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A critic takes a second look at Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s ‘Bardo’ — and is thankful he did

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A critic takes a second look at Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s ‘Bardo’ — and is thankful he did

It’s no shock — maybe it was even inevitable — that one of many extra extensively criticized scenes in “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths,” Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s magnificent and maddening new film, would characteristic an artist confronting his most outspoken critic.

The artist — and the film’s protagonist — is Silverio Gama (Daniel Giménez Cacho), an acclaimed journalist and documentary filmmaker making a return journey to Mexico a number of years after transferring to Los Angeles. The critic, whom he runs into at a celebration, is Luis (Francisco Rubio), a TV character who has made Silverio an everyday punching bag on his discuss present. Predictably, Luis isn’t any fan of Silverio’s newest work, dismissing it as “pretentious,” “a mishmash of pointless scenes” that “lacks poetic inspiration.” However for him, Silverio’s gravest inventive crime will not be his self-indulgence or his betrayal of his Mexican roots however moderately his coyness, the best way he hides his true self behind teasing metafictional layers: “If you wish to speak about your life,” Luis says, “inform it straight.”

That might nicely be a dig on the predictably divisive, relentlessly zigzagging “Bardo” itself, a semi-autobiographical fantasia that blurs the road the place Silverio’s life ends and Iñárritu’s begins. The film (which the director co-wrote with Nicolás Giacobone) is a carnivalesque romp by means of time and reminiscence, one which owes one thing to the labyrinthine magic realism of Jorge Luis Borges and one thing to the jaunty surrealism of Federico Fellini. Iñárritu and his cinematographer, Darius Khondji, ship their digicam floating throughout sun-drenched sands and barreling down corridors of consciousness, collapsing boundaries between historical past and hallucination, comedy and drama, life and loss of life, Silverio and Alejandro. For each males, the film — Iñárritu’s first to shoot primarily in Mexico since his 2000 debut characteristic, “Amores Perros” — marks a uncommon homecoming, a return marked by pleasure and nostalgia, but in addition ambivalence and frustration.

Daniel Giménez Cacho and Alejandro G. Iñárritu on the set of the film “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths.”

(Limbo Movies S. De R.L. de C.V./Netflix)

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One of many questions that “Bardo” leaves you with is whether or not Iñárritu, after years of enviable Hollywood success, now feels estranged from the nation he left behind. You might also surprise if, the Luises of the world apart, Silverio’s profession has generated something like the general public scorn that Iñárritu’s typically has. Which will appear to be an odd factor to say a few filmmaker who’s lengthy had his partisans, however in fact, the violent crucial rejection of Iñárritu in some circles is the type that may solely befall an already much-acclaimed, industry-lionized artist. And as somebody who’s gone up and down with Iñárritu over time and felt alternately defensive and disdainful of his work, it feels becoming — within the face of his most nakedly private work and his most overtly combative salvo to his critics — to put a few of that baggage on the desk.

In a creative medium typically pushed by the expertise and character of the auteur, various critics maintain a operating stock of their favourite and least favourite filmmakers and, inside these particular person catalogs, their favourite and least favourite of their efforts. And for various Iñárritu dissenters, his greatest movie stays his first. An electrifying triptych of tales introduced collectively by crashing automobiles, fiery passions, bestial males and yapping, snapping canines, “Amores Perros” turned heads and stomachs with its ferocious violence however generated sufficient acclaim to change into the primary Mexican manufacturing in 25 years to earn an Oscar nomination for greatest foreign-language movies. It additionally launched the world to a magnetic newcomer named Gael García Bernal and established Iñárritu and his screenwriter, Guillermo Arriaga, as deft storytellers with a really feel for gritty lower-depths realism and a Tarantinoid contact for splintered narratives.

These qualities persevered — and extra Oscar nominations adopted — with their grimmer-than-grim “21 Grams” (2003), one other jaggedly melodramatic pileup starring a mesmerizing Sean Penn, Naomi Watts and Benicio Del Toro, and with “Babel” (2006), an uneven tapestry of sob tales stretching from the dusty mountains of Morocco to the strobe-lit nightclubs of Tokyo. To revisit these first three options, with their incremental shift in focus from Mexico to the U.S. to all the world, is to understand the total scale of Iñárritu’s outsized ambitions. However what regarded like ambition to some started to reek of conceitedness to many others, who had been more and more turned off by what they noticed because the showy miserablism and gimmicky grandiosity of his filmmaking.

A man standing in the sunshine is seen through the open door of a darkened room.

Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths (2022). Daniel Giménez Cacho as Silverio.

(Limbo Movies, S. De R.L. de C.V./Netflix)

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As a lover of “21 Grams” and a certified admirer of “Babel,” I’ve all the time felt a little bit protecting of this early part of Iñárritu’s profession; for all their apparent manipulations and missteps, these two motion pictures obtain, for me, a bruising emotional energy that little of his work has approximated since. I’ve additionally suspected that Arriaga was greater than a little bit essential to their success, one thing that appeared all of the extra obvious after author and director parted methods (beneath less-than-amicable circumstances) and Iñárritu struck out with “Biutiful” (2010), a dour slog that not even Javier Bardem’s glorious efficiency might save.

“Biutiful” earned Iñárritu the worst evaluations of his profession and will nicely have provoked him into spewing among the anti-critic sentiments in his 2014 comeback, “Birdman or (The Sudden Advantage of Ignorance),” a bravura Broadway satire starring Michael Keaton as Riggan Thomson, a washed-up actor mounting a comeback of his personal. It additionally marked a radical stylistic break; after working for years with director of images Rodrigo Prieto, Iñárritu discovered, in Emmanuel Lubezki, a cinematographer whose flowing, superbly choreographed lengthy takes might obtain a panoramic new unity of type. Reasonably than chopping his scenes into jangly bits (although he retained the identical editor, the versatile Stephen Mirrione), Iñárritu pursued a brand new visible coherence; moderately than dividing his consideration amongst a swath of far-flung characters, he unfolded a whole drama — in a foreshadowing of “Bardo” — inside one man’s stressed, self-flagellating consciousness.

“A factor is a factor, not what is claimed of that factor,” reads a postcard on Riggan’s dressing-room mirror. I flashed again on that line — and the memorable scene through which Riggan butts heads with a New York Instances theater critic (Lindsay Duncan) — after I first watched “Bardo” months in the past and got here throughout that social gathering confrontation scene. This time, although, Iñárritu wasn’t simply casually thumbing his nostril; he appeared to be making an attempt to preempt criticism and to indicate that he can get pleasure from amusing at his expense, offered that he controls the supply and length of the laughter. He additionally appeared eager to present his media detractors a style of their very own spiteful medication. And so Silverio dismisses Luis as little greater than “an entertainer, an opinion peddler” who scrounges for likes on social media. Ouch! “It’s folks such as you who’ve left us with out reality,” Silverio declares, proper earlier than hitting a mute button that magically silences Luis’ rebuttal.

A man in a coat and tie stands amid dancers in a club

A person in a coat and tie stands amid dancers in a membership

(SeoJu Park/Netflix)

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Iñárritu, it’s straightforward to think about, should fantasize about muting his personal persecutors within the press. On the identical time — and that is the place “Bardo’s” animus takes on a productively playful edge — you must surprise why, in that case, he retains giving them such a outstanding voice and perspective in his work. Is he setting up some form of infernal artist-critic ouroboros, laying a intelligent lure for us and watching as we take the bait (to paraphrase some metaphors he floated in a tetchy current interview with my Instances colleague Josh Rottenberg)? Or is he, by decreasing himself to the presumably rock-bottom degree of his detractors, basically tumbling into his personal lure?

I don’t know. It’s doable the person simply can’t assist himself. Possibly he felt that swiping at critics really paid off with “Birdman,” sarcastically the film restored Iñárritu to a number of reviewers’ good graces. Not all of us, although: I discovered it humorous, creative and dazzling, if additionally skinny, overdetermined and greater than a little bit taken with its personal virtuosity. Nonetheless, it couldn’t assist however really feel refreshing after Iñárritu’s earlier marathon of distress; it handily gained the Academy Award for greatest image and earned Iñárritu his first Oscar for steering. He would win one other the next 12 months for his darkish neo-western “The Revenant” (2015), a return with a vengeance to bleak, violent terrain that struck me as a staggeringly impassive expertise, Iñárritu’s emptiest show of directorial chest-beating but.

As of this writing, the academy appears unlikely to bathe “Bardo” with related accolades, for which we will in all probability blame those who Iñárritu likes to blame most: critics! (You see what a vicious cycle that is.) When the film premiered on the Venice and Telluride movie festivals this fall, it drew the total gamut of reactions, a few of which sniped at its longueurs, its indulgences and its three-hour-plus operating time. My very own preliminary response was a mixture of admiration and exasperation within the face of what nonetheless appeared like “an imposing, lastly unbearable monument to [Iñárritu’s] personal awesomeness.” Others weren’t so sort.

Whether or not he was chastened by the response — or, with a possible awards marketing campaign on life help, persuaded by among the powers that be at Netflix — Iñárritu introduced quickly afterward that he would trim some 20-plus minutes from the film’s operating time earlier than its launch. And certainly, the brand new model of “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths” — the one now taking part in in theaters and set to start streaming Dec. 16 on Netflix — runs, by my depend, precisely 160 minutes, in contrast with the sooner 184-minute model. I wouldn’t have guessed, as I strapped myself in for a second viewing, that 24 minutes might make sufficient of a distinction, as multiple filmmaker has found upon returning to the chopping room after a tricky competition reception.

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A woman stands with her hand on her hip looking at a man in the foreground

Daniel Giménez Cacho and Griselda Siciliani within the film “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths.”

(Limbo Movies, S. De R.L. de C.V./Netflix)

And but. And but, and but, and but. At 160 minutes and on a second encounter, “Bardo” is — the right way to put this? — sufferable. It feels much less oppressive, much less elephantine, lighter and extra sleek on its toes. It typically plods, but it surely additionally whirls, dances and — just like the Silverio whose shadow we see catapulting throughout the desert within the languorous opening shot — even manages to soar. Did these 24 minutes actually make such a distinction? (Other than one conspicuously and mercifully eliminated scene — a formative sexual encounter between a younger Silverio and an older girl with fried eggs masking her breasts — I discovered the modifications laborious to trace.) Is it doable that when you’ve been given a preliminary tour, the shimmering nether-world of “Bardo” instantly feels newly inviting, newly immersive? Had the film actually modified, or had I?

Possibly a little bit of each. After I first noticed “Bardo,” it struck me as — virtually objectively talking — Iñárritu’s most solipsistic effort. The second time, curiously, the solipsism both retreated or recontextualized itself. In any case, most of Iñárritu’s motion pictures are works of brute ego, which is one cause I’ve by no means been capable of give up to “Birdman” and “The Revenant,” which presupposed to be about different issues — movie star and creation, historical past and revenge — however ultimately had been about little greater than Iñárritu and his personal pummeling virtuosity. Paradoxically, by starting with himself in “Bardo,” Iñárritu works his manner towards someplace rewardingly totally different, opening himself as much as new tributaries of which means. It’s his most formally playful and intellectually expansive film.

A man and woman talk in a pool.

Daniel Giménez Cacho and Ximena Lamadrid within the film “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths.”

(Limbo Movies, S. De R.L. de C.)

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A factor is a factor, not what is claimed of that factor. However typically issues change. My very own reversal on “Bardo” was actually drastic sufficient to induce some hand-wringing and second-guessing, which appears like a good and trustworthy response to a film whose hero, Silverio, is an avatar of self-doubt. He’s additionally a husband, a father, a dreamer, an adventurer and a dryly sardonic observer of historical past, with a mordantly humorous perspective on Mexico’s previous, current and future. His barbed remarks about how little the U.S. paid for the Mexican Cession in 1848 dovetail with some satirical background chatter regarding Amazon’s looming acquisition of Baja California. As Iñárritu scarcely must remind us, the area the place the U.S. and Mexico meet has lengthy been brutally contested terrain. And the place he and his tense, anguished alter ego match into that terrain is the query that regularly haunts this story, giving it drive and density even when it slows to a crawl.

Does Silverio have something significant in frequent with Mexico’s disappeared and lacking, the numerous women and men whose our bodies we see deserted on the streets of an eerily hushed Mexico Metropolis? Can he actually empathize with the migrants whose lengthy, arduous journeys he has photographed and chronicled within the title of artwork? Is the picture of him wandering throughout the desert, a spirit passing by means of a purgatorial state (the Tibetan Buddhist precept of “bardo” that evokes the title), a gesture of solidarity or a picture of isolation — of everlasting separation from his cultural id? Does this purveyor of nonfiction cinema have any actual reality to specific, or is he only a poseur, a sham, a sellout?

Iñárritu leaves that to us to resolve. Nevertheless it speaks to Giménez Cacho’s witty and transferring efficiency that not even the harshest reply might make Silverio much less participating firm. The actor’s reward for self-lacerating comedy was already obvious in Lucrecia Martel’s sensible South American epic “Zama,” through which he performed the wretched face of 18th century Spanish colonialism. In “Bardo” the political dynamic has shifted: His Silverio finally finds himself face-to-face with the conquistador Hernán Cortés in a putting, time-bending sequence that acknowledges Mexico’s lengthy historical past of wars and atrocities and raises the intriguing meta-question of what an artist or an artwork type features by restaging them. Silverio ponders that riddle, but in addition the riddle of his personal id. He loses himself on a jampacked dance flooring, rides the L.A. Metro and argues with an airport customs agent who claims he has no proper to name America his house. Wherever he goes and whomever he confronts, Silverio takes you with him.

His household, concerning him with affection and exasperation, should discover him equally unattainable to give up. Silverio stays dedicated to his spouse, Lucía (Griselda Siciliani), although their moments of home bliss and erotic ardour are regularly overshadowed — within the film’s most whimsical and poignant passages — by reminders of the loss of life of their first baby, Mateo. Their surviving youngsters, Camila (Ximena Lamadrid) and Lorenzo (Íker Sánchez Solano), are stunning and sensible, combative in spirit however unfailingly loyal when it counts. Essentially the most lyrical and transferring scenes in “Bardo” discover Silverio along with his spouse and children at a seaside resort the place previous woes, future anxieties and current on a regular basis inequities converge — after which, in a uncommon occasion of calm, slip away. For a second, you sense, Silverio is house finally — not due to the actual floor beneath his toes, however as a result of he shares that floor with these he loves.

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‘Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths’

In Spanish and English with English subtitles

Rated: R, for language all through, sturdy sexual content material and graphic nudity

Operating time: 2 hours, 40 minutes

Taking part in: Basically launch; begins streaming Dec. 16 on Netflix

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Entertainment

Jerry Seinfeld misses 'dominant masculinity' — so the internet trolled him with his own career

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Jerry Seinfeld misses 'dominant masculinity' — so the internet trolled him with his own career

For Jerry Seinfeld, Sean Connery and Muhammad Ali were among the men who exemplified the “dominant masculinity” of the early ’60s. For his social media critics, the “Seinfeld” comedian does not.

“Ah yes, when I think Dominant Masculinity, I think Jerry Seinfeld,” one X (formerly Twitter) user sarcastically tweeted. “LMAO. It’s so transparent that the most insecure people always project this stuff.”

The “Unfrosted” star and director, 70, is facing a new round of social media backlash after he shared his views on masculinity, culture and social “hierarchy” in an interview with Free Press editor Bari Weiss. On Tuesday’s episode of Weiss’ “Honestly” podcast, Seinfeld said his nostalgia for the ’60s, for “a common culture” and more influenced his Netflix Pop-Tart film.

“There’s another element there that I think is the key element, and that is an agreed upon hierarchy, which I think is absolutely vaporized in today’s moment,” he said.

He added that his desire “to be a real man” growing up adds to the longing he feels for that era. In addition to Ali and Connery, President John F. Kennedy was a “real man” Seinfeld said he wanted to emulate.

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“I want to be like that someday … I never really grew up,” he said. “You don’t want to, as a comedian, because it’s a childish pursuit, but I miss a dominant masculinity. Yeah, I get the [toxic masculinity], but still, I like a real man.”

Seinfeld, who has been vocal about how he feels “the extreme left and P.C. crap” are hurting comedy, was swiftly met online with backlash — and pictures of his memorable “Seinfeld” puffy shirt. “Yes the ‘dominant masculinity’ for which Jerry Seinfeld is well known…,” author Sarah Kendzior captioned a .GIF of Seinfeld in the frilly garment.

“This is my kind of dominant masculinity,” joked another X user who posted a photo of the comic wearing the puffy shirt in a “Seinfeld” episode with co-star Michael Richards.

One user shared photos of Seinfeld’s other over-the-top “Seinfeld” looks, while writer Rohita Kadambi joked that Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ Elaine Benes smoking a cigar on the show is actually the definition of “Seinfeld Dominant Masculinity.”

Several X users also took shots at Seinfeld making his living off stand-up comedy and movie projects including “Bee Movie” and “Unfrosted.”

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“The guy who gave us the bee movie wants more dominant masculinity 💀,” one critic said.

Seinfeld’s “dominant masculinity” comments also offered some users an opportunity to revisit the comedian’s controversial dating history. In the ’90s, Seinfeld dated Shoshanna Lonstein. He was 38 and she was 17 and a high school senior when they met.

“Saying he misses dominant masculinity is the first thing he’s ever said that made me laugh,” writer Rachel Wolf tweeted.

“A man who dated a 17 year old in high school when he was nearly 40 years old can never talk about ‘dominant masculinity’,” another X user said.

But a few people online supported Seinfeld and his views. One X user said they agreed to Seinfeld’s call for real men, which they said is “for the love of natural women who need you all.” In the YouTube comments section of the podcast video, several viewers expressed enjoyment of Seinfeld’s “insight and perspective” and lauded Weiss.

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Several viewers also praised Seinfeld for tearing up while recalling a recent trip to Israel, which he said was “the most powerful experience of my life.” Earlier this month, during two public appearances, Seinfeld — a vocal supporter of Israel amid its ongoing war against Hamas in Gaza — was interrupted by pro-Palestinian protesters.

During his “Honestly” conversation, Seinfeld also spoke about how he moved forward from negative reviews about “Unfrosted,” about his love for New York City and why he doesn’t mind those protesters.

“It’s so silly. They want to express this sincere intense rage, but again, a little off-target,” he said. “That’s, to me, comedic.”

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‘Atlas’ movie review: Jennifer Lopez carries Netflix’s AI sci-fi, but the script is dead weight

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‘Atlas’ movie review: Jennifer Lopez carries Netflix’s AI sci-fi, but the script is dead weight

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Artificial Intelligence is out to nuke the world, but not if a (checks notes) data analyst has anything to say about it in Atlas, now streaming on Netflix worldwide. This should be both topical and fun, and star Jennifer Lopez and director Brad Peyton (San Andreas, Rampage) initially seem up to the task. But they fail to shoulder the burden of a incredibly dull and shockingly unimaginative script.

Atlas opens in an unspecified future where interstellar travel is now possible, and the Los Angeles skyline has a few new skyscrapers, including Prague’s TV Tower. Three decades back, an artificial being named Harlan (a robotically over-the-top Simu Liu) became sentient and attempted to wipe out humanity, killing three million people before taking it on the lam across the galaxy, Roy Batty-style.

Lopez is the titular Atlas Shepherd, who has a special connection to Harlan: she’s his sister! Yes, mom (Lana Parrilla) “invented” Harlan before he went genocidal, and so Atlas now bears her burden, hunting the robot across the universe. In an early scene, she finally locates him after tricking AI associate Casca Decius (Abraham Popoola) into giving up the intel using this one simple trick all robots and 9-year-old children hate.

Harlan’s hiding out in the Andromeda Galaxy, just a short 2.5 million light year ride from Earth. So here’s the plan, formulated by stodgy General Jake Boothe (Mark Strong) and gung-ho Colonel Elias Banks (Sterling K. Brown): fly a planet-destroying nuclear payload to Harlan’s hideout… but only as Plan B. Instead, capture Harlan alive for, uh, reasons. Nevermind that by the time you need to employ Plan B, Harlan will have his hands on a nuclear payload capable of destroying Earth.

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We have questions. It’s established in the early scenes with Casca that you cannot “kill” AI. You can kill their physical form, but not the intelligence that forever lives on a cloud. And even the physical form can be easily replicated. So what’s the point of the mission? Isn’t the threat AI sentience itself, and not the physical Simu Liu robot?

Anyway, Atlas herself, the Jack Ryan in this sci-fi Clancyverse, joins the mission as the world’s foremost Harlan expert. Despite a deep mistrust of AI, she soon discovers that her only chance of survival will be to bond with an AI operating system named Smith (voiced by Gregory James Cohan) that operates her giant mech suit.

Helpfully, this AI bond between Atlas and Smith is displayed for the audience in a LED bar that slowly rises during the course of the movie, reaching the crucial 100 percent when Atlas opens up via climactic expository dialogue. Even though, we assume, the AI can read her mind at all times. What’s the point of the neural link if she needs to tell Smith everything verbally?

Atlas is at its modest best during scenes with Lopez alone in the mech, slowly forming a bond with the artificial intelligence. Smith asks her whether she likes pie or cake, and harvests an alien flower for her. Awww. Nevermind that the last AI system she bonded with ended up killing millions of people. They must have patched the genocide bug with this newest update.

There is some fun to be had in a big, schlocky would-be sci-fi epic like this, but Atlas takes itself way too seriously with big teary-eyed speeches and emotional swells on the soundtrack. Lopez is more than capable of carrying something like this, but she doesn’t seem to know what kind of movie she’s in; one could imagine frequent Peyton collaborator Dwayne Johnson bringing the right kind of self-awareness to the role.

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Atlas looks mostly great, with a certain car commercial slickness, though even the high production values seem to abandon the film as it climaxes in a hopelessly pedestrian nondescript warehouse on this strange new alien world. Netflix spent an alleged $100 million on this movie, but by the finale, it might as well be Cosmic Sin.

Worst of all, Atlas fails to capitalize on the topical subject that supposedly drives its narrative. AI can be both bad and good, it seems to be saying, as it argues for acceptance of the technology. Of course, when the bad is the deaths of millions and the good is the preservation of a flower and a friendly how-do-you-do, we wonder if JLo isn’t too hasty in learning stop worrying and love the algorithm.

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Los Angeles loses ground to rivals in film and TV employment but remains the biggest player

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Los Angeles loses ground to rivals in film and TV employment but remains the biggest player

Los Angeles’ portion of the domestic film and TV economy shrank last year amid devastating industry struggles, but it remains by far the most powerful entertainment player in the United States.

According to the latest Otis College Report on the Creative Economy, released Thursday, the City of Angels posted a 27% share of domestic film and TV employment in 2023 — down 8% from 2022 but still way ahead of its fiercest competitor, New York, which made up 12% of the entertainment workforce.

Other U.S. production hubs lagged far behind Los Angeles. Each claiming 2% of the entertainment pie last year were Atlanta, Dallas, San Francisco, Chicago and Miami; while Nashville, Tenn., Austin, Texas, and Washington, D.C., each hovered at 1% — largely in line with where they stood 10 years ago.

Additionally, the Otis report found that workers in Los Angeles County earned 50% of all wages across the domestic film and TV industry last year.

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With the exception of New York — long a production stronghold — film and TV activity outside of Los Angeles was spread pretty evenly throughout other parts of the country, leading Otis College to conclude that there is no “New Hollywood” on the horizon.

The new report tracks the pivotal decade from 2013 — when Netflix launched the streaming revolution with the release of “House of Cards” — to early 2024, immediately following the Hollywood writers’ and actors’ strikes.

“Los Angeles is still the apex of the entertainment industry, but the industry itself is undergoing once-in-a-generation changes,” Patrick Adler, principal at Westwood Economics and Planning Associates, said in a statement.

“It is less dependent on film and television studios, more oriented toward online content creation, live events and gaming, and also much more technical and managerial than ever. What it means to work in Hollywood is starkly different today than even 10 years ago.”

According to the study, film and TV currently covers about 52% of the entertainment business in Los Angeles County, coming in 12% behind 2013. Employment levels spanning film, TV, sound, broadcasting and print media — all labeled “traditional” entertainment fields by Otis — have similarly fallen roughly 9% from 2013 to 2024.

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The waning prominence of film and TV coincides with a drop in production, which is still down 9% from pre-strike levels, according to the report. Film and TV employment in Los Angeles County is 19% lower than it was prior to the work stoppages — leaving thousands of writers, crew members and other entertainment workers in a state of financial and emotional distress.

Otis College previously reported that entertainment employment in the greater Los Angeles area plummeted by 17% during the overlapping writers’ and actors’ strikes.

Previous reporting by The Times illustrates that the production and employment crisis in Los Angeles predates the walkouts and can be largely attributed to an ongoing industry contraction following studios’ overspending during the streaming wars.

As a result, film, TV, commercial and other production activity in the first quarter of 2024 was about 20% below the five-year average, according to FilmLA, a nonprofit organization that tracks on-location production in the Greater Los Angeles area.

Meanwhile, job growth in “modern” entertainment sectors — identified as software publishing, video gaming, social media, streaming, performing arts, live sports and “independent artists” — rose 53% between 2013 and 2024, Otis College reported.

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The fastest-growing corner of the entertainment industry in the county is software publishing (including video games), which has jumped 149% in the last decade. Film, TV and traditional publishing are the only areas that have seen a decline.

The report also determined that the number of college-educated workers in the Los Angeles entertainment industry increased from 46% to 68% between 2000 and 2022.

Creative and management positions accounted for 59% of entertainment jobs in 2013 and had risen to 66% by 2022. Meanwhile, the amount of manual occupations, such as transportation, cleaning, groundskeeping and construction, had declined.

Additionally, the entertainment workforce over the last decade has become more racially diverse. The share of white workers in creative fields decreased between 2013 and 2022, while employment for all other racial groups grew, the report indicates.

“My hope is that the trends identified in this study and our ongoing Otis College Report on the Creative Economy give industry leaders and policymakers insight into the needs of an evolving workforce,” Charles Hirschhorn, president of Otis College, said in a statement, “one that requires more training, investment and education than ever before.”

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