“Hardly an implosion”: What is Steven Spielberg’s Hollywood Implosion Theory? Fans Use Avatar, Avengers Movies to Prove Him Wrong

What is Steven Spielberg’s Hollywood Implosion Theory? Fans Use Avatar, Avengers Movies to Prove Him Wrong
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Steven Spielberg has changed history with his vision and ambition. But those qualities are not enough to make a person as skilled as him to survive and be sustainable in a cut-throat world without factoring in relevance and an ability to adapt to cultural shifts faster than the rest of the world. Staying ahead of the curve has always worked out in favor of visionary filmmakers, artists, and creatives and Spielberg luckily is all three packed into one explosive brain.

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Not to anyone’s surprise, the Indiana Jones director then predicted a certain “implosion” in Hollywood that would rock the industry’s very foundation to the core, making it an imperative task to change course and employ some corrective measures for its survival. This existential threat to Hollywood and the theatrical business is here and people are intent on proving Spielberg wrong.

Steven Spielberg
Steven Spielberg

Also read: “There’s going to be an implosion”: Steven Spielberg Predicted Multiple Box-Office Disasters 10 Years Ago After His $275M Movie Almost Went To HBO

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Steven Spielberg Declares an Existential Threat on Hollywood

The Hollywood Implosion theory of Steven Spielberg was first presented by the director in 2013 at a lecture during the opening of the then-new Interactive Media Building, a part of the USC School of Cinematic Arts at the University of Southern California. Present alongside his ever-loyal sidekick, the Star Wars Universe creator, George Lucas, Spielberg had confidently predicted a phenomenon that would most likely take place in the near future and involved a series of critical failures involving big-budget movies.

“That’s the big danger, and there’s eventually going to be an implosion — or a big meltdown. There’s going to be an implosion where three or four or maybe even a half-dozen megabudget movies are going to go crashing into the ground, and that’s going to change the paradigm.”

Steven Spielberg
Steven Spielberg in his early days of filmmaking

Also read: Harrison Ford Couldn’t Believe Steven Spielberg Made Him Carry an Obsolete Weapon in $2.2B Franchise: “Why am I carrying a…”

The danger and the paradigm that Spielberg posited as the catalyst for this meltdown referred to the state of upheaval in the industry where proven veteran talents, as well as young filmmakers with new and fresh ideas, were both finding it extraordinarily difficult to get their films into a theatre. The mass exodus toward direct-to-video or streaming was already imminent and Spielberg claimed, “You’re gonna have to pay $25 for the next Iron Man, you’re probably only going to have to pay $7 to see Lincoln.”

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He was not wrong about the moviegoing experience being under threat. He was also not wrong about the successive crash of megabudget movies. Spielberg especially hit the bullseye with his prediction about films shifting away from theatres and going for a more direct, televised approach.

Fans in Uproar as Steven Spielberg’s Prediction Hits a Nerve

Since the era of burning witches at the stake has come and gone, great ideas that are ahead of their time or dangerous and unsavory predictions about the future are almost always laughed at and dismissed by the modern-day audience. At the time of Steven Spielberg’s implosion theory, the crowd wasn’t too worried about the doom-and-gloom nature of his dilemma since it was more of a futuristic phenomenon than one that could happen in our very lifetimes.

Steven Spielberg with a young Ke Huy Quan
Steven Spielberg on the Indiana Jones set

Also read: “I’m not going to try and charm people”: Steven Spielberg Let Iron Man Star’s $289M Movie Take Home Best Film Because He Didn’t Want to Fight Harvey Weinstein

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Now that the global pandemic, an AI insurgence, and a boom in the streaming industry have accelerated the whole process, the people have banded together to prove there is still some hope left for the theatrical distribution business and its tragic love-hate story with big-budget films. And the way to approach it is by discrediting his implosion theory by negating the director’s intentions.

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Despite the predictions, theories, and antithesis that have taken over the internet, the danger remains very real and very urgent to the state of the theatrical distribution business. As George Lucas further claimed, “The pathway to get into theaters is really getting smaller and smaller,” one only needs to look as far as the adulation surrounding Tom Cruise’s Top Gun: Maverick that the people are crediting with reviving the moviegoing experience.

Moreover, as the WGA and SAG-AFTRA launch on a historical melée of strikes, picketing, and negotiations with the AMPTP, Hollywood comes to a screeching halt and is forced to take a hard look at the issues that concern the well-being, sustainability, and endurance of the industry going into the future.

Source: The Hollywood Reporter

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Written by Diya Majumdar

Articles Published: 1546

With a degree in Literature from Miranda House, Diya Majumdar now has above 1500 published articles on FandomWire. Her passion and profession both include dissecting the world of cinema while being a liberally opinionated person with an overbearing love for Monet, Edvard Munch, and Van Gogh. Other skills include being the proud owner of an obsessive collection of Spotify playlists.