Or maybe movies are getting better:
http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2006/12/did_movie_quali.html

cutNpaste:

Did movie quality go up this year?
By Marc Hedlund on December 07, 2006

Every year, disgruntled movie critics overstuffed with aging popcorn
write some long diatribe about how far the great movie has fallen in
recent years. Every year, we keep going to the movies.

Did something change this year? I looked over IMDb's list of U.S.
releases for the year and, though I feel like I barely got to half of
the ones I wanted to see, I still found 15 I felt were amazing in one
way or another. Has the rise of online media upped the stakes for
movie quality? Are there better mechanisms for finding great, talented
people now that they can post their work online for free? Is Netflix
really raising movie literacy? Or did we just get lucky this year?

Here's my list of favorites from the year, ordered as they appear in
IMDb's release list:

   * Good Night and Good Luck (came out last year - thanks, Andrew)
   * The Three Burials af Melquiades Estrada
   * Dave Chappelle's Block Party
   * Inside Man
   * Brick
   * An Inconvenient Truth
   * District B13
   * Wordplay
   * Little Miss Sunshine
   * Half Nelson
   * The Departed
   * The Queen
   * Flags of Our Fathers
   * Stranger Than Fiction
   * Casino Royale

I'm disappointed there aren't more great documentaries on that list.
Though I didn't see Borat, my pick for worst of the year has to be
Talladega Nights, though I've been told again and again this means I
am essentially humorless, stupid, and dead. Whatev! I'm most sorry not
to have made it to Last King of Scotland, yet, anyways. And there are
still some great ones coming this month.

(Also, The Big Animal finally made it to DVD in the U.S. this year. I
saw this at the SF International Film Festival several years ago and
it completely blew me away. Get it.)

A great year for the movies all around. If it's not the net driving up
quality, I hope whatever it is will continue.
Tags: haughey movies netflix youtube


On 12/17/06, Vinayak Hegde <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 12/16/06, Aditya Kapil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What is the basis for thinking that the number of good movies are less now?
>

The number of replays ?
The number of times you can watch a movie even after knowing the story
well.

-- Vinayak

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