Highest Paid Actors and Actresses, And A Decline
in the Cult of Major Film Celebrities and Stars:
Controversy still surrounded the existence of an ongoing
wage disparity in Hollywood, in which men made much more money than
women in the industry. For the most part, men tended to star in big-budget
action or superhero movies that earned tremendous sums at the box office,
while women were not allowed to compete at the same level (without the
opportunity for the same roles), except for a few exceptions such as
Angelina Jolie, Sandra Bullock and Jennifer Lawrence. And it had always
been true that aging women's salaries would precipitously decline.
Many of the best film openings were
not for a big-name major Hollywood star, but for a well-directed solid
story. The fast-action comedy Knight
and Day (2010) counted
on Tom Cruise's bankability (with another aging headliner Cameron Diaz),
but it ended up having Cruise's lowest-attended opening weekend since Far
and Away (1992). The
poorly-received pretentious summer film The A-Team (2010), capitalizing
only on its brand name, was a real low for a repeat of a major action
TV series.
The star power of the romantic thriller The Tourist
(2010), touting the pairing of Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie,
fell flat, as did Russell Crowe and Cate Blanchett in Ridley Scott's Gladiator-like Robin
Hood (2010), Jennifer Aniston and Gerard Butler mismatched in The
Bounty Hunter (2010), or George Clooney in the slow-moving The
American (2010). Over-privileged Julia Roberts in the heavily-merchandized Eat
Pray Love (2010) exhibited the narcissistic star's shallow soul-searching.
Joaquin Phoenix's appearance in the experimental mockumentary I'm
Still Here (2010) made fun of 'celebrity' itself.
For example, flops with big names in 2015
included: George Clooney in Tomorrowland (2015) (at $93 million,
with a budget of $190 million), Channing Tatum in Jupiter Ascending
(2015) (at
$47 million, with a budget of $176 million), Adam Sandler in Pixels
(2015) (at
$79 million, with a budget of $88 million), Sandra Bullock in Our
Brand is Crisis (2015) (at only $7 million), Meryl Streep in Ricki
and the Flash (2015) (at $27 million) and Angelina Jolie and Brad
Pitt in By the Sea (2015) (at only $538,000).
It was a sign of the times that three of the biggest films
of 2015 bypassed established movie stars and fronted their casts
with TV stars. Jurassic World
(2015): Park And Recreation’s Chris Pratt, Terminator
Genysis (2015): Game Of Thrones’ Emilia Clarke, and
Fantastic Four (2015): House Of Cards’ Kate Mara.
The Horror Film Boom:
Low-budget
horror films were on the rise in the decade of the 2010s. They were found
to be more lucrative (with larger profit margins and lower production
costs) than most other kinds of genre productions. After the growing
trend of torture-porn in the earlier decade (with films such as Saw
(2004) and
Hostel (2005)), horror films began to branch off and emphasize
suspense and thriller aspects instead of the gore. Halloween's 11
franchise films (from 1978-2018) were in strong contention, especially
after the release of Halloween (2018) (with domestic revenue of
$159.3 million), the number one film of the franchise.
The Saw series of eight
horror films (from 2004-2017) briefly took prominence as the highest-grossing
horror film series in the decade (and of all-time), with the release
of the 7th and 8th films in the gory-torture series, Saw
3D: The Final Chapter (2010) and Jigsaw
(2017). The Saw films
saw a domestic grand total of $454.8 million by the close of the decade.
This exceeded the total domestic gross ($401.4 million) of the
Paranormal Activity series (2007-2015) of
six films.
However, their main competitors were two up-and-coming
horror series:
- the two It films (2017-2019)
- the six Conjuring Universe films
(2013-2019), including The Conjuring, Annabelle, and The
Nun films (some sources include The Curse of La Llorona (2019), bringing
the domestic total to $740 million)
Other classic horror film series (from the last three decades)
with lesser revenues (although if adjusted for inflation, their box-office
numbers increased considerably) included:
Some Great Examples of Remarkable Horror Films in the
Decade of the 2010s:
2017 was one of the biggest years ever for the horror genre,
at approximately $865 million total, although some very original and memorable
horror films extended throughout the entire decade.
- The Babadook (2014) - from director/writer Jennifer
Kent, a chilling tale about the villainous, monstrous title character
('Mister Babadook'), and the deteriorating mental state of grieving
widowed single mother Amelia (Essie Davis) plagued by the violent death
of her husband (who died in a car accident while they were on their
way to the hospital to give birth); she was raising their only son
Samuel (Noah Wiseman) - a disturbed and outcast boy who was haunted
by an invisible force/monster in the house
- The Visit (2015) - writer/director M. Night Shyamalan's
low-budget, 'found-footage' horror film was about a 5-day visit with
grandparents, Doris "Nana" (Deanna Dunagan) and John "Pop-Pop" (Peter
McRobbie), by 15 year-old aspiring
documentary filmmaker Becca and her younger 13 year-old brother Tyler
(Ed Oxenbould) - with a tremendous plot twist revealing: "THOSE
ARE NOT YOUR GRANDPARENTS!!!!"
- The VVitch (2016), the
debut film of director Robert Eggers, a classic, tense and atmospheric
supernatural horror tale about an excommunicated or banished 17th century
Puritan family who built their own secluded farm on the edge of a vast
and deep forest where they became preyed upon by an ancient, malevolent
witch; the film's star was the family's oldest teenaged daughter Thomasin
(Anya Taylor-Joy) who became a problem for the pious, patriarchal father
figure William (Ralph Ineson) when accused by her younger siblings
of being a witch working for Black Phillip, the pet goat
- The Conjuring 2 (2016) - a very scary sequel
that surpassed the original from 2013, again directed by James Wan,
about paranormal investigators Ed Warren (Patrick Wilson) and Lorraine
Warren (Vera Farmiga) who were pitted against England’s
famous Enfield Poltergeist in a house in North London
- Split (2017), a psychological thriller from writer/director
M. Night Shyamalan as an entry in his so-called "Unbreakable" trilogy,
about a disturbed abductor-kidnapper (James McAvoy) with 23 distinct
'split-personalities' (and a 24th one about to emerge); with domestic
revenue of $138.3 million - it was the 23rd highest-grossing (domestic)
film of the year
- Get Out (2017), director-writer/actor
Jordan Peele's small-budgeted independent horror film (his directorial
debut film), with
a budget of $4.5 million and box-office gross of $176 million (domestic),
it was easily one of the most profitable movies of all-time
- and the 15th highest-grossing (domestic)
film of the year; it received the Academy Award for Best Original
Screenplay; the creepy satire on race relations and white hubris also
hinted at 'The Stepford Wives'; the film's plot was simple - young
African-American photographer Chris Washington (Daniel Kaluuya) met
his white girlfriend Rose's (Allison Williams) family, the Armitages
(led by hypnotherapist Missy (Catherine Keener)) for the first time
during a weekend trip to their secluded home in the woods - a family
with incredibly-disturbing secrets
- It (2017) -
another Stephen King adaptation, this time from director Andy Muschietti,
a huge R-rated hit with $327.5 million revenue (domestic) - and the
highest grossing horror film of all time that threatened
to bypass every other horror franchise with the release of its
sequel; it was the 6th highest-grossing (domestic)
film of the year; the coming-of-age story was about a group of bullied
kids (The Loser's Club) in the summer of 1989 in Derry, Maine also
featured Bill Skarsgard as the evil and unforgettable Pennywise the
'Dancing' Clown - a shape-shifting monster
- A Quiet Place (2018), a post-apocalyptic, sci-fi
thriller from director/co-writer/star John Krasinski, about a near-future
world where human survivors (including Emily Blunt, Krasinski and their
three children) had to remain quiet in order to avoid detection by
blind creatures with ultra-sensitive hearing
- Halloween (2018), from director David Gordon
Green, a solid entry that returned to the iconic roots of the Halloween
saga; it was the eleventh installment in the Halloween film
series and a direct sequel to Halloween (1978),
again with Jamie Lee Curtis reprising her role as an older, PTSD-suffering
Laurie Strode seeking revenge after 40 years against masked mental
patient and homicidal psychopath Michael Myers
- Hereditary (2018), the debut feature film from
writer/director Ari Aster, a terrifying film about the dark secrets
of a self-destructive family led by grieving Annie Graham (Toni Collette)
(after the death of her mother), and her son Peter (Alex Wolff) - menaced
by a supernatural force
- Us (2019), Jordan Peele's follow-up to Get
Out (2017) - about the Wilson family's return
to a Santa Cruz, CA beachfront home; earlier in her life, the
wife Adelaide (Madison Curry as child, Lupita Nyong’o as adult)
was confronted at the same locale by an apparition that looked like
her; now, the entire family
was being attacked by four masked strangers wearing red jumpsuits and
wielding brightly colored, sharp scissors - they were actually doppelgangers
of each family member
The Strength of Feature-Length Documentaries:
Movie audiences had a more positive attitude toward screen
entertainment of all kinds, thanks to growing familiarity with reality
TV and YouTube. There were a number of film distributors who took
chances on self-produced, low-budget projects independent of the studios
(and financed through a phenomenon known as "crowdfunding"),
during a time when the number of studio films was declining. Documentaries
could be made cheaply, with widely-available and affordable, low-cost
digital film equipment. Many docs of feature-length made a strong showing
as unexpected hits during the summer months of 2010.
Some
felt there was a glut of documentaries critical of various social issues,
such as the two environmentally-themed documentaries which were Oscar
nominees in the year of the Gulf oil spill: Waste Land (2010) and GasLand
(2010). They were joined by National Geographic's Afghanistan
war-themed Restrepo (2010), Inside Job (2010) -
an accounting of the 2008 global financial meltdown, and the mysterious
UK graffiti artist Banksy's Exit Through the Gift Shop (2010).
Others that showed promise included the highest-grossing documentary
of the year - Disney's ecological nature drama Oceans (2010);
also Babies
(2010), Guggenheim's un-nominated polemic on US education woes in Waiting
For Superman (2010), the intriguing and plot-twisting Catfish
(2010) revealing a surprising Facebook family relationship, Joan
Rivers: A Piece of Work (2010), Countdown to Zero (2010) (the
follow-up film about the nuclear arms race from the makers of An Inconvenient
Truth), and The Tillman Story (2010) about a NFL star turned
soldier.
Joshua Oppenheimer's The Act Of Killing (2012) provided
re-enactments of genocidal mass killings by former Indonesian death-squad
leaders. Malik Bendjelloul and Simon Chinn's Oscar-winning Searching
For Sugar Man (2012) followed two Cape Town fans - Stephen "Sugar"
Segerman and Craig Bartholomew Strydom - to find out whether the rumored
death of American musician Sixto Rodriguez was true or not. Also, Morgan
Neville's Oscar-winning Twenty
Feet From
Stardom (2013) followed
the life of back-up singers, and Alex Gibney's controversial Going Clear:
Scientology and the Prison of Belief (2015) was an expose of the Church
of Scientology and its alleged human-rights
violations and instances of psychological abuse. The sensationalizing,
passionate news-documentary feature Blackfish (2013) from director
Gabriela Cowperthwaite was an expose about the harmful treatment of captive
orca whales at SeaWorld (San Diego, CA).
Documentaries made a modest comeback
in mid-decade, especially Asif Kapadia's Oscar-winner Amy (2015) followed
the tragic rise and fall of British singer and songwriter Amy Winehouse.
Michal Marczak's All These Sleepless Nights (2016) was a mesmerizing
documentary that followed the lives of two Polish twenty-somethings.
Ezra Edelman’s and ESPN's O.J.:
Made in America (2016) won the Best Documentary Oscar Academy Award,
becoming the longest Oscar winner ever (at 467 minutes) - it was released
as an episodic 5-part serial on ESPN. Other praised documentaries included
Weiner (2016) - the examination of a scandalous NY political figure
running for NYC Mayor, and director Ava DuVernay's 13th (2016) -
about racial inequality in the US criminal justice and prison systems.
Netflix's Oscar-winner Icarus (2017) revealed a major international
doping scandal within the sport of amateur cycling racing, and another
Oscar winner
Free
Solo (2018) documented the first free solo climb of Yosemite's El Capitan.
Two documentaries that also made a significant impact were
biopics: Morgan Neville's Won't You Be My Neighbor? (2018) about
children's TV show host Fred Rogers, and RBG (2018) about the
life of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
The Passing of Older Stars and Notables in the Decade:
Year
|
Star
|
Age
|
Some Notable Films
|
2010
|
Jean Simmons
Actress
|
80
|
The Robe (1953), Guys and Dolls (1955),
and Spartacus (1960) |
|
Dennis Hopper
Actor, Filmmaker
|
74
|
Rebel Without a Cause (1955), Giant
(1956), and Easy Rider (1969) |
|
Leslie Nielsen
|
84
|
Airplane! (1980), and Naked Gun films (1988-1994) |
|
Tony Curtis
Actor
|
85
|
Sweet Smell of Success (1957), The
Defiant Ones (1958), and Some
Like It Hot (1959) |
|
Blake Edwards
Writer/Director
(married to Julie Andrews)
|
88
|
Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961),
Days of Wine and Roses (1962), and The Pink Panther films (1963-1993) |
2011
|
Jane Russell
Actress
(Discovered by Howard Hughes)
|
89
|
The Outlaw (1943) and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
(1953) |
|
Elizabeth Taylor
Actress
|
79
|
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958), Cleopatra
(1963) and Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf? (1966) |
|
Sidney Lumet
Producer/Director
|
86
|
12 Angry Men (1957), Dog
Day Afternoon (1975), and Network (1976) |
2012
|
Ernest Borgnine
Actor
|
95
|
Marty (1955) |
2013
|
Esther Williams
Swimmer/Actress
|
91
|
|
|
Peter O’Toole
Multiple Oscar-Nominee
|
81
|
Lawrence of Arabia (1962) |
|
Joan Fontaine
Actress
(Olivia de Havilland's sister)
|
96
|
Rebecca (1940) and Suspicion
(1941) |
2014
|
Shirley Temple Black
Child Star/Actress
|
85
|
|
|
Mickey Rooney
Actor
|
93
|
Boys Town (1938)
(one of longest acting
careers from 1927 until death) |
|
Robin Williams
Actor/Comedian
|
63
(suicide)
|
Dead Poets Society (1989) and Good Will
Hunting (1997) |
|
Lauren Bacall
Actress
(married to Humphrey Bogart)
|
89
|
To Have and Have Not (1944), The
Big Sleep (1946), and Key Largo (1948) |
|
Mike Nichols
Director
|
83
|
Who’s Afraid of Virginia
Woolf? (1966) and The Graduate
(1967) |
2015
|
Leonard Nimoy
Actor/Director
|
83
|
Spock in the original Star Trek series and
through out the Star Trek feature
film franchise (1966-2013) |
|
Christopher Lee
Actor
|
93
|
Multiple Hammer Studios' horror film roles as Dracula
(i.e., Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1966)) and for his performances
in two parts (II and III) of the Star
Wars franchise, and as Saruman in The
Lord of the Rings film trilogy (2001–2003) and in two Hobbit films
(2012, 2014) |
|
Maureen O’Hara
Actress
|
95
|
Miracle on 34th Street (1947) and The
Quiet Man (1952) |
2016
|
Michael Cimino
Writer/Director
|
77
|
The Deer Hunter (1978) and Heaven's
Gate (1980) |
|
Gene Wilder
Actor
|
83
|
Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory (1971), Blazing
Saddles (1974), and Young Frankenstein
(1974) |
|
Carrie Fisher
Actress
|
60
|
Princess Leia in Star
Wars: Episode IV: A New Hope (1977) and four sequels
(1980, 1983, 2015, and 2017) |
|
Debbie Reynolds
Actress
(mother of Carrie Fisher)
|
84
|
Singin’ in the Rain (1952) |
2017
|
Roger Moore
British Actor
|
89
|
James Bond in seven films over twelve years
(from Live and Let Die (1973) to A
View to a Kill (1985)) |
|
George A. Romero
Director/Zombie film-maker
|
77
|
Night of the Living
Dead (1968) and Dawn of
the Dead (1978) |
|
Jerry Lewis
Comedian/Actor
|
91
|
The Bellboy (1960), The Nutty Professor
(1963) and Martin Scorsese's The King of Comedy (1982) |
2018
|
Dorothy Malone
Actress
|
93
|
The Big Sleep (1946),
and Written
on the Wind (1956) |
|
Milos Forman
Director
|
86
|
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's
Nest (1975), Hair (1979), Ragtime (1981), Amadeus
(1984), Valmont (1989), The People vs. Larry Flynt
(1996), and Man on the Moon (1999) |
|
Bernardo Bertolucci
Director
|
77
|
Last Tango
in Paris (1972), The Last Emperor
(1987), The Sheltering Sky (1990), Stealing Beauty
(1996), and The Dreamers (2003) |
|
Nicolas Roeg
Director
|
90
|
Performance (1970), Walkabout (1971), Don't
Look Now (1973), The Man Who Fell to Earth (1976), Bad
Timing (1980), and The Witches (1990) |
|
Penny Marshall
Director/Actress
|
75
|
Big (1988), Awakenings (1989), and A League
of Their Own (1992) |
|
Tab Hunter
Actor
|
86
|
Damn Yankees (1958), and Polyester (1981) |
2019
|
Doris Day
Actress
|
97
|
Calamity Jane (1953), Love Me or Leave Me (1955),
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956),
The Pajama Game (1957), Pillow Talk (1959), Lover Come Back (1961),
That Touch of Mink (1962), and With Six You Get Eggroll (1968) |
|
Peter Fonda
Actor/Director
|
79
|
Lilith (1964), The Young Lovers (1964), The Wild Angels
(1966), The Trip (1967), Easy Rider (1969), The Hired Hand (1971),
The Last Movie (1971), Dirty Mary Crazy Larry (1974), Race With the
Devil (1975), Futureworld (1976), Outlaw Blues (1977), Wanda Nevada
(1979), The Cannonball Run (1981), Ulee's Gold (1997), The Limey
(1999) |
|
John Singleton
Director
|
51
|
Boyz n the Hood (1991), Poetic Justice (1993),
Higher Learning (1995), Shaft (2000), 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) |
Film History of the 2010s
Part 1, Part
2, Part 3, Part
4, Part 5
|