of Sils Maria and Adventureland
 * 224) **Matthew Broderick for Glory, Biloxi Blues, and Ferris Bueller's Day Off
 * 225) **Steve Martin for The Jerk, Roxanne, and Father of the Bride
 * 226) **John Belushi for Animal House and The Blues Brothers
 * 227) **John Candy for Planes, Trains & Automobiles
 * 228) **Bob Hoskins for Who Framed Roger Rabbit?
 * 229) **Matthew Lillard for Scream and Scooby-Doo
 * 230) **Michael Fassbender for Shame and Hunger
 * 231) **Hayden Christensen and Peter Sarsgaard for Shattered Glass
 * 232) **Domnhall Gleeson for About Time
 * 233) **Will Smith for I Am Legend
 * 234) **Javier Bardem for Skyfall
 * 235) **Steve Zahn for Rescue Dawn
 * 236) **Ryan Reynolds for Deadpool
 * 237) **Jack Black for High Fidelity
 * 238) **Robert De Niro for The Irishman
 * 239) **Charles Grodin for Midnight Run
 * 240) **Lakeith Stanfield for Sorry to Bother You
 * 241) **Ewan McGregor for Trainspotting and Moulin Rouge
 * 242) **Joseph-Gordon Levitt for 50/50, Brick and Mysterious Skin
 * 243) **Ryan Gosling for Lars and the Real Girl, Drive, The Ides of March, and Blade Runner 2049
 * 244) **Tom Cruise for M:I - Fallout, Collateral, and A Few Good Men
 * 245) **Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd for Back to the Future
 * 246) **Val Kilmer for Tombstone, The Doors, and Wonderland
 * 247) **Robert Pattinson for The Lighthouse and Good Time
 * 248) **Tom Hanks for Captain Phillips
 * 249) **Simon Rex for Red Rocket
 * 250) **Guy Pearce for Memento
 * 251) **Bill Skarsgård for IT
 * 252) **Rainn Wilson for Super!
 * 253) **Joaquin Phoenix for Her
 * 254) **Josh Brolin for Avengers: Infinity War
 * 255) **Ben Affleck for Chasing Amy and Gone Girl
 * 256) **Robert Downey Jr. for Avengers: Endgame and Iron Man
 * 257) **Nicolas Cage for Face/Off, Pig, Lord of War, and Mandy
 * 258) **Michael B. Jordan for Creed, Black Panther and Fruitvale Station
 * 259) **Jared Leto, Marlon Wayans and Jennifer Connelly for Requiem for a Dream
 * 260) **Jackie Earle Haley, Billy Crudup, Matthew Goode and Malin Akerman for Watchmen
 * 261) **Eddie Murphy for The Nutty Professor, Beverly Hills Cop and Dolemite is my Name
 * 262) **Andy Serkis for the modern Planet of the Apes movies and Lord of the Rings
 * 263) **Hugh Jackman for Prisoners, The Fountain, The Prestige, and Logan
 * 264) **Song Kang Ho and Park So-Dam for Parasite
 * 265) **Taron Egerton for Rocketman
 * 266) **Patrick Stewart for Logan
 * 267) **Bill Murray for Rushmore and Life Aquatic
 * 268) **Robert Eggers for Best Director (The VVitch, The Lighthouse)
 * 269) **Denis Villeneuve for Best Director (Blade Runner 2049, Dune)
 * 270) **Ridley Scott for Best Director (Alien, Blade Runner, The Martian)
 * 271) **Christopher Nolan for Best Director (Inception, Interstellar, The Dark Knight, etc.)
 * 272) **Spike Lee for Best Director (Do the Right Thing, 25th Hour, and Malcolm X)
 * 273) **Hoop Dreams, Grizzly Man, Life Itself, Fahrenheit 9/11, Won't You Be My Neighbor? and Val for Best Documentary
 * 274) **Waking Life, Mary and Max, Tangled, Megamind, Despicable Me, The Peanuts Movie, Rio, Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, Flushed Away, Over the Hedge, Curious George, The Polar Express, Arthur Christmas, The Adventures of Tintin, The LEGO Movie, The LEGO Batman Movie, The Simpsons Movie, Paprika, The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie, The Cat Returns, Waltz with Bashir, Ponyo, Arrietty, Your Name, A Silent Voice, Josee, The Tiger and the Fish, A Letter to Momo, Words Bubble Up Like Soda Pop, the CGI Doraemon films, Lupin III: The First, Millennium Actress, The Wild Thornberrys Movie, The Boy and the Beast, and Weathering With You for Best Animated Feature. Hell, a lot of anime films get snubs with Belle and Demon Slayer: Mugen Train being the biggest offenders.
 * 275) **For Best Original Song:
 * 276) ***"Love Me Like You Do" from 50 Shades of Grey. Sure, "Earned It" was good, but this one was a worldwide hit.
 * 277) ***"See You Again" from Furious 7. Very hypocritical from them considering that this was one of the most popular songs of 2015.
 * 278) ***"We Don't Talk About Bruno" from Encanto. As with "Love Me Like You Do", this was also a worldwide hit and deserved the nomination more than "Dos Oruguitas".
 * 279) ***"For You" from Daredevil
 * 280) ***"Maniac" from Flashdance
 * 281) ***"Porcelain" from The Beach
 * 282) ***"Danger Zone" from Top Gun
 * 283) ***"Kiss Me" from She's All That
 * 284) ***"Zero to Hero" from Hercules
 * 285) ***"I'm Alright" from Caddyshack
 * 286) ***"You're Welcome" from Moana
 * 287) ***"Keep Holding On" from Eragon
 * 288) ***"Men in Black" from Men in Black
 * 289) ***"Alice" from Alice in Wonderland
 * 290) ***"No Easy Way Out" from Rocky IV
 * 291) ***"I Believe I Can Fly from Space Jam
 * 292) ***"Upside Down" from Curious George
 * 293) ***"He Mele No Lilo" from Lilo & Stitch
 * 294) ***"I'm Still Here" from Treasure Planet
 * 295) ***"Scream" from High School Musical 3
 * 296) ***"Cry Little Sister" from The Lost Boys
 * 297) ***“Scotty Doesn’t Know” from EuroTrip
 * 298) ***"Lady Marmalade" from Moulin Rouge!
 * 299) ***"Everything Burns" from Fantastic Four
 * 300) ***"Darling I Do" from Shrek Forever After
 * 301) ***"The Heat is On" from Beverly Hills Cop
 * 302) ***"Never Say Never" from The Karate Kid
 * 303) ***"You Know My Name" from Casino Royale
 * 304) ***"Princes of the Universe" from Highlander
 * 305) ***"Little Wonders" from Meet the Robinsons
 * 306) ***"Fight the Power" from Do the Right Thing
 * 307) ***"Drive It Like You Stole It" from Sing Street
 * 308) ***"Playground Love" from The Virgin Suicides
 * 309) ***"Gangsta's Paradise" from Dangerous Minds
 * 310) ***"Rocking the Suburbs" from Over the Hedge
 * 311) ***"Exit Music (For a Film)" from Romeo + Juliet
 * 312) ***"Brighter Than Sunshine" from A Lot Like Love
 * 313) ***"Take This Job and Shove It" from Office Space
 * 314) ***"Please Mr. Kennedy" from Inside Llewyn Davis
 * 315) ***"The Climb" from Hannah Montana: The Movie
 * 316) ***“Everything is Awesome” from The Lego Movie
 * 317) ***"When Can I See You Again" from Wreck-It Ralph
 * 318) ***"I'm Not a Girl, Not Yet a Woman" from Crossroads
 * 319) ***"Sunflower" from Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse
 * 320) ***"America, F Yeah" from Team America: World Police
 * 321) ***"St. Elmo's Fire (Man in Motion)" from St. Elmo's Fire
 * 322) ***"Up There" from South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut
 * 323) ***"Don't You (Forget About Me)" from The Breakfast Club
 * 324) ***"God Bless Us Everyone" from Disney's A Christmas Carol
 * 325) ***"Forever May Not Be Long Enough" from The Mummy Returns
 * 326) ***"Knockin' on Heaven's Door" from Pat Garret and Billy the Kid
 * 327) ***"What I've Done", "New Divide" and "Iridescent" from the Transformers films
 * 328) ***"Decode", "Eclipse (All Yours)" and "A Thousand Years" from the Twilight films
 * 329) ***"Hero", "Ordinary", "Vindicated" and "Signal Fire" from the original Spider-Man trilogy
 * 330) ***And, worst of all, “Feel This Moment” from The Emoji Movie
 * 331) **Legendary directors like Orson Welles, Charlie Chaplin, Federico Fellini, David Lynch, Ingmar Bergman, Andréi Tarkovski, Akira Kurosawa, Agnès Varda, George Lucas, Alfred Hitchcock and Stanley Kubrick never won the Oscar for Best Directing. Quentin Tarantino hasn't won one yet and his next film will be his last one.
 * 332) **Several female directors, for example: Mary Harron for American Psycho, Greta Gerwig for Little Women, Celine Sciamma for Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Ava DuVernay for Selma, Claire Denis for Beau Travail, Lulu Wang for The Farewell, Mati Diop for Atlantics, Regina King for One Night in Miami. Ironic that they promote feminism but don't nominate these people.
 * 333) **Plenty of iconic and amazing films, both classic and modern, like King Kong, Duck Soup, M, The Third Man, Singin' in the Rain, Rear Window, Seven Samurai, Tokyo Story, Vertigo, North By Northwest, Some Like it Hot, Psycho, The Searchers, Cool Hand Luke, 8½, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Blazing Saddles, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, The Mirror, Alien, Manhattan, Airplane!, The Empire Strikes Back, The Shining, Blow Out, Blade Runner, The Thing, Scarface, The Terminator, Ghostbusters, Ran, Back to the Future, The Breakfast Club, After Hours, Aliens, The Princess Bride, Full Metal Jacket, Grave of the Fireflies, Die Hard, When Harry Met Sally, Do the Right Thing, Boyz N the Hood, Terminator 2, Reservoir Dogs, Jurassic Park, Groundhog Day, Clerks, The Lion King, Se7en, Toy Story, Heat, The Usual Suspects, Before Sunrise, Sling Blade, Chasing Amy, Princess Mononoke, Boogie Nights, The Truman Show, Being John Malkovich, Eyes Wide Shut, Magnolia, Toy Story 2, Office Space, The Matrix, Fight Club, In the Mood for Love, Requiem for a Dream, Almost Famous, Memento, Shrek, The Royal Tenenbaums, Signs, Spirited Away, City of God, Oldboy, School of Rock, Kill Bill, Shaun of the Dead, Mean Girls, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, The Incredibles, Spider-Man 2, Before Sunset, Collateral, Sin City, Caché, A History of Violence, The Prestige, Casino Royale, Children of Men, Pan's Labyrinth, Hot Fuzz, Into the Wild, I'm Not There, Ratatouille, Taare Zameen Par, Tropic Thunder, The Wrestler, WALL-E, The Dark Knight, Iron Man, Where the Wild Things Are, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, Shutter Island, I Saw the Devil, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2, Drive, Skyfall, The Avengers, The Master, Prisoners, Miracle in Cell No. 7, Gone Girl, The LEGO Movie, Interstellar, Wild Tales, Inside Out, Silence, Your Name, Zootopia, The VVitch, Sing Street, Blade Runner 2049, War for the Planet of the Apes, The Disaster Artist, I Tonya, Coco, A Silent Voice, Logan, Paddington 2, A Quiet Place, Eighth Grade, If Beale Street Could Talk, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, Avengers: Endgame, Booksmart, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Uncut Gems, Knives Out, The Lighthouse, Soul, I'm Thinking of Ending Things, Another Round, Spencer, Tick Tick Boom!, Spider-Man: No Way Home, and Red Rocket never received Best Picture nominations despite being considered some of the best films of their years, as well as nominations in other, deserved categories.
 * 334) ***Also, speaking of the above, the Academy almost never usually considers comedies as Best Picture nominees with rare exceptions, which is pretty ironic and hypocritical considering the fact that a good vast of the Academy's members are/were comedians and also the fact that all, if not at least most, of the Academy's members, have been involved in a comedy film at least once during their respective careers. Also, there are many comedy films over the years that were loved by both critics and audiences that could've been easily been Best Picture nominees but were sadly snubbed: Some good examples being Modern Times, Some Like It Hot, Pink Panther, The Producers, Blazing Saddles, The Heartbreak Kid, Young Frankenstein, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, Life of Brian, Animal House, The Jerk, Airplane!, The Blues Brothers, Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Trading Places, Caddyshack, Local Hero, The King of Comedy, Tootsie, Coming to America, Ghostbusters, This is Spinal Tap, Top Secret!, Beverly Hills Cop, The Goonies, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Back to School, Spaceballs, The Naked Gun, A Fish Called Wanda, Withnail & I, Beetlejuice, Planes, Trains and Automobiles, When Harry Met Sally, Christmas Vacation, Hot Shots!, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, Home Alone, Father of the Bride, Wayne's World, Groundhog Day, Dazed and Confused, The Mask, Dumb and Dumber, Tommy Boy, Clueless, Mallrats, The Nutty Professor, Grosse Point Blank, The Big Lebowski, Liar Liar, The Wedding Singer, Rush Hour, Baseketball, Rushmore, Bowfinger, Galaxy Quest, Office Space, Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery, There's Something About Mary, Zoolander, The Royal Tenenbaums, Old School, Elf, School of Rock, Mean Girls, Napoleon Dynamite, Shaun of the Dead, Anchorman, Dodgeball, Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle, Team America: World Police, The 40-Year-Old Virgin, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Wedding Crashers, Thank You for Smoking, Grandma's Boy, Talladega Nights, Borat, Hot Fuzz, Knocked Up, Superbad, Enchanted, Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story, Tropic Thunder, Step Brothers, Role Models, Be Kind Rewind, In Bruges, The Hangover, Zombieland, Four Lions, Easy A, Crazy Stupid Love, Bridesmaids, Goon, Seven Psychopaths, This is the End, The World's End, Paddington, 22 Jump Street, Deadpool, The Death of Stalin, The Disaster Artist, The Big Sick, Deadpool 2, Paddington 2, Booksmart, Dolemite Is My Name, etc.
 * 335) ***The same can be said for action films of any kind including superhero films that were considered maybe the best over the years: If the Academy can nominate films such as Mad Max: Fury Road, The Lord of the Rings, Avatar or Black Panther for Best Picture, then why not films such as The Empire Strikes Back, Aliens, The Terminator, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Predator, The Matrix, Casino Royale, Skyfall, Point Break, Enter the Dragon, 300, Wanted, Watchmen, Top Gun, V for Vendetta, Rambo: First Blood, Independence Day, Sin City, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, The Guest, John Wick, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Iron Man, Taken, The Dark Knight, The Raid: Redemption, Edge of Tomorrow, Star Trek, Spider-Man 2, X-Men: Days of Future Past, Logan, Avengers: Endgame, Shoot Em' Up, Spider-Man: No Way Home and the like?
 * 336) ***Animated movies have been terribly mistreated by the Academy and almost all the time snubbed for a Best Picture nomination at the Academy. The only Animated Films that managed to get nominated are Beauty and The Beast, Up, and Toy Story 3. Good examples of animated movies that were snubbed but considered worthy for a Best Picture nomination are: Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Fantasia, Pinocchio, Bambi, Dumbo, Peter Pan, The Jungle Book, The Castle of Cagliostro, The Secret of NIMH, Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Castle in the Sky, The Land Before Time, My Neighbor Totoro, Akira, Grave of The Fireflies, The Little Mermaid, Kiki's Delivery Service, Aladdin, The Nightmare Before Christmas, The Lion King (the most infamous example), Toy Story (since it was THE first 3D animated movie, this also counts as another infamous example), Whisper of the Heart, Princess Mononoke, The Prince of Egypt, Perfect Blue, Mulan, Toy Story 2, South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut, The Iron Giant, Chicken Run, The Emperor's New Groove, Shrek (AKA the first ever animated movie to win an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature), Monsters, Inc., Waking Life, Spirited Away, Ice Age, Lilo & Stitch, Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Shrek 2, Howl's Moving Castle, Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, Ratatouille, Persepolis, The Simpsons Movie, Kung Fu Panda, Ponyo, WALL-E (another infamous example), Waltz with Bashir, Coraline, Mary and Max, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs, The Secret of Kells, The Princess and the Frog, Tangled, How to Train Your Dragon, Arthur Christmas, Kung Fu Panda 2, The Adventures of Tintin, Rango, Wreck-It Ralph, The Wind Rises, The LEGO Movie (which won the Oscar for Best Original Song), How to Train Your Dragon 2, Song of the Sea, Tale of the Princess Kaguya, When Marnie Was There, Inside Out, Zootopia, Kubo and the Two Strings, Moana, Coco, A Silent Voice, The LEGO Batman Movie, Your Name, Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse (Come on Academy, this one could've easily made it), How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World, Toy Story 4, Klaus, Demon Slayer the Movie: Mugen Train, Wolfwalkers, Soul, Encanto, The Mitchells vs the Machines, Flee and Belle''.
 * 337) ***And with horror movies; that's another case that's worthy of an entire page. The Academy has been shamelessly ignoring horror movies ever since its beginning despite the fact that horror is one of the most popular and iconic movie genres, and that a lot of them have received positive reviews from both critics and audiences. The only horror movies that got nominated for Best Picture are The Exorcist, Jaws, The Sixth Sense and Get Out while Silence of the Lambs is the only one that managed to win. Clear examples of awesome horror movies that were sadly snubbed for both Best Picture and other categories are: Vampyr, Frankenstein, King Kong, Dracula, The Night of the Hunter, Eyes Without a Face, Psycho, The Innocents, Night of the Living Dead, Rosemary's Baby, The Haunting, The Wicker Man, Duel, Don't Look Now, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Carrie, Halloween, Suspiria, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, The Omen, House, Dawn of the Dead, Eraserhead, Nosferatu, Alien, The Shining, The Evil Dead, An American Werewolf in London, Scanners, The Thing, Poltergeist, Twilight Zone: The Movie, Videodrome, A Nightmare on Elm Street, Gremlins, The Lost Boys, The Fly, Evil Dead 2, Fright Night, Dead Ringers, They Live, The Serpent and the Rainbow, Manhunter, Jacob's Ladder, Misery, Candyman, Braindead, Interview with the Vampire, Se7en, Scream, Ringu, Audition, The Blair Witch Project, The Devil's Backbone, Mulholland Drive, The Others, The Ring, 28 Days Later, Signs, Saw, The Descent, The Host, The Mist, The Orphanage, [REC], Trick R' Treat, Inside, Thirst, Let the Right One In, The Loved Ones, Zombieland, Drag Me to Hell, I Saw the Devil, Insidious, Attack the Block, The Cabin in the Woods, The Conjuring, The Babadook, Creep, It Follows, Bone Tomahawk, The VVitch, Train to Busan, IT, Annihilation, A Quiet Place, Hereditary, Us, Midsommar and The Lighthouse.
 * 338) *And finally, here's an infuriating fact about the Academy in general that, while it sounds logical at first, then starts to make no sense: The only people who gets to become members of the Academy, and therefore choose the nominees/winners of each year's ceremonies, are people who are involved in the film industry (actors and actresses, directors, screenwriters, producers, cinematographers, costume designers, set designers, film editors, makeup artists and hairdressers, etc). But not only are  we  the ones who pay tickets to see a movie, but we're the ones who have the power to make a film popular (or at least a cult classic) and/or succeed at the box office. So why can't we, the audiences, as well as the critics, be the ones who get to choose the best in film of each year? Simply put, Hollywood is practically and literally congratulating itself.
 * 339) Several horror films heavily rely on cheap jump-scares, rather than the atmosphere, like The Nun, Annabelle, The Quiet Ones, Ouija, Deliver Us from Evil, Devil's Due, Chernobyl Diaries, 11-11-11, the entire Paranormal Activity series, the Insidious sequels, Winchester, As Above So Below, The Apparition, The Gallows, Texas Chainsaw 3D, V/H/S Viral, Slender Man, The Devil Inside, Silent Hill Revelation, Wish Upon, Mirrors, The Eye, Friend Request, The Devil Inside, The Woman in Black, The Rite, The Boy, The Bye Bye Man, Rings, The Last Exorcism: Part 2, The Curse of La Llorona, etc. And if it's not with jump scares, they'll tend to overuse shock content. Some examples being: The Hostel franchise, the Saw franchise, the Human Centipede trilogy or Piranha 3DD.
 * 340) *Here's a video explaining the problem. (See the videos section below)
 * 341) Ever since the 2000s, certain action movies have poorly done CGI/special effects, bad cinematography such as shaky cam, too many jump cuts and overall bad editing in fight sequences, or just downright weak acting, although this isn't always the case.
 * 342) Movie adaptations don't often do their source material justice or are being loosely based on them are usually most prominent with movies based on video games, books, or TV shows (or in some cases, they are based on other things like toys, board games, or internet-related stuff).
 * 343) Following dark, problematic and controversial events like Trump winning the 2016 election, the Charlottesville riots, the tragic killing of George Floyd which led to pillaging and riots across the U.S.A. for months, the 2021 United States Capitol storming, Anthony Fauci who has been revealed to be repeatedly misleading the public in health and the pandemic, the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse, the acquittal of George Zimmerman, Robb Elementary school shooting, the downfall of Weinstein and its aftermath; this led to intensified movements like #MeToo, Time's Up, Black Lives Matter and the "Woke" movement in general which made progressive propaganda even more prominent in media and entertainment.
 * 344) *In fact, many of these events are the main reasons many celebrities in the industry became incredibly toxic, out of control, or downright terrible people in general.
 * 345) Hypocrisy: They are promoting diversity as shown above yet they are clearly fine with demonizing male/white characters by making them dumb and stupid like how men/white people used to do the same to females or people of color many years ago.
 * 346) *There is also another case of hypocrisy through the French movie industry for the movie Cuties, where it tries to promote anti-pedophilic messages, but in true Cuties fashion, the movie fully contradicts itself and fully participates in pedophilia with underaged women (11-year-old children) participating in sexual activities in which the director, parents of these children, or anyone else on production, possibly forced them to do so!!
 * 347) Often nowadays, many "important" movies are made for a specific audience under the guise of promoting diversity and equality so that minority audiences see themselves on screen. Representation and diversity is a good thing; but the problem is that being movies with a progressive theme, if you don't like the movie and you say so, they will accuse you of being racist or sexist. Frankly speaking, making films for a single audience segment is discrimination; we need good movies made by women and minorities and good movies about women and minorities, no one needs movies made for women and minorities. The fact that a film is progressive does not automatically make it good, and quotes like "It wasn't made for you, so shut up!" only serve as an excuse to dismiss criticism of those films; to the point where some critics, SJW and woke vloggers, and celebrities, at worse their ego, promote those movies more for the progressive message than for the film itself which leads towards what is called "Inclusivity Bias" as coined by BlackLightJack. Some examples are:
 * 348) *BlacKkKlansman, Get Out, A Wrinkle in Time, Crazy Rich Asians, and Black Panther were promoted as films made mainly for African American or Asian viewers; if you say you disliked any of these movies, many corrupt critics, some of the people involved with these projects, and definitely some of its audience may call you racist, even when you're not being so. While not all of them are bad, some of them are really good, these acts essentially give these films a bad name.
 * 349) *2016's Ghostbusters reboot, MIB International, Birds of Prey, Thunder Force, Shadow in the Cloud, Moxie, The 355, and 2019's Black Christmas are films with feminist themes, but they end up being misandrists because in these, the male characters are portrayed very negatively while the women are superior to them in any way. Dislike them and you're automatically a misogynist. Even if it's with films with a good balance of female to male representation like Wonder Woman.
 * 350) *Speaking of Wonder Woman, while it's an amazing movie, movie theater chain Alamo Drafthouse hosted women-only screenings of the movie to promote the feminist message; when people complained about this, they were called sexist and made fun of.
 * 351) *Another infamous example is the background of the 2019 movie adaptation of Charlie's Angels, director Elizabeth Banks (known for being a radical feminist on social media) said in several interviews that this movie was not for men but women specifically; When the movie flopped at the box office, Banks publicly blamed men for not watching her movie, claiming that men don't see or like movies starring women (which is false) and saying that she was forced to watch men-led films all her life, which contradicts her previous statements and makes her hypocritical and cynical for not accepting her mistake, she also victimizes herself because nobody forces you to watch movies, you do it because you want to. The movie, anyway, has the same bad characteristics mentioned above.
 * 352) *When Santa Inc. got tons of criticism online for being anti-white and anti-Christian propaganda, Seth Rogen labeled the haters of the show as "white supremacists", even if the criticism is constructive, or the haters are not white. This shows Seth Rogen is not only incapable of handling criticism, it also makes him a rabid SJW.
 * 353) *One of the recent examples in shows is High Guardian Spice which despite being promoted as a diversity show ended up having many females, one trans male, and two males, which does not make it diverse let alone does not make any sense as the world is around 105 boys per 100 girls (51% Man, 49 Woman). Like the examples above they also blamed the reviewers by calling them Anti-LGBT despite the fact even some LGBT users are not happy with the show.
 * 354) *What's upsetting is that Hollywood has proved that they are actually capable of making good feminist films where the male characters are not demonized and the female characters are not "Mary Sues": The Lovely Bones is a film that shows the dangers that girls and teenagers can face in their neighborhoods; Catfish and Trust_ show in a disturbing and tragic way the dangers to which adolescents, especially girls, are exposed through the internet and social networks. There are also films like North Country that show the struggles women face in America's dark areas and those that address the theme of friendship, sisterhood, and union in a memorable and moving way like Thelma & Louise, The Color Purple, Booksmart, Little Women, Aquamarine, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, and even Sucker Punch.
 * 355) Quantity over Quality: Many modern-day films and TV shows only cared about making money than making good quality films and shows themselves, even long before 2016 (as long as the entertainment industry itself, to be frank). This is especially true nowadays, hence the phrase "Hollywood's running out of ideas" and the “Everything old is new again” speech due to unoriginal ideas, remakes, reboots, sequels, prequels, spin-offs, countless adaptations of stuff that originated from other media, or franchise milking.l
 * 356) *The live-action remakes of Disney's classic animated films are the best example.
 * 357) **As a matter of fact, The Walt Disney Company has become one of the perfect examples of everything that's wrong with Hollywood today, as they evidently seem to care more about making money and profit from its properties than actually making quality art and content despite also making some great content from things like the MCU and Pixar. And this became even more evident after they acquired 20th Century Fox.
 * 358) *Star Wars, Fast and Furious, The Hangover, Terminator, Pirates of the Caribbean, Die Hard, Men in Black, Home Alone, Despicable Me, Dumb and Dumber, Ted, Hotel Transylvania, and Ice Age are franchises that declined in quality because of their forced sequels. Hell, some people even believe that the MCU of all franchises (despite it chiefly still being good) is now starting to veer into this territory! That is how bad it is!
 * 359) *Not even the rest of the entertainment industry is safe as shows like Family Guy, The Simpsons, The Loud House, mh:besttvshows:Sesame Street, SpongeBob SquarePants and The Fairly OddParents went downhill due to milking.
 * 360) *While it is true that Hollywood stood as a business just so they can make revenue, these days it no longer balances making original artwork and profiting, instead of weighing on the latter.
 * 361) *The leaked script for CW's infamous Powerpuff Girls live-action reboot is outright irredeemably awful in every possible way, to the point that Blossom's soon-to-be actress, left the project. It's so unfaithful to the source material it makes every other reboot, remake, or adaptation not made by CW look tolerable in comparison, even Dragonball: Evolution, the Super Mario Bros. movie from 1993, and the Shyamalan Avatar: The Last Airbender movie. It also contains as much propaganda as the level of 2016's Ghostbusters remake.
 * 362) **Judge it for yourself.
 * 363) Since the COVID-19 pandemic era in 2020, Hollywood has charged absurd prices for movie rentals of recent movies starting with Trolls: World Tour, which often costs more than just one ticket to see the movie in a cinema or to buy the movie in any format once a given amount of time has passed. It even costs about the same price to buy the movie on either a 4K UHD/Blu Ray bundle, or a limited edition copy of the movie in any physical format. Even buying a bundle or box set containing an entire film franchise would be a better use of your money than a worthless, overpriced movie rental.
 * 364) *On PVOD, you are only given 2 weeks to 1 month to press play, and only 2 days to watch it once you start it, meaning that your money will quickly go down the drain if you pay this much for a movie rental.
 * 365) *Usually the case with Warner Bros films, you are also given the option to pay $5 more to buy it, normally as a shameless attempt to get more money off impatient consumers who aren't willing to wait an extra 2-3 months for the price to drop.
 * 366) *One of the most infamous examples is Disney's "Premier Access" program, where Disney+ users can choose to pay $30 (or $35 in some countries) on top of the monthly subscription, to rent a theatrically-released Disney film (except Mulan, which went straight to Premier Access) for up to 3 months before users can see it at no additional cost. Thankfully, at the moment, Disney gave this practice a rest, to avoid future piracy issues and loss of revenue.
 * 367) *The breaking point for this practice as of January of 2022 was when Google Play Australia initially offered The Boss Baby: Family Business on PVOD for  $38  to rent the movie for 48 hours once you press play after cinemas across the country stopped playing it. The backlash was so bad they had to quickly reduce it to $30AUD, and we thought Disney's prices were outrageous. See it for yourself.
 * 368) *Because of this system, piracy has increased massively as a result.
 * 369) *Not helping is that people have lost their jobs or are struggling to earn money in this current climate, so they are not able to pay for these rentals in the first place, let alone barely have enough to pay for their food or bills.
 * 370) In previous decades and even in recent years as well, Hollywood made pretty terrible and mediocre average movies; However, many of them earned a cult following for being films "so bad that they are good", simply because viewers could enjoy them for various reasons: Maybe they grew up loving these films in their childhoods and can enjoy them in a nostalgic way, maybe these helped them overcome personal struggles such as depression, anxiety, abuse, illnesses or go through a hard time in their lives, maybe these were outright terrible but also being "so bad that they're good" and resulted in people enjoying them happily and also becoming internet memes, cult favorites or classic guilty pleasures in the process, maybe these films, despite their flaws, managed to be memorable in their own ways and had their notorious merits such as good acting and performances, a fairly good direction, cool scenes and sequences, etc; or maybe because in the end these "bad" movies were really good and underrated films which audiences saw as being unfairly hated by critics and some other audiences. Movies like White Chicks, Bad Boys 2, Spy Kids, The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl, The Road to El Dorado, Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome, the Police Academy franchise, Paul Blart: Mall Cop, Dude Where's My Car?, Van Wilder, Sucker Punch, Hancock, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, the four original Scary Movie's, Hulk, Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo, The Animal, The Hot Chick, The Holiday, Speed Racer, Spider-Man 3, The Amazing Spider-Man 2, Nacho Libre, Aquamarine, Crossroads, Click, Battleship, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra, Bruce Almighty and Evan Almighty, the Night at the Museum trilogy, the Star Wars prequels, Parking 2, the 2000s Fantastic Four movies, the Cheaper by the Dozen films, The Pacifier, The Game Plan, Sky High, mh:awfulmovies:Rugrats Go Wild, Love Actually, She's All That, 27 Dresses, Killers, Bride Wars, Herbie Fully Loaded, Sleepover, Just My Luck, the High School Musical films, Rock of Ages, I Robot, The Matrix Reloaded and Revolutions, Drillbit Taylor, No Strings Attached, the Jurassic World films, Friends with Benefits, Eurotrip, Road Trip, 17 Again, The Interview, Just Go With It, You Me and Dupree, Maid in Manhattan, Failure to Launch, The Ugly Truth, Sweet Home Alabama, the Fast and Furious films, the Johnny English trilogy, the original Transporter trilogy, The Green Hornet, Get Rich or Die Tryin, Escape From L.A., Last Action Hero, Kindergarten Cop, Jingle All the Way, Here Comes the Boom, Zookeeper, Diary of a Mad Black Woman, the Big Momma trilogy, Snakes on a Plane, Joe Dirt, the Austin Powers sequels, the Expendables trilogy, The Rocker, The Benchwarmers, The Watch, The Internship; or surprisingly even films such as The Room, Troll 2, Son of the Mask, Strange Wilderness, The Tuxedo, Little Man, The Cat in the Hat, The Dukes of Hazzard, Freddy Got Fingered, Ghost Rider, Batman and Robin, Alvin and the Chipmunks, The Garbage Pail Kids Movie, the 90s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Norbit, Dumb and Dumberer: When Harry Met Lloyd, I Love You Beth Cooper, Grown Ups and Grown Ups 2, Jack and Jill, That's My Boy, I Now Pronounce You Chuck And Larry, Pixels, Little Nicky, Chicken Little, Bubble Boy, xXx, Green Lantern, Mr. Popper's Penguins, Gulliver's Travels, the live action Garfield duology, the live action Scooby-Doo duology, Race to Witch Mountain, Highlander II, Die Another Day, Lake Placid, RV, Christmas with the Kranks, Entourage, The Three Stooges, the Beverly Hills Cop sequels, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, X-Men: The Last Stand, The Space Between Us, Wild Wild West, the Blade trilogy, the Are We There Yet? duology, The Hangover sequels, the 2nd and 3rd Men in Black, the Twilight films, the Friday the 13th sequels, or the Nightmare on Elm Street sequels. While we can admit that those movies are pretty terrible, flawed and forgettable, each of them still manages to be entertaining and memorable on it's own way and has a slight factor of greatness that very few people gets to see. Today, many bad films are just there and they're just really bad and that's it, there's almost nothing memorable about them and almost everybody seems to hate them. At least you can watch the movies we just mentioned and say "Hey, at least they tried", or realize that the cast & crew must've had a great time shooting the movie; but now, it feels like that magic is gone. They're just movies that come and go, such as Disaster Movie, Movie 43, Annie, Vacation, The DUFF, A Good Day to Die Hard, 50 Shades of Grey, Strange Magic, Kim Possible, Hot Tub Time Machine 2, Jem and the Holograms, The Emoji Movie, Spy Kids 4D, Home Sweet Home Alone, Dragonball: Evolution, Dirty Grandpa, Project X, After Earth, Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk, CHIPs, The Circle, A Million Ways to Die in the West, the Madea movies, Holmes and Watson, Zoolander 2, Scary Movie V, Space Jam: A New Legacy, Bucky Larson: Born To Be A Star, The Kitchen, Night School, The Last Airbender, Collateral Beauty, 2016's Ghostbusters, Fant4stic, Pan, MIB International, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul, Music, 2019's Hellboy, Silent Hill: Revelation, Ice Age: Collision Course, Mars Needs Moms, Artemis Fowl, Monster Hunter, Dolittle, Gods of Egypt, 2022's Marmaduke, The Ice Age Adventures of Buck Wild, Morbius, Fun Size, Unfriended, Need for Speed, Hitman: Agent 47, Warcraft, Assassin's Creed, Slender Man, Cats, 2019’s Charlie's Angels, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, both Addams Family animated movies, Escape from Planet Earth, Baywatch, United Passions, Playmobil: The Movie, and many of Disney's terrible live-action remakes; hell, there are even some movies with the infamous 0% rating on Rotten Tomatoes that are better than these, so you can tell Hollywood stopped trying a long time ago.
 * 371) There are often terrible ideas that Hollywood tries to adapt into movies, for example: The Emoji Movie, Karen, The Boss Baby, Twilight, Fifty Shades of Grey, Playmobil: The Movie, or any board game-based movie besides Clue.
 * 372) Several movies these days (such as mh:greatestmovies:Ralph Breaks the Internet, Josie and the Pussycats, the live-action Inspector Gadget movies, Mac and Me, Don’t Look Up, Playmobil: The Movie, Free Guy, The Emoji Movie, Space Jam: A New Legacy, and most Happy Madison films) contain tons of product placement in them (sometimes through far too many character cameos), and often feel more like advertisements for said products or other franchises than a movie. For Ralph Breaks the Internet, Space Jam: A New Legacy, and especially The Emoji Movie, they often feel like giant commercials for their own respective studios that made them. While there are great films are featuring product placements or cameos such as The Lego Movie, E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, the first Wreck-It Ralph movie, Ready Player One, or Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, at least those 5 movies focus on the story instead of making the audiences hunt Easter eggs for showcasing their products.
 * 373) Studios and executives don't even give chances to rising, underrated, overlooked, or fading actors; instead, they keep giving big parts and roles to the same big names over and over again. This was even true before 2011, where this problem would worsen, although the late 2010s defined this worsening even more than it already has. To add more salt into the wound: It can happen to any actor no matter how popular or how young they are, so it could even come as a surprise to audiences because they are unexpectedly no longer being acknowledged by the media as much as they were back then, causing many to think what happened to that actor recently, asking questions like "Did they retire?", "Are they taking a break?", or even "Did they pass away?". So it's a fairly serious problem in the industry.
 * 374) *Because of this, many talented and highly regarded actors of past decades and even those who were popular during the 2010s have faded or started fading into oblivion with their careers on the brink of being near-completely forgotten; whilst others have only gone for lower scale films or supporting/minor roles in movies or TV series. At times it is mostly unfair why it happens, like when the actor appears in what is known as a "career-killing movie" which is a movie that gets panned so badly it actually kills the career(s) of one, or more of the actors involved ( this doesn't automatically make them bad actors, by the way ), or maybe the actor was "thrown under the bus" and sold out by the industry and/or even audiences basically forgetting them just like that, or maybe it's due to them often being typecast in a same genre too often ( again, it does not make them bad actors ). Though to be fair, sometimes it can be justifiable, such as when they do a controversial act that destroys their reputation (e.g. Will Smith, Mel Gibson, Ezra Miller), or maybe having a notorious reputation of being rather difficult to work with (e.g. Julia Roberts, Shia LaBeouf, Chevy Chase), or maybe it could be out of personal preference as the actor might take a break to focus on something else or for personal reasons (e.g. Meg Ryan, Leonardo DiCaprio, Cameron Diaz, Rick Moranis), or even due to their frequent overexposure in the media having overstayed their welcome and therefore audiences getting sick of them, eventually hence having the actor deserving to fade back into obscurity in the coming years (a potential yet infamous case being Chris Pratt). However, it is important to keep in mind that those big-name actors aren't the ones to blame, as it is the industry's fault for giving them way too much attention. This became evident around 2015, as actors who were popular in the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s were given less attention compared to ones who became popular such as Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart, Zac Efron, Ryan Reynolds, Chris Pratt, Seth Rogen, Scarlett Johannson, Gal Gadot, Ben Affleck, Charlize Theron, Mark Ruffalo, etc., but even then, considering we're in the 2020s now, it seems that many of these actors who were popular throughout the 2010s and early 2020s have started to fade into oblivion themselves since there are more popular actors on the rise who could overtake those ones. This is also what partially contributes to what is known as "Stunt Casting".
 * 375) *There are two red flags where you can tell that this is already happening to a certain actor: One of which is where the actor doesn't appear in a new big budget film for quite some time (excluding indie films), as such in the cases of Miles Teller (2017-2022), Will Smith (2008-2012), Martin Lawrence (2011-2020; that's VERY close to a whole decade!), Denzel Washington (2018-2021), Jamie Foxx (2014-2017), and Ryan Gosling (2018-2022); whereas another is where the actor or actress still appears in movies but only mainly in indie movies (which DO NOT count as a part of the mainstream industry) but with the occasional big budget film (which does count) in between after appearing in several big-budget films that most or at least half of which weren't as well-received and only got the actor or actress mostly blacklisted by the industry, thus leading to them fading away (at least to some fair extent), as such in the cases of actors such as Natalie Portman, Jessica Biel, and Carla Gugino.
 * 376) **As of 2022, for the various reasons above, these actors and actresses, of not only the past but also even the present, sadly began to fade away or perhaps have even already faded away from Hollywood, or will most likely have faded in the coming years being sidelined in favor of the up-and-coming or more popular actors, despite being popular or beloved at one point themselves are the following: Chris Hemsworth, Ryan Gosling, Bradley Cooper, Chris Pratt, Chris Pine, Jeremy Renner, Eddie Redmayne, Miles Teller, Jesse Eisenberg, Paul Rudd, Sienna Miller, Natalie Portman, Letitia Wright, Will Smith, Keanu Reeves, Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Ewan McGregor, Morgan Freeman, Denzel Washington, Forest Whitaker, Angelina Jolie, Gene Hackman, Dustin Hoffman, Harvey Keitel, John Travolta, Tim Allen, Cuba Gooding Jr., Rick Moranis, Wallace Shawn, Matthew Broderick, Meg Ryan, Glenn Close, Barbra Streisand, Bette Midler, Shirley MacLaine, Sally Field, Elizabeth Perkins, Holly Hunter, Jodie Foster, Anthony Hopkins, Albert Brooks, Kevin Costner, Sean Penn, Richard Gere, Val Kilmer, Tim Roth, Bill Pullman, Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill, Daniel Stern, Denis Leary, Craig T. Nelson, Oliver Platt, Jim Belushi, Nathan Lane, Nick Nolte, William Shatner, Kelsey Grammer, Greg Kinnear, John Malkovich, William H. Macy, Kurt Russell, Hugo Weaving, John Turturro, Woody Harrelson, Dennis Quaid, Alex Winter, Edward Norton, Nicolas Cage, Liam Neeson, Gary Sinise, Steve Martin, Martin Short, John Goodman, Jeff Bridges, Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Sigourney Weaver, Andrew McCarthy, Demi Moore, Tommy Lee Jones, Michael Caine, Malcolm McDowell, James Cromwell, Jean Reno, Rob Lowe, Michael Keaton, Laurence Fishburne, Salma Hayek, Jennifer Lopez, Julia Roberts, Jeff Daniels, Joe Pantoliano, Danny Glover, Al Pacino, Clint Eastwood, Mel Gibson, Mickey Rourke, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone, Antonio Banderas, Vin Diesel, Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart, Billy Bob Thornton, John C. Reilly, Jude Law, Ralph Fiennes, Bruce Willis, Eric Bana, Adrien Brody, Gary Oldman, Hugh Grant, Halle Berry, Clive Owen, Naomi Watts, Liev Schreiber, Aaron Eckhart, Ethan Hawke, Kate Winslet, Tom Cruise, Johnny Depp (who got it worse after Amber Heard defamed him), Kim Basinger, Drew Barrymore, Uma Thurman, Joan Cusack, John Cusack, Catherine Keener, Winona Ryder, Jet Li, Wesley Snipes, Geena Davis, Susan Sarandon, Jamie Lee Curtis, Steve Buscemi, Jennifer Connelly, Hugh Laurie, Michael Douglas, Catherine Zeta Jones, Billy Crystal, Mike Myers, Dana Carvey, Chris Kattan, Ricky Gervais, Russell Brand, Steve Coogan, Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Eric Idle, John Cleese, Rowan Atkinson, Michelle Pfeiffer, Heather Graham, Terrence Howard, Cedric the Entertainer, Chevy Chase, Robert Patrick, Chris Rock, Dave Chappelle, Arsenio Hall, Eddie Murphy, Jim Carrey, Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Luke Wilson, Vince Vaughn, Jack Black, Will Ferrell, Steve Carell, Paul Rudd, Jason Schwartzman, Jason Segel, Seth Rogen, Jonah Hill, Michael Cera, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Jay Baruchel, Craig Robinson, Danny McBride, Ed Helms, Zach Galifianakis, Jason Bateman, Jason Sudeikis, James Franco, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Louis C.K., Hank Azaria, Janeane Garofalo, Pauly Shore, Stephen Baldwin, George Lopez, Paul Reubens, Gary Cole, Andy Dick, Jon Lovitz, Adam Sandler, Rob Schneider, David Spade, Kevin James, Nick Swardson, Cheech Marin, Tommy Chong, Eugene Levy, Catherine O'Hara, Queen Latifah, Neve Campbell, Alicia Silverstone, Matt Dillon, Skeet Ulrich, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Freddie Prinze Jr., Matthew Lillard, David Arquette, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry, David Schwimmer, Alfonso Ribeiro, Emilio Estevez, Anthony Michael Hall, Judd Nelson, Molly Ringwald, Ally Sheedy, Neil Patrick Harris, Josh Radnor, Mo’Nique, Gabourey Sidibe, Martin Lawrence, Nia Long, Nicole Ari Parker, Michael Ealy, Vanessa Williams, Loretta Devine, Damon Wayans, Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans, Katt Williams, Eddie Griffin, Omar Epps, Ice Cube, Mike Epps, Kel Mitchell, Tracy Morgan, Tim Meadows, Breckin Meyer, Brendan Fraser, Matthew McConaughey, Claire Danes, Jennifer Garner, Anna Faris, Jaime Pressly, Jamie Kennedy, Jon Heder, Alexis Bledel, Amanda Bynes, Rachel Nichols, Sara Paxton, Michelle Trachtenberg, Hayden Christensen, Hayden Panettiere, Elisha Cuthbert, Megan Fox, Lindsay Lohan, Tobey Maguire, Christina Ricci, Lacey Chabert, Malin Akerman, Sophia Bush, Eva Longoria, Seann William Scott, Chad Michael Murray, Eric Christian Olsen, Macaulay Culkin, Melissa Joan Hart, Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens, Emma Watson, Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Elijah Wood, Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart, Taylor Lautner, Liv Tyler, Taylor Kitsch, Amanda Peet, Kate Bosworth, Katie Holmes, Emile Hirsch, Tom Green, Steve Zahn, Shia LaBeouf, Chris "Ludacris" Bridges, Tyrese Gibson, Jennifer Jason Leigh, John Krasinski, Jenna Fischer, Rainn Wilson, BJ Novak, Ioan Gruffudd, Michael Chiklis, Jessica Alba, David Duchovny, Gillian Anderson, Yvonne Strahovski, Zooey Deschanel, Kate Beckinsale, Milla Jovovich, Jane Lynch, James Van Der Beek, Josh Peck, Jason Biggs, John Cho, Kal Penn, Zach Braff, Johnny Knoxville, Chris Tucker, Carla Gugino, Juliette Lewis, Kirsten Dunst, Logan Lerman, Sam Worthington, Patrick Dempsey, Chris O’Donell, David Duchovny, Josh Harnett, Adrian Greiner, Kevin Connolly, Jeremy Piven, Charlie Sheen, Ashton Kutcher, Tom Welling, Clark Duke, Jerry Trainor, Justin Long, Jason Lee, Dane Cook, Brandon T Jackson, Renee Zellweger, Ali Larter, Mandy Moore, Teri Polo, Jaden Smith, Frankie Muniz, Haley Joel Osment, Emily Osment, Abigail Breslin, Alice Eve, AnnaSophia Robb, Bella Thorne, Julia Stiles, Jim Caviezel, Maggie Grace, Mario Van Peebles, Nathan Fillon, Alan Cumming, Timothy Olyphant, Tim Curry, Sarah Jessica Parker, Thomas Haden Church, etc. All of these actors were sadly affected in varying ways, hence Hollywood eventually rejecting them in the first place, which is a shame, since audiences loved these actors back then and quite a lot of them were popular or at least had potential, but sadly were overshadowed by other popular actors and were forgotten about as a result, or will be overshadowed at some point. And we should also note that these were actors who were everywhere in the 1990s or the 2000s or, considering we're in the 2020s now, even the 2010s!
 * 377) **The most infamous case of this would be three-time Oscar winner Jack Nicholson, the legendary actor seen in The Shining who hasn't been in a movie since 2010! The reason why this happened? Well, it ended up unconfirmed for nine years until when director Mike Flanagan confirmed Nicholson's retirement when asked if Nicholson was offered to appear in Doctor Sleep. He even was invited to make a cameo appearance as another character like Danny Lloyd, but turned down the offer.
 * 378) **Another infamous case of this would be Taylor Lautner, the once famous teen heartthrob and sensation infamously known for his role as Jacob Black in the Twilight films. While not quite to the same extent as Jack Nicholson (who had a bigger career and is much older in age), Lautner didn't get to appear in many films as many of the films in his filmography were underachievers amongst critics and the box office. While, if Rotten Tomatoes is to be believed, audiences were nicer to the Twilight films, critics felt that those films were abysmal, but both critics and audiences weren't as fond of his other films. This sadly worsened for Lautner, as he had made the unfortunate decision to appear in two infamously hated Adam Sandler-led comedies as he was fresh from the Twilight films: 2013's Grown Ups 2 and 2015's The Ridiculous 6. What makes it even sadder for Lautner is that his last known appearance in a film - up until 2022's Home Team - was back in 2016, where he appeared in the obscure drama Run the Tide, and even that got negative reviews. After that, he started appearing more in TV series, but even in the TV industry he's overlooked. It's sad when you realize this is someone who perhaps had potential to become a big movie star, but threw it all away by wasting his talents in otherwise terrible movies.
 * 379) **Not only that, there's also  DENNIS RODMAN , the famed Chicago Bulls basketball player. Before he became known for his love of North Korea in the 2010s, he starred in 3 critically panned action films in the 90's called Double Team, Cutaway and Simon Sez. Despite their terrible reception, some people, including the Nostalgia Critic and Obscurus Lupa, quickly began to point out that Dennis Rodman actually has some decent acting in the films, compared to other basketball stars like Shaq, but sadly, these three movies quickly ended his acting career for good, due to their half-assed material and  especially  Dane Cook's performance in Simon Sez. This ended up being another sad case of wasted potential, just like Taylor Lautner.
 * 380) **Back in 2013, WILL SMITH decided to team up with Columbia Pictures and they made this infamously terrible sci-fi film called After Earth. Not only did they kill Will’s son Jaden's career, but it also started to give Smith a bad reputation in the industry, and many audiences started to believe that he had already passed his peak since he was more popular in the 1990s and 2000s, and that the industry is just giving him big parts just so he can stay "relevant" despite it being clear that, due to After Earth being a flop, he is not anymore. He had since faded from the industry, mostly appearing in films that were huge flops, and audiences then started to become more interested in rising actors like Margot Robbie, Kevin Hart, Ryan Reynolds etc. despite the industry still giving Smith big parts and audiences still ironically going to see his movies as a result, mainly as a result of his likeable charms. And it doesn't even end there: in 2017 he started a YouTube channel possibly for the sole purpose of trying to stay "hip" to his younger fans, and while his channel is pretty impressive for the most part, it still isn't good enough for him to even try to stay popular. And then came the infamous incident that definitely killed his career and even ultimately left a notorious stain on his reputation in audiences' hearts, in which he had slapped Chris Rock in the face at the 2022 Oscars onstage and live as the entire world was watching after Rock had made a joke about Jada Pinkett-Smith's hair loss, also ordering out-loud to Rock to "keep his wife's name out of his f--king mouth!" This incident made him retire as a member of the Academy and got him banned from attending any future Oscars ceremonies for a decade, and was what led to Emancipation being delayed from 2022 to 2023 (amongst other reasons), Netflix cancelling Bright 2 and Fast and Loose, and Sony temporarily suspending production on Bad Boys 4. Thankfully, he did apologize for his actions, but only time will tell if he will redeem himself and restore his reputation in Hollywood (if at all).
 * 381) **The movie industry also has this AWFUL tendency of ditching actors simply because they had the misfortune of being in a terrible movie that ultimately gave them a bad reputation, this is known as a "Career-Killing Movie". This move is wrong in so many levels because the film industry needs to understand that being in a bad movie, doesn't make someone a bad actor. A clear example would be the case of Taylor Kitsch: He is a great actor and was a promising star at the beginning of the 2010s; however, after the releases of his leading movies John Carter and Battleship, two of the biggest box office flops of 2012, the industry forgot about him and has not given him major roles in large-scale movies ever since, and despite having proven his talent in movies like Lone Survivor, Only the Brave or the 2nd season of True Detective, he's still an undervalued actor. Other examples of versatile actors whose careers sadly ended because of bad movies are: Mike Myers (The Love Guru), Dana Carvey (The Master of Disguise), Eddie Murphy (A Thousand Words), Brendan Fraser (Furry Vengeance), Jason Lee (Alvin and the Chipmunks), Alicia Silverstone (Batman and Robin), Pauly Shore (Bio-Dome), Ben Stiller (Zoolander 2), Owen Wilson (Marmaduke), Jack Black (Gulliver's Travels), Will Ferrell (Holmes and Watson), Halle Berry (Catwoman), Brandon J Routh (Superman Returns), Topher Grace (Spider-Man 3), Dennis Rodman (Simon Sez), Vince Vaughn (Unfinished Business), Luke Wilson (Death at a Funeral), Jamie Foxx (Annie), Jackie Chan (The Spy Next Door), Shaquille O'Neal (Steel), Tim Allen (Christmas with The Kranks), Hayden Christensen (Star Wars Episodes II and III), Adam Sandler (Pixels), Freddie Prinze Jr. (Scooby-Doo), Jaden Smith (After Earth), Lindsay Lohan (I Know Who Killed Me), Demi Moore (Striptease), Katie Holmes (Batman Begins), Elizabeth Berkley (Showgirls), Sean Connery (League of Extraordinary Gentlemen), Taylor Lautner (Abduction), Jamie Kennedy (Son of the Mask), Tom Green (Freddy Got Fingered), Chris Kattan (Corky Romano), Kevin Costner (Waterworld), and Avril Lavigne (Jem and the Holograms).
 * 382) **Not only that, but the industry also, alongside the "career-killing movie" stuff, has the tendency to give parts to rising actors only within a certain period of time because they are popular or have potential, only to literally ditch them shortly afterwards. This is strictly particularly bad with teen sensations or undervalued actors, but made even worse with child actors. One such example would be AnnaSophia Robb, who had a promising career after starring in the 2007 film Bridge to Terabithia with films such as Race to Witch Mountain, Soul Surfer and The Way, Way Back. However, after appearing in the aforementioned The Way, Way Back, which was released back in 2013, the industry suddenly forgot about her and now she only appears in direct-to-video or independent films, thus diminishing her potential for having a much bigger career and thus ending her "fifteen minutes of fame". Another example would also be Abigail Breslin, who became a very famous child actress in the mid-to-late 2000s with roles such as Little Miss Sunshine and Zombieland under her belt, and had continued this streak in the early 2010s as well, but around 2015 she fell off, sticking to more obscure, lower scale films ever since, though she did appear in 2019's Zombieland: Double Tap, but other than that and maybe a few indie films, nothing. One more example would be that of Bella Thorne, who had gotten her start on the Disney Channel sitcom Shake It Up which ran from 2010 to 2013, with subsequent attention in a few (mostly family oriented) movies throughout 2014 and 2015, but was mostly ditched all of a sudden around 2016 or 2017, mostly appearing in indie/arthouse teen dramas and some DTV flicks after that. This would lead one to ask: "If the industry wants to employ some child actors well into adulthood, then why not others?"
 * 383) **Sometimes, one of the key reasons for an actor fading at least slowly back into obscurity is that when the actor confirms that they are going to "take a break" from acting to focus on another cause like a musical career or sociopolitical activism or even personal stuff, but the industry misconstrues the actor simply taking a break for the actor outright retiring, so that by the time they are ready to shine again, they are sadly forgotten about and are overshadowed by actors who have become more popular than that actor, which has sadly happened to so many actors like Meg Ryan or Rick Moranis for example. However, the industry needs to know that considerably taking a break from acting does not equal retirement from acting.
 * 384) **Another reason for an actor being rejected by the industry is when the actor is often underutilized or unnoticed by the industry that they are often on the rear end of things, and are glossed over to the point where they are forgotten about after some time and just like that. One such example of this is Carla Gugino, who was a once promising though sadly overlooked star in the 1990s and 2000s with films such as Son in Law, Snake Eyes, the first three Spy Kids, Sin City, the first Night at the Museum, American Gangster, Race to Witch Mountain, and Watchmen, and even shows like Spin City, Karen Sisco and Entourage under her belt, but was forgotten about in the 2010s after her three big budget 2011 outings Sucker Punch, Mr. Popper's Penguins, and New Year's Eve, mostly appearing in indie/arthouse films and television shows (like the first season of Wayward Pines) ever since, most likely due to her tendency to show up in supporting or minor roles rather than lead roles. However, she still does show up in films every now and then, like San Andreas, The Space Between Us, and Gunpowder Milkshake, and Mike Flanagan has tried to give her a career boost recently by getting her to appear in his 2017 Netflix horror film Gerald's Game (in one of the rare cases where she actually played the lead role) and his 2018 Netflix miniseries The Haunting of Hill House. However, she does not seem to mind the obscurity either (as she has stated in the past that she cares more about her job than the fame that comes with it), and actually appreciates the fact that there is a small portion of society that knows who she is.
 * 385) *This also causes talented but sadly overlooked actors of both the past and present and regardless of the genre or no matter how famous they are like Ben Foster, Lakeith Stanfield, Cillian Murphy, Dan Stevens, Andrew Garfield, Paul Dano, Joel McHale, Jesse Eisenberg, Ethan Hawke, Jonathan Majors, James Spader, Alfred Molina, Antonio Banderas, Chris O'Dowd, Adam Scott, Harvey Keitel, Vincent Cassel, Casey Affleck, Dave Franco, Simon Rex, Kevin James, John C. Reilly, Jude Law, John Krasinski, Rainn Wilson, BJ Novak, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Eddie Redmayne, Channing Tatum, Oscar Isaac, Christoph Waltz, Jon Hamm, Danny Pudi, Donald Glover, Brendan Fraser, Miles Teller, Robert Pattinson, Steve Zahn, Tim Roth, Willem Dafoe, Peter Dinklage, Zachary Levi, Jonathan Groff, Jason Momoa, Kelvin Harrison Jr., Walton Goggins, Wesley Snipes, Woody Harrelson, Stephan James, Andres Wiese, Stephanie Cayo, Vanessa Kirby, Marion Cotillard, Sienna Miller, Rachel Nichols, Anna Kendrick, Alexis Bledel, Gabourey Sidibe, Jodie Comer, Hunter Schafer, Katie Holmes, Megan Fox, Jessica Biel, Abigail Breslin, AnnaSophia Robb, Maggie Grace, Tilda Swinton, Salma Hayek, Kristen Stewart, Kate and Rooney Mara, Jamie Bell, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Matt Lanter, Paul Walter Hauser, Milo Ventimiglia, Jeremy Renner, Ed Helms, Zach Galifianakis, Brian Tyree Henry, Mark Hamill, William Zabka, Ralph Macchio, Bryan Cranston, John Turturro, Lena Headey, Felicity Jones, Constance Wu, Jennifer Garner, Jessica Alba, Michelle Yeoh, Elizabeth Olsen, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Greta Gerwig, Sydney Sweeney, Amanda Seyfried, Kate Hudson, Shailene Woodley, Drew Barrymore, Kristen Schaal, Eva Green, Taraji P. Henson, Kerry Washington, Carla Gugino, Toni Collette, Samara Weaving, Olga Kurylenko, Ana De Armas, Uma Thurman, Kate Beckinsale, Melanie Lynskey, Juliette Lewis, Alison Brie, Gillian Jacobs, Jenna Fischer, Emily Blunt, Angela Bassett, Elisabeth Moss, Yvonne Strahovski, Naomie Harris, Melanie Laurent, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Kathy Bates, Karen Gillan, Dakota Fanning, Elle Fanning, Aubrey Plaza, Jennifer Hudson, Teresa Palmer, Beanie Feldstein, Kaitlyn Dever, Emilia Clarke, Carrie-Anne Moss, Jeff Foxworthy, or Carey Mulligan to be ignored and sidelined by the industry; in fact, due to this, it could just as well send them back to obscurity if they are unlucky enough (which some of them already are).
 * 386) **Comedic actors like Keegan-Michael Key, John Cena, Bill Hader, Awkwafina, Anna Faris, Julia Roberts, Sandra Bullock, Tiffany Haddish, Seth Rogen, Adam Sandler, Owen Wilson, Luke Wilson, Pete Davidson, Jack Black, Will Ferrell, Vince Vaughn, Eddie Murphy, Mike Myers, Kathryn Hahn, Zac Efron, Kate McKinnon and Melissa McCarthy as dramatic actors.
 * 387) **Dwayne Johnson, Chris Pratt, Tyrese Gibson, Chris "Ludacris" Bridges, Vin Diesel, Matt Damon, Tom Cruise, Jason Statham, Will Smith (if the industry still wants to give him a chance considering what happened at the 2022 Oscars), Rachel McAdams, Will Arnett, Charlize Theron, Gal Gadot, Samuel L. Jackson, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Rachel McAdams, Will Arnett, and Sylvester Stallone when they don't appear in action movies, and to a lesser extent, outside of action franchises they may be involved in such as the Fast and Furious franchise, the Mission: Impossible franchise, the Marvel Cinematic Universe etc.
 * 388) **Robert Downey Jr., Chris Evans, Tom Hiddleston, Chris Hemsworth, Anthony Mackie and Sebastian Stan outside of the MCU.
 * 389) **Paul Rudd outside of both comedies and the MCU.
 * 390) **Daniel Craig outside of the James Bond films.
 * 391) **Saoirse Ronan outside of comedy and drama films.
 * 392) **Although those actors are likeable and memorable, the problem with Rachel McAdams and Will Arnett is that Hollywood makes them star in too many films just because they both somehow became popular unexpectedly.
 * 393) **And perhaps even Tom Holland, Zendaya, Hugh Jackman, Keanu Reeves, Bradley Cooper, Benedict Cumberbatch, Anya Taylor-Joy and Ryan Reynolds aren't immune to this!
 * 394) ***Most of the time this is due to being typecast too often in the same role/genre, or maybe simply due to having limited screentime in the films that they appeared in and not being able to realize their full potential, or maybe even due to the fact that the industry never gives them better offers and the only offers that they are almost always given are usually supporting roles. Or even, in some cases, being cast more due to popularity rather than talent.
 * 395) *Most of the time, different groups of popular A-list actors can often always be cast in films of the same genre, the worst offenders being the action and comedy genres, and while it can happen in the drama genre too, it still isn't as bad by comparison (because, unlike action and comedy films, dramas will often oscillate between different actors). While this is somewhat okay, and it has still led to some amazing/decent performances from actors and actresses in films of these genres and most of these actors and actresses are still great regardless of the genre that they appear in, it should be noted that seeing the same actors and actresses in the same genre all the time can lead to them being typecast and/or being ignored by Hollywood for roles outside of the genre they usually appear in, and it can get repetitively annoying for some audiences also, even more so to the point where some audiences will refuse to watch any movie with a certain actor/actress because by seeing their name on the poster, and automatically assuming it's a film from that genre 'even when this is not the case, or it may even cause them to fade back into obscurity and therefore become rejected by the industry. Here are some examples of this happening from around 2013 or 2014, and more specifically from 2015-2016, where it worsened, even causing certain big-name actors and/or actresses who were very popular up until the mid-2010s such as Denzel Washington, Natalie Portman, Halle Berry, Tom Cruise, and even Leonardo DiCaprio to fade away and even be ignored by the industry to frequently employ other big-name actors and actresses in movies. But this practice actually started in the mid-1990s too, so there are also some examples of this happening from 1995 to 2010 as well (though they are not as bad as today):
 * 396) **In the comedy genre (except for indie films/sequels/spin-offs/bit parts/cameos/animated films), expect these actors to appear quite often (or at least sometimes, but usually), usually frequently appearing together in small chunks:
 * 397) ***From 1995 to 2010 (at various points): Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Vince Vaughn, Will Ferrell, Jack Black, Luke Wilson, Paul Rudd, Adam Sandler, Rob Schneider, David Spade, Chris Rock, Martin Lawrence, Eddie Murphy, Mike Myers, Tim Allen, Jim Carrey, Steve Carell, Seth Rogen, Anna Faris, Jennifer Aniston, Katherine Heigl, Heather Graham, Reese Witherspoon, Ashton Kutcher, Seann William Scott, Tina Fey, Ice Cube, Mike Epps, Matthew McConaughey, Jennifer Lopez, Steve Martin, Queen Latifah, Eugene Levy, Cedric the Entertainer, Julia Roberts, Sandra Bullock, Eddie Griffin, and David Koechner.
 * 398) ***From 2013 to 2021: Kevin Hart, Melissa McCarthy, Seth Rogen, Keegan-Michael Key, Kumail Nanjiani, Amy Poehler, Will Arnett, Kristen Bell, Rachel McAdams, Tiffany Haddish, Kate McKinnon, John Cena, Zac Efron, Adam DeVine, Randall Park, Alexandra Daddario, Kathryn Hahn, Jason Sudeikis, Jillian Bell, Jason Mantzoukas, Hannibal Buress, Maya Rudolph, Awkwafina, James Corden, Keanu Reeves, and Bill Hader.
 * 399) **In the action genre (except for indie films/sequels/bit parts/cameos/animated films), expect these actors to appear quite often (or at least sometimes, but usually), usually frequently appearing together in small chunks:
 * 400) ***From 1995 to 2010 (at various points): Tom Cruise, Matt Damon, Sylvester Stallone, Bruce Willis, Jet Li, Ice Cube, Will Smith, Vin Diesel, Samuel L. Jackson, Dwayne Johnson, Nicolas Cage, Mel Gibson, Jackie Chan, Jason Statham, and John Travolta.
 * 401) ***From 2013 to 2021: Kenan Thompson, Rachel McAdams, Will Arnett, Dwayne Johnson, Charlize Theron, Jason Statham, Gal Gadot, and Chris Pratt.
 * 402) **Other actors like Tom Holland, Awkwafina, James Corden, Timothee Chalamet, Anya Taylor-Joy, Charlize Theron, Gal Gadot, Ryan Reynolds, Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart, Chris Pratt, Rachel McAdams, Will Arnett, Keanu Reeves, Seth Rogen, Tiffany Haddish, and Kenan Thompson have starred in too many movies within a short time frame just because they became popular unexpectedly. Not only is this bad for these particular actors since they appear too often, it could just as badly cause them to eventually fade into oblivion within the next decade or so or even within a few years depending on when they became popular, because audiences will get sick of seeing them in the long run or they will suffer from burnout, or they will eventually do a film that flops to an irredeemable extent thus causing them to be shunned by both the industry and/or audiences and therefore forgotten about for that reason, now only sometimes appearing in supporting or minor roles if not rarely or not at all.
 * 403) *Popular actors nowadays can even replace professional voice actors from certain source material just because of their popularity rather than for their talent, most of the time without informing the voice actors they were going to replace, which is often noticed in remakes of earlier films, or animated adaptations of TV shows and video games (or sometimes, live-action CGI hybrid movies). For Space Jam: A New Legacy, Kath Soucie was initially going to reprise her role as Lola Bunny from the original Space Jam, but the day the trailer was released, it was announced instead that Zendaya will be voicing Lola instead in the finished film, despite that Soucie has been voicing the character since her debut. Another example would be SCOOB!, where the entire cast from the TV shows (except Frank Welker as Scooby-Doo himself), are replaced with popular celebrities for no reason other than to get people to watch it. The most recent infamous example would be when Chris Pratt, out of all people, got chosen to play as the lead roles in both the animated Mario and Garfield movies respectively in a span of fewer than 2 months, likely out of star power from playing Star-Lord in the MCU rather than talent, not to mention his role in the Mario movie was so laughable it caused a lot of controversy on the internet, and don't forget that Charles Martinet voiced Mario in nearly every role for over 25 years, so replacing him would make zero sense.
 * 404) *The success of the Marvel Cinematic Universe caused many of its cast members to appear in many films more frequently, due to their prominent roles in the MCU movies. A few examples include Tom Holland, Zendaya, Awkwafina, and Chris Pratt.
 * 405) Certain kids/family film movies (Especially animated films) tend to use the infamous "But it's made for kids!" excuse just to make a quick buck on kids films. Many non-Disney-Pixar films often suffer this treatment.
 * 406) *Some would shoehorn certain pop culture jokes that are forced just to appeal to younger audiences like for example Ice Age: Collision Course has Crash and Eddie make references to hashtags or when The Emoji Movie had PPAP (Pen-Pineapple-Apple-Pen) by Pikotaro making a brief appearance in the YouTube app, and Playmobil: The Movie had Charlie and his friends doing the floss dance and Emperor Maximus dabbing in one scene. Many kids films before 2016 were guilty of shoehorning and forced references to popular culture, take Doogal (The US version of the 2005 Magic Roundabout movie), Chicken Little, and The Thief And The Cobbler (Miramax version) for example.
 * 407) *Speaking of which, many modern movies, such as Playmobil: The Movie, would make references to certain memes that were popular at the time but are now irrelevant, including social media references (most notably Instagram), internet slang, emojis (specifically aimed at its movie adaptation, The Emoji Movie), and outdated dances like the floss and dab, both of which are still used in movies even to this very day.
 * 408) *Some family films nowadays tend to overuse gross-out humor to the point where it becomes childish and redundant. Some instances would be certain scenes that are hard to look at.
 * 409) **Speaking of humor, even some jokes that do not relate to gross-out humor tend to fall flat.
 * 410) *And now, thanks to this, many foreign animated films have a chance to shine in a very mature way like for example When Marnie Was There or even Song of the Sea.
 * 411) *In fact, many animation fans, even outside the US, called out that with a quote from Bob Flynn, "animation is not a genre, but a medium." If that wasn't enough, Phil Lord, Christopher Miller, Brad Bird, and Guillermo del Toro called out how animation is treated.
 * 412) *Several non-Disney/Pixar movies (especially animated films) used very popular songs for no reason at all, that got inserted into random parts of the movie. For example, The Emoji Movie stole “Watch Me” by Silento and “TiK ToK” by Ke$ha without permission, and you can hear those songs playing in the Spotify app, Space Jam: A New Legacy stole Europe’s “The Final Countdown”, Smurfs: The Lost Village stole Eiffel 65’s “A Decade in Blue”, Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted stole Katy Perry’s “Firework”, Johnny English Strikes Again stole Bananarama’s “Venus”, and both Sing movies stole songs from singers like Katy Perry, Lady Gaga, and Drake without permission. Not only that, Hollywood is always stealing songs from pop stars like Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber, Ariana Grande, Shawn Mendes, Ke$ha, and The Weeknd without permission and the industry is making all those pop stars become irrelevant.
 * 413) *Heck, even Netflix appears to treat animation terribly nowadays. Recently they canceled some of their anticipated animated shows like Bone and The Twits (even though the latter was eventually reworked into an animated movie) to get canceled which firing nearly 100 of their animation employees. What's worse is that Netflix treasures The Boss Baby just because it makes a lot of money. Animation isn't about money or popularity, it's about attempting to be fun or just be art.
 * 414) *Not only that, as of today, even other streaming services like HBO Max treated animated series like nothing!
 * 415) Sometimes, some films tend to have a production that is rushed just so the films can be released on a certain day (notably in the summer or Christmas season). It can be very noticeable in some films like Cats, Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, or Justice League (2017). To be fair, it always has been a major problem before the 2010s.
 * 416) While this has been a problem before 2016 (because of films like Rock: It's Your Decision and Blackfish), some documentaries have a tendency to now be used as a weapon like with Leaving Neverland which ruins the legacy of Michael Jackson or Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party being used as a weapon against the Democratic Party.
 * 417) Some films have a tendency to advertise their actors and cast in the wrong way. In animated films, the Hollywood cast members always get the top bill, discrediting longtime voice actors. For example, My Little Pony: The Movie's poster features the names of Emily Blunt, Zoe Saldana, or Liev Schreiber billed, but none of the actual voice cast are.
 * 418) *Some trailers/promotional material seem to give a bad impression simply because they make their characters do hip or edgy (depending on the film's target audience) stuff like dance to a popular song or try too hard to be dark. Even if the film doesn't turn out to be bad, it can still be annoying to sit through. Take The Nun for example as it did have a YouTube advertisement that received so much backlash that it was removed (the ad depicted a volume gauge of a phone that went down complete with a jumpscare just to trick people).
 * 419) *False advertising is present in some films. Let's say a movie poster or promotional material seems to be heavily focused on a certain character or scene, yet it does not really appear in the film despite ads saying otherwise. For example, in The Emoji Movie, Patrick Stewart's character is heavily marketed in trailers and posters, but in the actual movie, he only gets a few dialogues and doesn't important in the movie. This can also happen to ads that depict a certain character as the main character or said to be the main character when the actual film says otherwise.
 * 420) Several movies have mainly plagiarized scenes and/or entire plots of different pre-existing media, such as movies. For example:
 * 421) *Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles rips-off the entire story of The Amazing Spider-Man.
 * 422) *Star Wars: The Last Jedi blatantly copied the plot of Crimson Tide and the ending of Escape from L.A.
 * 423) *Taken 3 rips off the plot of The Fugitive.
 * 424) *R.I.P.D. copies the plot of mh:greatestmovies:Men in Black and steals elements from Supernatural.
 * 425) *Scoob! plagiarizes scenes of mh:greatestmovies:The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part.
 * 426) *Life of the Party copies the plot of mh:greatestmovies:An Extremely Goofy Movie.
 * 427) *The Legend of Hercules is a rip-off of both Gladiator and mh:greatestmovies:300.
 * 428) *Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker mimicking Harry Potter, The Lord of the Rings, and the final act of mh:greatestmovies:Avengers: Endgame.
 * 429) *Rio 2 plagiarized Meet the Parents and mh:greatestmovies:Avatar.
 * 430) *Tom and Jerry: The Movie rip-off the huge entire plot of Disney's mh:greatestmovies:The Rescuers and Don Bluth's mh:greatestmovies:All Dogs Go to Heaven.
 * 431) *Ice Age: Collision Course plagiarized mh:greatestmovies:Deep Impact and Armageddon.
 * 432) *Mars Needs Moms copied the plot of mh:greatestmovies:Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
 * 433) *Skyscraper rip offs mh:greatestmovies:The Towering Inferno and mh:greatestmovies:Die Hard.
 * 434) *Sabotage copied the plot of Training Day, Dark Blue, and Street Kings.
 * 435) *Who's Your Caddy? is a painfully obvious ripoff of Caddyshack that actually plagiarizes the entire plot of Caddyshack II. It's also extremely racist, due to the large amount of African-American stereotypes. Seriously, if you need any proof, then see for yourself.
 * 436) *Speaking of Who's Your Caddy?, Soul Planecompletely rips off the entire premise of the 1980 comedic classic Airplane!, but with the most racist African-American stereotypes, and none of the comedic feel. The same goes for Logan Paul's godawful Airplane Mode, which is even worse, but this time, it focuses on extremely dated internet references.
 * 437) *The Spy Next Door which feels like a poorly inspired rip-off combo wannabe of both Spy Kids and The Pacifier.
 * 438) *The Emoji Movie plagiarized Wreck-It Ralph, The Lego Movie, and Inside Out.
 * 439) *Playmobil: The Movie was accused of being a low-budget Lego Movie rip-off, but with tons of pop culture references, teen slang, and shameless product placement all over the place!
 * 440) To be frank, even well-received and praised movies can become unfairly hated for the wrong reasons, although some can be justified, either due to being subject to controversy at the time of its release or being offensive to certain groups of people, or even due to getting an age rating in a certain country that was too high or too low, or many other reasons. Some unfortunate examples including Logan (due to its depiction of child abuse), Monty Python's Life of Brian (due to its religious satire having been considered too blasphemous for certain religious groups), Django Unchained (having been unfortunately released around the same time as the Sandy Hook Elementary shooting, the fact that the protagonist is a gunslinger, and its inaccurate portrayal of slavery), Gerald's Game (the infamous scene where Carla Gugino's character Jessie Burlingame gets raped apparently disturbed many viewers, and even made some pass out), Dunkirk (as its infamous use of no dialogue and cliches) and Joker (there were concerns that this film would promote violence), many Disney movies (such as Tangled, The Little Mermaid, The Lion King, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, among others, for the SJW concepts of "Jewish coding" and "queer coding" of villains (Gothel gets hated for being a greedy, having a "hooked nose" even though she has a normal nose, kidnapping and using the power from a blonde, Rapunzel, to stay young, which people thing MUST be "antisemitism", even though Rapunzel and Flynn are "Jewish coded" by that logic simply from having Jewish voice actors and the fact that Gothel was based physically on Cher, and Cassandra in the series is never accused of being "antisemitic", similarly the old disguise of the Evil Queen is hated because of the big, hooked nose. Scar, Ursula, Jafar, etc. are accused of "queer coding" because they're flamboyant even though everyone is somewhat flamboyant as they are musicals, the villains are just supposed to be memorable, fun, and dramatic, or Maleficent occasionally gets this because her horns look "phallic" to some, even though they're clearly dragon horns, not genitalia). Even foreign movies and TV shows that got popular in America have been targeted with the "queer coding" claims (the two lised examples being anime), such as Pokémon (simply because James is a villain and often cross-dresses), and Naruto (because Orochimaru can shapeshift into a woman, has long hair, and is voiced by Kujira (a woman) in Japanese, ignoring the fact that Naruto himself is voiced by Junko Takeuchi, who is also a woman, in Japanese, and the fact that he has the "sexy-jutsu" maneuver where he can shapeshift into a woman, just because Naruto isn't a villain). One YouTuber said Tangled was offensive because there weren't enough POC in 18th century Germany (except one of the bar guys, who she said was racist because he had small, squinty eyes even though he's not Asian), and when people called her out and pointed out the setting, she also said that "Italians aren't white" when someone (though mistankenly) said the movie was set in 18th century Italy, which is blatant misinformation and also anti-Italian, and that it was "appropriating Indian and Thai culture" because the floating lanterns are popular traditions in India and Thailand during their traditional holidays. Interestingly, she also jumped on the "Jewish coded Gothel" bandwagon too. Cinderella has been targeted by another YouTuber whose video otherwise had valid criticisms of offensive moments in Disney movies, because they though Jaq and Gus were "black coded' just because they were brown and "sounded too black".
 * 441) Considering how many voice actors (even in Canadian TV shows) are being replaced at the wishes of SJWs and producers who obey them, it's hard to know when any POC character gets a POC voice actor after a white person is because of pandering. If true, even Polly Pocket is guilty of this, since allegedly Cherlandra Estrada (who is either Latina or Afro-Latina) is now voicing Shani because Kazumi Evans regretted it. If so, that's even worse, since Evans isn't even white, she's Japanese!
 * 442) As if voice actors being replaced from SJWs wasn't bad enough, there's certain media (including celebrities) that have been targeted by SJWs, even fallen into the various victims of cancel culture. This is especially common after George Floyd's death.
 * 443) *The 1990 action comedy film Kindergarten Cop was going to be shown at a film festivel in Oregon back in 2020, but it was pulled due to people saying it romanticized the police.
 * 444) *The 1939 classic, Gone With the Wind, has been targeted in 2020 due to Hattie Mcdaniel playing Mammy, a slave in the aformentioned movie. The outrage led to HBO Max getting rid of the movie on their streaming service. When the film came back on HBO Max, it received a different narrative with an opening discretion.
 * 445) *One episode of Bubble Guppies called, The Police Cop-etition! was pulled from the television broadcast and online streaming due to being police-related in the wake of the protest in June 2020.
 * 446) *In December 2017, CNN posted an article which called Thomas and Friends sexist, classist, and overall 'facist', despite the fact that there was plenty of female representation and that it was meant to be a realistic portrayl of railways in the 1950s. In response, Mattel addressed these criticisms in the critically disdained "Big World Big Adventures" era (Seasons 22-24).
 * 447) *Edward the Blue Engine and Henry the Green Engine were removed from Thomas & Friends and replaced with Nia and Rebecca for almost no reason.
 * 448) *The long-running COPS was canceled by the Paramount Network in the wake of the George Floyd protest. Live PD was also canceled by A&E, which lost over half of its viewership over this decision. Thankfully, COPS has made it's return on TV two years later.
 * 449) *Not even Paw Patrol was safe from cancel culture, as it recieved scrutiny twice for representing Chase as a "good-cop archetype". While the show wasn't cancelled, it did go dark in response to the protest in June 2020.
 * 450) *The 1994 film, PCU, has yet to appear on streaming services and receive a Blu-Ray release mainly due to the film mocking political corectness.
 * 451) *Lucasfilm and Disney in February 2021 under Kathleen Kennedy's leadership fired Gina Carano, actress of Carla Dune (who is one of the greatest female characters in Star Wars) from The Mandalorian after she posted on her Instagram about the experience of Jewish people during the Holocaust to the U.S. political climate. Although she went too far for her Instagram post, it's still very unfair that she got cancelled when The Mandalorian could have been postponed for her controversy if she hadn't been fired. Futhermore, Pedro Pascal is allowed to keep his job despite the fact he compared Trump supporters to Nazis.
 * 452) **To make this even more infuriating, Gina Carano's Instagram post resulted in toy company Hasbro to stop publishing all toys related to Carla Dune.
 * 453) ***Meanwhile, several days later, Cristela Alonzo who is another actress from Disney as the voice of Cruz Ramirez from Pixar's "Cars 3", disrespected Rush Limbaugh's death on Twitter and said "I hope hell is him having to listen to every episode of his show." This is much worse than what Gina Carano posted, and Cristela Alonzo still gets to keep her job. Not helping is that, similar to Alyssa Milano, this was the year she became an SJW, as she's a far-leftist, is a strong Democrat supporter and will target anything right-wing, conservative or Republican. However, she is starting to slowly fade away, likely because of her tweet on Rush Limbaugh that drove her into scrutiny in which she recieved negative critisism on her Twitter.
 * 454) *In March 2021, The New York Times published articles that denounced deceased author Dr. Seuss of his six books and Looney Tunes character, Pepé Le Pew. They labeled six of Seuss' books "racist" and "offensive" and accused Pepé of promoting "rape culture", even though his actions, while wrong, were never glorified (in fact, they were mocked and Penelope or whatever other girl he'd be hitting on would call him out or run off). They unfortunatley got what they wanted along with the outrage mob, as the Dr. Seuss estate removed those six books from circulation and Warner Bros. promised not to include Pepé Le Pew in any upcoming movies and TV series of Looney Tunes again after being removed from Space Jam: A New Legacy. What's even worse with Dr. Seuss is that they removed his books on his 117th birthday, so they basically disrespected his death. Admittedly, he did have some definitely offensive thoughts, with cartoons he drew during the war with the "Yellow, squinty eyed, bucktoothed Tojo clone" sterotype against the Japanese, but still.
 * 455) *Also in March 2021, Paramount+ pulled the SpongeBob SquarePants season 3 episode “Mid-Life Crustacean” for its controversial panty raid scene and was deemed inappropriate for kids, and not long after the episode was pulled from Nickelodeon after being on the channel for 18 years. This reasoning is highly hypocritical for Nickelodeon airing several SpongeBob episodes with mature themes like suicide in “Are You Happy Now?” but still airs that episode. Not to mention, the critically reviled episode "One Coarse Meal" which also has themes about suicide (though poorly represented) still airs to this day. With that said, however, this episode is still available on the season 3 DVD set.
 * 456) *The FNAF movie has been severely postponed as Scott Cawthon (who is the creator of the FNAF games) was forced into early retirement in June 2021 after Twitter SJWs discovered that he donated to Republican/Anti-LGBT politicians such as Donald Trump. What isn't any better is that Scott and his whole family were doxxed and received death threats just because he was allowed to have his own political opinion. It's made even worse when many internet trolls made fun of his retirement, including the Foodists group who are well known for mocking deaths of other YouTubers or their family relatives (Logan Roof, Louielol, Savetion, etc.).
 * 457) *David Ducovany, main actor of The X-Files has been targeted by far-leftists all because he participated in a Russian beer ad that was Anti-LGBT.
 * 458) *And then there's even David Mamet, who is mostly known for being the writer of The Untouchables, Glengarry Glen Ross and The Edge, as well as the director of Heist along with the 2004 political action thriller, Spartan, and even being the creator of the well recieved military action drama series, The Unit. He was nearly blacklisted by Hollywood due to him being a conservative, despite the fact he used to be a liberal. Even if he did make false claims about the 2020 Presidental Election being stolen and fraudulent, that still does not deny that attempting to blacklist him for all this is a right thing to do.
 * 459) On the subject of voice actors, Hollywood movies based on independent movies and cartoons put Hollywood actors in the movies when they don't need to even remake independent projects in the first place (Both MLP films recently did this: My Little Pony: The Movie put celebrities like Emily Blunt in the movie but kept the Canadian voice actors as the Mane Six, but A New Generation is just Hollywood actors as the new characters, and the Canadian voice actors only play the Mane Six in a brief opening scene and then are gone.)
 * 460) Sometimes the people behind some of their movies seem to not accept criticism on certain movies that went bad or at least mediocre. You got those that would do things like put a lawsuit or outright insult on social media.
 * 461) Many modern-day kids' movies are repetitive and formulaic, especially the Disney and Pixar ones. To be fair, both Disney and Pixar did make some good movies no doubt, but they are prone to be formulaic regardless if the movie is good or not.
 * 462) It's hard to trust critics nowadays depending on the movie. While it's true that some movies can be good, decent, average, or bad, some critics come up with some outlandish reviews while others are being nitpicky. For instance, some reviewers for Sonic the Hedgehog 2 complained about Sonic, Tails, and Knuckles getting too much focus without realizing that those characters are supposed to be the main/prominent characters of the movie. If that wasn't enough, one reviewer literally compared the afformed characters to that of the conflict between Ukraine and Russia of all things due to the color of the characters.. Like for real, how can three fictional characters become comparable to that of real-life war?
 * 463) *Then you have the reverse part of this problem. You also have critics who defend bad movies (as in really bad movies like Ghostbusters 2016). Since we mentioned Ghostbusters 2016, why don't you compare the critic reviews on Rotten Tomatoes to what fans of Ghostbusters have to say about this movie?
 * 464) As a result of their actions, certain dreadful movies being made, and exposures, several audiences lost faith in the film industry and many of these former supporters started to backlash against them. Even then, their pleas and criticisms are most of the time, ignored. This is another reason that was true even before 2016 because it's been happening since around the mid-2000s and onward, giving birth to nostalgia purists.
 * 465) *What doesn't make this any good is that it only causes already bad communities to grow more toxic, pessimistic, arrogant and in the worst of cases, nihilistic (Obsessive Anti-SJWs and nostalgia freaks for example).
 * 466) Most summer blockbusters and movies tend to become mediocre, average or just boring in general, with some exceptions.

Good Qualities

 * 1) Despite the industry going downhill during the 2000s (or around 2016, depending on your opinion), there are obviously still many fantastic or at least decent (meaning that they aren't exactly perfect, but are still enjoyable enough to be entertaining and fantastic in their own right) american (or had US involvement) movies and shows released in the past and present, especially in the 2010s. Movies like:
 * 2) *Pixar movies (except Cars 2 and Lightyear)
 * 3) *Most of the MCU movies (except for Iron Man 2, Thor: Dark World, Captain Marvel and Eternals)
 * 4) *Zack Snyder's Justice League
 * 5) *Boyhood
 * 6) *La La Land
 * 7) *Christopher Nolan’s Batman trilogy (Batman Begins, The Dark Knight, and The Dark Knight Rises)
 * 8) *The Mitchells vs. The Machines
 * 9) *The Batman
 * 10) *The Northman
 * 11) *Top Gun: Maverick
 * 12) *Everything Everywhere All at Once
 * 13) *Jackass Forever
 * 14) *Joker
 * 15) *Zootopia
 * 16) *Shutter Island
 * 17) *Baby Driver
 * 18) *Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse
 * 19) *A Quiet Place
 * 20) *The Shape of Water
 * 21) *Logan
 * 22) *The Nice Guys
 * 23) *Minari
 * 24) *Skyfall
 * 25) *Her
 * 26) *Hacksaw Ridge
 * 27) *Tropic Thunder
 * 28) *Superbad
 * 29) *Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy
 * 30) *The modern Planet of the Apes trilogy
 * 31) *The How to Train Your Dragon Trilogy
 * 32) *Black Swan
 * 33) *The Town
 * 34) *127 Hours
 * 35) *Midnight in Paris
 * 36) *50/50
 * 37) *The Descendants
 * 38) *Crazy, Stupid Love
 * 39) *Edge of Tomorrow
 * 40) *Warrior
 * 41) *Beginners
 * 42) *Moneyball
 * 43) *Hugo
 * 44) *Super 8
 * 45) *Argo
 * 46) *Moonrise Kingdom
 * 47) *Zero Dark Thirty
 * 48) *Looper
 * 49) *Django Unchained
 * 50) *Life of Pi
 * 51) *Les Miserables
 * 52) *The Cabin in the Woods
 * 53) *The Dark Knight
 * 54) *The Grey
 * 55) *The Place Beyond the Pines
 * 56) *Before Midnight
 * 57) *12 Years a Slave
 * 58) *The World's End
 * 59) *The Secret Life of Walter Mitty
 * 60) *Prisoners
 * 61) *Nebraska
 * 62) *The Wolf of Wall Street
 * 63) *The Handmaiden
 * 64) *Da 5 Bloods
 * 65) *Knives Out
 * 66) *Jojo Rabbit
 * 67) *The Irishman
 * 68) *A Star is Born
 * 69) *1917
 * 70) *The Disaster Artist
 * 71) *Arrival
 * 72) *Moonlight
 * 73) *If Beale St. Could Talk
 * 74) *Blade Runner 2049
 * 75) *Hunt for the Wilderpeople
 * 76) *Mission: Impossible – Fallout
 * 77) *Promising Young Woman
 * 78) *The Social Network
 * 79) *Inception
 * 80) *Drive
 * 81) *The Master
 * 82) *Hereditary
 * 83) *Nightcrawler
 * 84) *Snowpiercer
 * 85) *X-Men: Days of Future Past
 * 86) *Frances Ha
 * 87) *Fruitvale Station
 * 88) *John Wick
 * 89) *Interstellar
 * 90) *The Guest
 * 91) *Selma
 * 92) *Creed
 * 93) *The Martian
 * 94) *Carol
 * 95) *Sicario
 * 96) *Ex-Machina
 * 97) *The Revenant
 * 98) *Kingsman: Secret Service
 * 99) *Me, Earl & the Dying Girl
 * 100) *Manchester by the Sea
 * 101) *The Nice Guys
 * 102) *Sing Street
 * 103) *The Lobster
 * 104) *Fences
 * 105) *Hacksaw Ridge
 * 106) *BlackKklansman
 * 107) *Eighth Grade
 * 108) *First Reformed
 * 109) *Mandy
 * 110) *Upgrade
 * 111) *The Farewell
 * 112) *Phantom Thread
 * 113) *Gerald's Game
 * 114) *Get Out
 * 115) *Brigsby Bear
 * 116) *Uncut Gems
 * 117) *The VVitch
 * 118) *3 Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri
 * 119) *Lady Bird
 * 120) *The Lego Movie
 * 121) *Moana
 * 122) *Dune (2021)
 * 123) *Marriage Story
 * 124) *Widows
 * 125) *Red Rocket
 * 126) *Spencer
 * 127) *Licorice Pizza
 * 128) *Judas and the Black Messiah
 * 129) *The Last Duel
 * 130) *Free Guy
 * 131) *tick...tick...BOOM!
 * 132) *Coda
 * 133) *Spring Breakers
 * 134) *The Green Knight
 * 135) *No Time to Die
 * 136) *West Side Story (2021)
 * 137) *Annihilation
 * 138) *The Lighthouse
 * 139) *Booksmart
 * 140) *Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
 * 141) *Whiplash
 * 142) *The Favourite
 * 143) *Birdman, and the list goes on
 * 144) *And even shows too such as
 * 145) **Breaking Bad
 * 146) **Game of Thrones (seasons 1-7)
 * 147) **The Office (US)
 * 148) **Euphoria
 * 149) **Stranger Things
 * 150) **Avatar: The Last Airbender
 * 151) **BoJack Horseman
 * 152) **Mr. Robot
 * 153) **Fleabag
 * 154) **Daredevil
 * 155) **Heroes
 * 156) **Mad Men
 * 157) **Six Feet Under
 * 158) **Gilmore Girls
 * 159) **The Americans
 * 160) **Total Drama (Island, Action, World Tour and Revenge of the Island)
 * 161) **Watchmen
 * 162) **Ted Lasso
 * 163) **Scrubs
 * 164) **Fargo
 * 165) **Hannibal
 * 166) **Rick and Morty
 * 167) **Mindhunter
 * 168) **Barry
 * 169) **Schitt's Creek
 * 170) **24
 * 171) **True Detective
 * 172) **Sons of Anarchy
 * 173) **SpongeBob SquarePants (except certain seasons)
 * 174) **Arrested Development
 * 175) **It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
 * 176) **Chernobyl
 * 177) **When They See Us
 * 178) **Twin Peaks: The Return
 * 179) **Cobra Kai
 * 180) **Better Call Saul
 * 181) **Succession
 * 182) **Prison Break
 * 183) **Lost
 * 184) **The Wire
 * 185) **The Handmaid's Tale
 * 186) **The Leftovers
 * 187) **The Underground Railroad
 * 188) **Adventure Time
 * 189) **Steven Universe
 * 190) **Gravity Falls
 * 191) **Regular Show
 * 192) **The Owl House
 * 193) **Infinity Train
 * 194) **Amphibia
 * 195) **The Mandalorian
 * 196) **And much more.
 * 197) 2001, 2004, 2007 to 2010, 2014, 2017, 2019 and 2021 were pretty good years for the American film industry.
 * 198) The film industry still did a good job handling the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, with many studios delaying most of their movies (e.g. Black Widow, F9, A Quiet Place Part II) from the original 2020 release slate to 2021 (or even 2022), and theaters shutting down for the safety of the public, as well as movies and the like halting production, or sending them to streaming services and/or the digital marketplace either earlier than expected or directly. Even those involved in the film industry encouraged their fanbases to stay at home, wash their hands, etc. That also included even controversial celebrities, showing that celebrities do have standards (even if they at least tried to be well-meaning as far as their controversial behavior went) and care deeply about the interests of those who idolize them.
 * 199) At times, the remake can be decent like Scarface, Little Shop of Horrors, The Ring, Dawn of the Dead and Cape Fear.
 * 200) Many films, as always, are still only disliked for more general reasons than political (e.g. plot holes, lazy writing, bad acting, overdosed and clichéd tropes that are badly handled, etc.) just like many of those that came out before 2016.
 * 201) As a result of the above qualifications, the only ongoing film franchise (mainly so far) that started before 2016 that still has some excellence added to it is Marvel Studios' own shared universe: none other than the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It's even a multimedia franchise now!
 * 202) *Sadly, however, it has recently started to take a nosedive in popularity and to lesser extent in quality as well, probably in the combined reasoning that audiences are claiming it's getting too politically progressive, the fact that it is starting to run out of ideas, and also because audiences believe that the MCU should've ended after Avengers: Endgame, with them pointing out it would have been a fitting finale for the MCU, and that the franchise is now being milked to death.
 * 203) Although the industry is not as good as it used to be now, those involved in it (e.g. actors, actresses, screenwriters, directors, etc.) still try and put much effort into the work they make for film buffs alike (even if it lacks quality for political or general reasons like many movies that were released before 2016), thus showing that the film industry is still loved, still makes plenty of money, and still has many loyal fans as well as supporters (also, many audiences still have faith in the industry and many still go to theaters) and film buffs despite its downfall (more so for political reasons, unoriginality, etc.), thus proving that there's still a lot of hope for this faltering business. Some actors/actresses/screenwriters/directors such as Tom Hanks, Rachel McAdams, Channing Tatum, Julie Andrews, Steven Spielberg, Angelina Jolie, Will Arnett, and Keanu Reeves treated their fans with respect and they were never racist on social media or were outright criminals and hypocrites.
 * 204) Although SJWs and woke vloggers have given these acts a bad name in recent years even in the film industry (especially with films such as MIB: International, the Charlie's Angels reboot, 2016s Ghostbusters, and certain others), the idea of diversity and representation in films and television shows isn't really bad, and is actually well-meaning and still is a good cause, seeing as the minorities presented such as people of African/Latin/Polynesian, etc. descent, the LGBTQ+ community, the mentally and physically disabled, Muslims, Jews, women, etc. were, and still are, oppressed by other people who are not apart of their communities over the years.
 * 205) Some animated movies don't even need to rely so much on big-name Hollywood actors and instead just retain the original actors. Just take a look at the SpongeBob or VeggieTales movies.
 * 206) There is a part of the film industry that mocks most of its problems, proving that Hollywood can poke fun at itself once in a while; as in movies like Free Guy, Seven Psychopaths, Adaptation, Tropic Thunder, This is the End, or Team America: World Police.
 * 207) While the same actors are cast over and over again in the same film genre to the point where it becomes obsessive, it can be justified by the fact that it's their job, they have a good acting range, and people simply enjoy seeing films from a specific actor and/or actress.
 * 208) *It's also very possible that Hollywood only casts certain big-name actors in a certain time frame because they are popular or relevant at the time. This means that in a decade or so from now, or even sooner, actors and actresses like Dwayne Johnson, Gal Gadot, Kevin Hart, and Chris Hemsworth may be on their way out and will start to fade away, just like how actors and actresses like Halle Berry, Brendan Fraser, Sandra Bullock, Tobey Maguire, and Denzel Washington are already on their way out and are fading away.
 * 209) **It's also possible that only certain actors and actresses are cast in movies and are overlooked/fading away due to a large number of actors and actresses there are in Hollywood. It's not like you can cast everyone at once!
 * 210) ***In fact, certain actors and actresses being cast frequently or in a certain genre also even created some trends in the past defining a certain actor or actress' popularity at the time. In the late 90s to the entirety of the 2000s to the early 2010s, there was the "Frat Pack": A term defining certain comedy actors such as Ben Stiller, Will Ferrell, Steve Carell, Vince Vaughn, Owen Wilson, Luke Wilson, Paul Rudd, and Jack Black who appeared in the highest-grossing comedies in the 2000s. It's possible that the industry would not be the same today without these trends.
 * 211) *To be fair, there is also one other good enough reason as to why some actors and actresses don't get cast anymore or not even cast at all: Some actors and actresses have a range of having made controversial statements or having done controversial career-killing mistakes, to being arrogant and egotistical jerks who have been called difficult to work with (though that's still nothing compared to the other two), to even being outright crooks, rapists, racists, abusers, murderers, sociopathic bullies, ultra-obsessive SJWs (the really menacing ones), and the like, which has made the industry/individual filmmakers rightfully decide to blacklist them (though sometimes also for the wrong reasons, but sometimes mainly for the right reasons too) and not cast them anymore. Actors and actresses accused of these include Rose McGowan, Mel Gibson, Letitia Wright, Kevin Spacey, Steven Seagal, and Chevy Chase. Also, it's possible that once Amber Heard is exposed and Johnny Depp is declared innocent, then she may join this list too.
 * 212) Because of the positive impact that the American film industry had in the world, production film companies all over the world have a chance to shine with outstanding films to represent their countries like Boy and the World, Studio Ghibli films, Song of the Sea, Klaus, the CGI Doraemon films, A Silent Voice, Demon Slayer Mugen Train, Belle, the My Hero Academia movies, A Costume for Nicolas, Shame, Amour, Where Is Anne Frank, My Father's Secret, Long Way North, Wolfwalkers, Hayop Ka, Calamity, Lupin III, The Hunt (Jagten), The Legend of Hei, Your Name, Weathering With You, Paddington 2, Nahuel and the Magic Book, The Mole Agent, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Toni Erdmann, Loving Vincent, The Second Mother, Retablo, The Milk of Sorrow, Days of Santiago, The City and the Dogs, Wild Tales, The Secret in Their Eyes, A Prophet, Cell 211, Parasite, Train to Busan, Shoplifters, Call Me By Your Name, Life is Beautiful, In the Mood for Love, The Father, Cinema Paradiso, Todo Sobre mi Madre, Volver, Y Tu Mamá También, Amores Perros, Roma, A Fantastic Woman, Flee, Les Misérables, Silence, The Lady, K.G.F. Chapters 1 and 2, RRR, and so on.
 * 213) Some actors are doing good deeds like when Robert Downey Jr (Iron Man) gave Iron Man's New Arm Prosthetic to a 7-year-old boy without an arm, Mark Hamill (Luke Skywalker) calls the child a Jedi before he passed away, Jason Momoa (Aquaman) surprises the fan Danny Sheehan and calls him beautiful boy, Johnny Depp (Captain Sparrow) who also surprises a fan in Vancouver Hospital.
 * 214) Some sequels that are based on already existing movies can still be great or at least decent for 2010 and above. Take a look at Blade Runner 2049, Mad Max: Fury Road, Star Trek: Beyond, Scream (2022), 22 Jump Street, Fast Five, Logan, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, Toy Story 3, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, John Wick: Chapter 2, War for the Planet of the Apes, Top Gun: Maverick, Thor: Ragnarok and most of the MCU related sequels, Creed II, Kung Fu Panda 3, etc.
 * 215) *Speaking of sequels, some can be big improvements towards the predecessors of certain sequels. Take a look at Justice League 2017 and Zack Snyder's Justice League as well as Minions 2015 and Minions: The Rise of Gru for example. Heck, why don't you compare Cars 2 to Cars 3 as another example since Pixar appears to treat Cars 2 as a non-canon film?
 * 216) There are still heaps of great actors of the past and present who are both amazing on the screen as in real life; such as the late Chadwick Boseman, the late Betty White, the late Humphrey Bogart, the late Sean Connery, the late Sammy Davis Jr., the late Sidney Poitier, the late Richard Pryor, the late Gene Wilder, the late Roger Moore, the late Christopher Reeve, the late Ricardo Montalban, the late Burt Reynolds, the late Steve McQueen, the late Chespirito, the late Michael Clarke Duncan, the late Bill Paxton, the late Olivia Newton-John, the late Kelly Preston, the late Christopher Plummer, the late Ed Asner, the late James Caan, the late Ray Liotta, the late Mickey Rooney, the late Carrie Fisher, the late George Carlin, the late Chris Farley, the late John Candy, the late Verne Troyer, the late Paul Walker, the late Fred Willard, the late James Gandolfini, the late Alan Rickman, the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, the late Robin Williams, the late Heath Ledger, the late Anton Yelchin, Dick Van Dyke, Anthony Hopkins, Sylvester Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Mark Hamill, Dustin Hoffman, Morgan Freeman, Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, Jack Nicholson, Denzel Washington, Tom Hanks, Rita Moreno, Geena Davis, Susan Sarandon, Bette Midler, Joan Cusack, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill, Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Billy Crystal, Christopher Walken, Kelsey Grammer, Michael Douglas, Sigourney Weaver, Michelle Pfeiffer, Steve Martin, Martin Short, Emilio Estevez, Michael J. Fox, Bill Murray, Dan Akroyd, Gary Sinise, Danny Devito, Dave Chappelle, Mike Epps, Eddie Murphy, Wesley Snipes, Will Smith, Keanu Reeves, Johnny Depp, Gary Oldman, Pierce Brosnan, Nicolas Cage, John Travolta, Jackie Chan, Liam Neeson, Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Samuel L. Jackson, Dwayne Johnson, Jennifer Lopez, Salma Hayek, Antonio Banderas, Danny Trejo, Russell Crowe, Brad Pitt, Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Kate Winslet, Nicole Kidman, Naomi Watts, Angelina Jolie, Kevin Hart, Sacha Baron Cohen, Mike Myers, Dana Carvey, Adam Sandler, Chris Rock, Kevin James, Rob Schneider, David Spade, Steve Buscemi, Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly, Jack Black, Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson, Luke Wilson, Vince Vaughn, Steve Carell, Jim Carrey, John Krasinski, Emily Blunt, Olivia Colman, James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, Benedict Cumberbatch, Christoph Waltz, Matthew McConaughey, Jason Sudeikis, Jason Bateman, Will Forte, Simon Pegg, Bill Burr, Pete Davidson, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Rowan Atkinson, Ricky Gervais, Martin Lawrence, Ryan Reynolds, Channing Tatum, Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Chris Hemsworth, Jeremy Renner, Mark Ruffalo, Chris Pratt, Anthony Mackie, Sebastian Stan, Tom Holland, Simu Liu, Henry Cavill, Jason Momoa, Antony Starr, Karl Urban, Seth Rogen, Karen Gillan, Naomie Harris, Regina King, Mahershala Ali, John Boyega, Michael B. Jordan, Daniel Kaluuya, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen, Andy Serkis, J.K. Simmons, Bryan Cranston, Bob Odenkirk, Ethan Hawke, Ewan McGregor, Hugh Jackman, Tom Hardy, Cillian Murphy, Jude Law, Vincent Cassel, Viggo Mortensen, Ralph Fiennes, Daniel Craig, Daniel-Day Lewis, Mads Mikkelsen, Joaquin Phoenix, Colin Farrell, Oscar Isaac, Adrien Brody, Woody Harrelson, Willem Dafoe, Christian Bale, Taron Egerton, Zac Efron, Ryan Gosling, James Franco, Ashton Kutcher, Casey Affleck, Ben Affleck, Danny McBride, Jay Baruchel, Jake Gyllenhaal, Aaron Paul, Miles Teller, Jennifer Connelly, Jessica Chastain, Amanda Seyfried, Dakota Johnson, Anne Hathaway, Cate Blanchett, Eva Green, Margot Robbie, Emilia Clarke, Emma Stone, Brie Larson, Blake Lively, Rachel McAdams, Carey Mulligan, Cameron Diaz, Malin Akerman, Ali Larter, Uma Thurman, Eva Mendes, Teresa Palmer, Anna Faris, Maggie Grace, Jennifer Garner, Queen Latifah, Regina Hall, Wanda Sykes, Eva Longoria, Sophia Bush, Zooey Deschanel, Rachel Nichols, Marion Cotillard, Vanessa Kirby, Stephanie Cayo, Sienna Miller, Lauren Lapkus, Anna Kendrick, Alexis Bledel, Gabourey Sidibe, Jodie Comer, Dan Stevens, Andrew Garfield, Lakeith Stanfield, Lil Rel Howery, Milo Ventimiglia, BJ Novak, Andres Wiese, Paul Rudd, Jon Heder, Joseph-Gordon Levitt, Stephan James, Tom Cruise, Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, Zach Galifianakis, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry, David Schwimmer, Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Carla Gugino, Connie Britton, Kirsten Dunst, Bill Hader, Neil Patrick Harris, Macaulay Culkin, Taylor Lautner, Robert Pattinson, Elijah Wood, Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson, Johnny Knoxville, Jamie Kennedy, Tom Green, Steve Zahn, Zach Braff, Zachary Levi, Seann William Scott, Tobey Maguire, Brendan Fraser, Hayden Christensen, Hayden Panettiere, Megan Fox, Kate Beckinsale, Jenna Fischer, Rainn Wilson, Joel McHale, Danny Pudi, Donald Glover, Terry Crews, Marlon Wayans, Craig Robinson, Tyrese Gibson, Chris "Ludacris" Bridges, Shaquille O’Neal, John Cena, Jason Statham, Vin Diesel, Eugenio Derbez, Lin Manuel Miranda, Diego Luna, Gael Garcia Bernal, Josh Gad, Bo Burnham, Joe Keery, Taylor Kitsch, Justin Long, Matthew Gray Gubler, Timothee Chalamet, Paul Walter Hauser, Matt Lanter, Hunter Schafer, Sydney Sweeney, Zendaya, Anya-Taylor Joy, Lili Reinhart, Amandla Stenberg, Daisy Ridley, Joey King, Maya Hawke, Mindy Kaling, Sara Paxton, Kelly Marie Tran, Ariana DeBose, Gillian Jacobs, Alison Brie, Julianne Hough, Kristen Stewart, Elizabeth Olsen, Zoe Kravitz, Zoe Saldana, Saoirse Ronan, Florence Pugh, Awkwafina, Rooney Mara, Hailee Steinfeld, Natalie Portman, Kerry Washington, Halle Berry, Will Arnett, Rachel McAdams, and many many more to name.
 * 217) Likewise, there are still fantastic directors and producers; such as Steven Spielberg, Peter Jackson, George Lucas, Edgar Wright, Greta Gerwig, Guillermo del Toro, Alfonso Cuarón, James Cameron, Barry Jenkins, Chloe Zhao, Paul Thomas Anderson, Wes Anderson, Bong Joon Ho, Phil Lord and Chris Miller, Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez, Sam Raimi, Clint Eastwood, Robert Eggers, James Gunn, Zack Snyder, the Russo Bros., Denis Villeneuve, The Safdies, Christopher Nolan, Noah Baumbach, Rian Johnson, Brad Bird, Jordan Peele, Spike Lee, Ridley Scott, and Martin Scorsese who really value and seem to care about cinema.
 * 218) There are still many completely original films out there made by Hollywood even today, This is especially true in the animation department. mh:greatestmovies:Pixar is the biggest prime example as well as companies like Annapurna, Laika, Walt Disney Animation Studios, A24, and Paramount.
 * 219) There are still plenty of aspiring actors and filmmakers out there who want to join to industry to actually make quality cinema and get the industry back to what it used to be.
 * 220) Some people in the industry do listen to criticism. Take the crew of the 2020's Sonic the Hedgehog movie for example due to them listening to the fans of Sonic the Hedgehog thus fixing Sonic's ugly old design.
 * 221) Sometimes they give canceled movies another chance to shine. It's not always everyday that this happens, but you can tell some people in the industry do want to give shelved movies a second chance. Take Nimona as an example because the late Blue Sky Studios intended to work on the film, but now Netflix acquired it.
 * 222) While this also applies to other industries as well, many nostalgia freaks do have a point about many movies in the industry from 2000-2015 being better by comparison when compared to the ones from 2016 onwards if they believe that the industry has become too politically biased, as at least the industry wasn't showing off any political bias during 2000-2015. Though it sometimes can be for the wrong reasons too, as they might selfishly say today's movies suck when they overlook the fact that there are movies from past decades that sucked too (though many have gained a cult following with some very rare exceptions) which can make them sound hypocritical.
 * 223) The movies and shows we watched, many filmmakers, and even other countries' film industries won't exist without Hollywood. Also, our very lives would not be the same without said movies and shows, since both movies and TV can help influence someone's life, outlook, and attitudes.

Videos
Ib_d6GE_Xtg zz6KOsePEHs eac0lXfMs9c ng4S2WKinDI gCrf8BJjtyM 12f0ligwS5s ZNk6Sf9yo84 zmnCeR2qhxw oj8JK6c5x3M VI9RSlHqu-w ev2aTi9sWAE sDgOaWzja20 wmOZgSyQjtA CQ92cggLMx8 Pjt-vxEMpVs WZRjGy5F2EI <youtube width=320 height=180>GCtPiMvSjSs <youtube width=320 height=180>QvcWMqu6dEE <youtube width=320 height=180>Pg5bEWBryNE <youtube width=320 height=180>157GLRMe5x4 <youtube width=320 height=180>uEWVGht3SBI <youtube width=320 height=180>CfyMD5rSK50 <youtube width=320 height=180>oKGX1nXpXa4 <youtube width=320 height=180>IMJHL2EPn8M <youtube width=320 height=180>FIEXfgkZIsk