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And Steven Spielberg is the biggest culprit, apparently.
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00:00Just like if I won a car on a TV game show and then accidentally smashed it into an
00:04aquarium, sometimes good things can bring about negative consequences.
00:08This rings true in the world of cinema as well, with films that are praised for innovation
00:12or success giving birth to a string of copycats which ultimately harms the overall experience.
00:17It's a weird dynamic as the films on this list are legitimately great, but have unfortunately
00:22done more bad than good in the long run.
00:24With this in mind, I'm Jules for WhatCulture.com and these are 10 great movies that inadvertently
00:29ruin cinema.
00:30Number 10
00:30The Godfather Part 2 brought about the use of numbers to denote sequels
00:34Having a Part 2 tag on the end of a movie title might seem like something that has been around
00:39since the dawn of time, but it's a little-known fact that Francis Ford Coppola's follow-up
00:43to The Godfather was the first movie in history to make blatant use of this subtitle.
00:47Before Coppola used Part 2 for the Godfather sequel, movie sequels tended to have different
00:52names.
00:52Once Coppola opted to do it this way, however, a new movie trend was born in that studios
00:57realized that it was a neat way to market sequels.
00:59After all, it's a lot easier to cash in by telling people this is the same experience
01:03as the first one that they enjoyed, which a differently-titled movie wouldn't be able
01:06to do so well.
01:07The difference was, though, that The Godfather was titled as such because it was an indication
01:11that you needed to see the first film in order to understand the second, which, as we
01:15know today, doesn't exactly mean the same thing now.
01:18Number 9
01:18Jaws became the first blockbuster but inspired relentless marketing tactics
01:22The success of Jaws is many-fold, it's a great film for a start, but one of the reasons
01:27that everyone saw it back in the day was because instead of being rolled out one territory at
01:32a time in the US as was the norm, it was released in theaters everywhere on the same day.
01:37This meant that the marketing budget and exposure people had to these adverts was excessive,
01:41and as a result tons of people went to see it.
01:44This widespread campaigning of adverts was quickly adopted by other studios and is now the reason
01:49why every billboard, bus, and electronic service is smeared with film adverts.
01:53It was always going to be the way that cinema was heading, but Jaws did it first.
01:57Number 8
01:58Heaven's Gate changed the way that movies were made forever and the death of independent
02:02auteur-driven films
02:03Heaven's Gate has become something of a fable of cinematic disaster.
02:07After its budget rose to astronomical levels and the director became notoriously difficult
02:11to work with, the film flopped so hard that United Artists actually had to close down.
02:16Now, around this time there was a boon of independent films financed by big studios, the idea being
02:21hundreds of small investments to offset the risk of a project failing.
02:25The issue was that this failure sparked panic within the big boys and then they pulled the
02:29funding.
02:30This led to tighter control of budgets, which are still huge now, but now have much more
02:34executive meddling than before.
02:36Number 7
02:37Jurassic Park pretty much put an end to the usage of practical effects and animatronics.
02:41Stan Winston and Phil Tippett were the animatronic experts who worked on Jurassic Park, but neither
02:46of them had a truly positive experience on set.
02:49CGI was experimental at this point, but definitely on the rise, and in Jurassic Park it looked
02:55phenomenal.
02:56It was still expensive, but could move beyond the scope of animatronics.
02:59This led Tippett to utter the line,
03:01I've just become extinct.
03:03And when you look at the landscape of today's cinema, you can see that unfortunately he was
03:06right.
03:07CGI is now standard practice with films, and in fact they go overboard to sell any time
03:12that they actually have a real thing in real life on a real set.
03:15How bizarre.
03:16Number 6
03:17Saving Private Ryan made shaky cam a staple of mainstream cinema
03:20So the concept of shaky cam is in no way a technique invented by Spielberg, but it was one
03:25of the first blockbusters to incorporate this method into its shooting.
03:28Before this point, the wobbly viewpoint was seen as unprofessional.
03:32But Spielberg used it to great effect to disorientate his audience, especially during the Normandy
03:36Beach Assault.
03:37But as with all good examples, there have been countless times where this technique has
03:41either been misused or just done to hide shoddy action sequences.
03:45It's gotten so bad that in some fight or action scenes it's near impossible to tell
03:48what's going on.
03:49What was so immersive in one film is just cutting corners in others.
03:53Number 5
03:54Titanic brought the movie song back to popularity
03:57My Heart Will Go On is one of the biggest selling singles of all time, and we have one
04:01of the biggest grossing films of all time to thank for it.
04:04For a long time prior to Titanic, the whole song from the movie had just died out, yet
04:09James Horner convinced James Cameron that a cash cow needed to be milked for all it was
04:13worth and that they should pop this track in.
04:15Thus breathing life back into the whole, movie should have their own song phenomenon once
04:19more.
04:20And for a while, it was okay.
04:22It was cheesy as hell, but it was just okay.
04:25And now it's just really annoying.
04:28Number 4
04:28The Sixth Sense inspired endless left-field twist movies.
04:32M. Night Shyamalan didn't invent the shocking twist with The Sixth Sense, of course, but
04:36he damn near pioneered it as a marketing technique and selling point for motion pictures in general.
04:41With The Sixth Sense, audiences were so impressed with the twist that they began clamoring for
04:45more, and Hollywood obliged.
04:47Which is to say, in the aftermath, Hollywood began to flood theaters with shocking left-field
04:51twist movies, motion pictures that would market themselves on being built around twists
04:55you'd never see coming.
04:57The problem with this is obvious, with the now-expected twist becoming more and more over-the-top and
05:02declining dramatically in impact.
05:05Number 3
05:05The original Star Wars trilogy implies that all sequels have to have weird names.
05:10Earlier in the video, we touched upon The Godfather Part II's distinction of having
05:13been the first mainstream movie to include Part II in its title.
05:16Though the numbering system is irritating in an oh-my-god-it-reaks-of-corporate-greed way,
05:21it's at least clean.
05:22But we have the original Star Wars trilogy to thank for an even worse trend, the ever-weirdly
05:27named sequels.
05:28Since The Empire Strikes Back, the movie industry has literally been throwing lame and often
05:32very arbitrary subtitles onto anything and everything.
05:36Thor, The Dark World, G.I. Joe Retaliation, Jack Ryan Shadow Recruit, what do they even mean?
05:42Well Hollywood would say, well we're being creative guys, but what it really means to us is,
05:47what?
05:48Number 2
05:49Avatar made 3D cool again, but is responsible for increased ticket prices
05:54After several ailing attempts throughout cinematic history to make it relevant, Avatar was the
05:58first movie that finally made 3D cool in the eyes of the movie going public.
06:02James Cameron set out to have the audience feeling like they were right inside the world
06:06of stupidly named precious resources.
06:08Even now, the achievement stands tall.
06:10Gravity aside, Avatar is still probably the best and most accomplished 3D film ever.
06:15However, the films that followed in its wake were not as well incorporated, and even lower-ranked
06:21flicks offered 3D as a way to cash in.
06:23As a result, prices rose to accommodate this new, viewing experience, and viewers were subject
06:28to films shot in 2D, but awkwardly bumped to 3D in post-production.
06:31And let's just say, it showed.
06:33And number 1, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 and 2 show that you can just chop an
06:37ending in half.
06:39If somebody told you that your film would make millions of dollars, you'd be pretty happy.
06:43Now, imagine if that same person told you that you could take your film, split it in
06:47two, pad out some bits to fill in the runtime, and make double.
06:50Well, if you have standards, then you'd probably be okay not doing this, but Harry Potter proved
06:54that splitting your final arc in two really could bring in the muggle money.
06:58The split arguably was never needed from a storytelling perspective, and encouraged countless
07:03other titles to follow suit.
07:04The problem with this, of course, is that moviegoers are now having to fork out twice as
07:08much to see two parts of a story that only needed one part.
07:11Twilight and The Hunger Games are guilty of this as well, and while it's so obvious
07:15what they're doing, they still get millions of people to go in and see it.
07:19And that's just annoying.
07:22Where am I?
07:24Where am I?
07:26Where am I?
07:27Where am I?
07:28Where am I?
07:28Where am I?
07:33How would you guys like to start a Star Trek channel?
07:36Have we any idea what came through the rupture before we were able to shut it down?
07:39We seek new life and new civilizations, but mess with us.
07:43Real life dolphins that you have seen in a nature documentary, and I have dated at least
07:48two women with tattoos of them.
07:51I'm the wisecracking first officer who kisses hot alien babes first, asks questions later.
08:00Chris is the chief engineer because he makes things work and look nice.
08:03Marcus is the captain, obviously, as he's the only one who's verified on Twitter.
08:06Brian Brasser!
08:09Brian Brasser!
08:10Brian Brasser!
08:11I am, in fact, to be still very much under probation, Sean Farrick.
08:15As he was deemed to be satanic.
08:17Episode 14, Beverly fucking ago.
08:21One hundred king food!
08:24Get in!
08:25This!
08:26Get in!
08:28Good!
08:29Yeah.
08:31Which is great, but then Ahura and Sulu end up dead.
08:35Because that's who you go get sex advice from on the Enterprise.
08:39This one may lean a little heavy on the conspiracy theory side of things, but they just haven't
08:45showed it to us yet.
08:47Terry Farrell grabbed my hand and said how proud that made her, and that is a memory I
08:53really just wanted to share with everybody today.
08:55Take a walk with me as we go and do some cetacean observations.
09:02Hi, Deb!
09:02With that in mind then, I'm Ellie with Trek Culture, and here are ten examples of Star Trek
09:09story arcs you can binge in a dent.
09:11The show is, to quote a famous Trek Culture voice, Piss Funny.
09:15So, so, so stupid.
09:19Yeah.
09:20Wait, what?
09:21Guys, guys, we are, we are, we're cutting live, live to Adam Cleary right now.
09:34Well...
09:34We'll see you next time soon.
09:35My discordgram is for today.
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