Do you really think the typical moviegoer is so easily distracted and bored? I'm not so sure -- I suspect that skyrocketing budgets in the film industry are causing producers to play it safe. They won't get fired for cramming six zillion explosions into five minutes, but they might get into seriously hot water if some "critic" at a TV station suggests that the plot of their new epic drags a bit.Evan Kubota wrote:Enabling is different than causing, which I realize you didn't explicitly state.
Your average Hollywood feature can maintain the attention of an average American moviegoer because things are constantly happening. Yes, the film may be two hours or so, but the segments between specific 'actions' are rarely more than 30-40 seconds.
There are still some good films out there that don't look like Cheetos commercials, and they're cut on NLE. It gives me hope.

Now -- as for George Lucas -- I think the man made a drunken deal with a magical Leprechaun. He seems intent on earning an infinite number of pots of gold by releasing the same four films over and over again. I'm nervously awaiting the day he edits Jar Jar Binks into THX 1138.