There are many reasons you might think cinema is going the way of the dinosaurs. With the popularity of long-play TV series booming, are films 鈥渢oo short鈥 now to allow the kind of plot and character development that we have become used to? In our changing world of media, does the distinction between 鈥淭V series鈥 and 鈥渇ilm鈥 even make sense?
In a recent class, when I asked my film studies students who had watched the set film for the week only a few hands went up 鈥 and my heart sank. Searching for an explanation, I asked who had watched the latest episode of the popular Netflix show . Nearly every hand went up.
What does this anecdote reveal about changing viewing habits? Does the fact that even film students prefer the latest streaming series to the classic films set as coursework serve to illustrate the point that cinema is dying?
There is no doubt of the enormous appeal of the many long-form series readily available to subscribers of streamed content providers such as Netflix, Amazon Prime, HULU, iTunes, Google Play, and NowTV. Viewers can binge-watch or pace their way through their favourite show before algorithms point them to their next favourite show, in an endless addictive cycle of entertainment and sleep deprivation.
Screen companions and virtual friends
There are many reasons for the global popularity of streamed series. For one, their characters are often more diverse and interesting than many of those in mainstream Hollywood filmic fare. This is exemplified so well by shows such as , with a nearly all-female cast playing characters with diverse sexual orientations and ethnic and class backgrounds.
Over the many hours of screen time, spanning many years in some cases, audiences become emotionally invested in characters鈥 stories. They become our screen companions and virtual friends. This has seen global fan bases emerge. These fans find kinship and a new kind of collective mourning when providers cancel their favourite show as seen with the devotees of the . The size and influence of these groups has helped the success of campaigns like that of Sense8 fans, who fought for and of their cancelled show. Similarly, the fans of One Day at a Time helped it find its new home at cable network 鈥淧op鈥.
The ultra long-play format of streamed series also allows time for extreme character development. The best known character evolution is perhaps that of Breaking Bad鈥檚 Walter White who makes a from school teacher to conflicted drug kingpin over the show鈥檚 62-hour run-time.
Hollywood cinema refuses to die
But traditional Hollywood cinema refuses to die 鈥 as evidenced by the boom in . from the Motion Picture Association of America reveals rising worldwide cinema ticket sales. The total takings at the box office topped US$41 billion 鈥 and the number of cinema screens worldwide increased by 7% (to 190,000 screens). The report states that 鈥渢here is no question that in this ever complex world of media, theatres are vital to overall entertainment industry success鈥.
But cinema still has its place. It allows a fantasy-filled retreat for family and friend entertainment 鈥 an immersive experience without the distraction of mobile phones, knocks on the door or family members talking over important bits. Cinemas, film societies, or open-air screenings become spaces where we can put our political divisions aside and cheer collectively for heroes overcoming odds to save screen worlds.
Blockbuster films may be thriving, but poetic art cinema has a more precarious place in the market and needs nurturing by cinephiles. Film director (of The Revenant, Birdman, and Babel fame) recently about how our worlds are being closed in by streaming services managed by 鈥渁lgorithms designed to keep feeding people what they like鈥. He added: 鈥渢he problem is that the algorithms are very smart but they are not creative, and they don鈥檛 know what people don鈥檛 know they like.鈥
We are in a golden age of streaming content and at-the-cinema-film. We just need to be guided by more than algorithms to see the treasures hiding away in this new era of excess and neglect.
TV or film 鈥 what鈥檚 the difference?
To complicate the arguments about the relative merits of TV series and film, distinctions between film and television are less clear than they ever have been. Many films (particularly those involving ) are no longer stand alone, but form part of a serial cinematic 鈥淯niverse鈥.
Many TV series now consist of feature-length episodes. With a run-time of 151 minutes, we could ask whether the Sense8 finale was actually a Netflix film, rather than a single episode. And, does it even matter to viewers what we call it?
In a world where visual media is being increasingly viewed on tablets, mobile phones and laptops rather than in actual cinemas or on television sets perhaps the terms 鈥渃inema鈥 and 鈥渢elevision鈥 no longer even make sense. This is an argument my co-editors and I make in a recent editorial for the journal Transnational Screens.
A key point is that streaming platforms such as Amazon and Netflix do not stand in opposition to cinema. Instead they have consumed cinema, repackaged it and made it available to global audiences. Powerful voices of such platforms, but they do enhance screen culture and make cinema more available to global audiences.
Dr Deborah Shaw is Professor of Film and Screen Studies at the 1024核工厂, and Research Lead for the School of Film, Media and Communication.
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons Licence. .