"We will have high-definition, wide-screen television sets and a push-button dialing system to order the movie you want at the time you want it. You’ll not go to a video store but instead order a movie on demand and then pay for it. Videocassette tapes as we know them now will be obsolete both for showing prerecorded movies and for recording movies. People will record films on 8mm and will play them back using laser-disk/CD technology. I also am very, very excited by the fact that before long, alternative films will penetrate the entire country. Today seventy-five percent of the gross from a typical art film in America comes from as few as six –six– different theaters in six different cities. Ninety percent of the American motion-picture marketplace never shows art films. With this revolution in delivery and distribution, anyone, in any size town or hamlet, will see the movies he or she wants to see. It will be the same as it’s always been with books. You can be a hermit and still read any author you choose."

Roger Ebert Predicting The Future Of Film In 1987 | /Film (via popculturebrain)

He did a pretty solid job with the future of film distribution.  

If the media futurists could do such a good job, why couldn’t the transportation futurists do the same — where are our darned flying cars!?

(via matthewknell)

Oscars coming up in a few hours — anyone have good advice on picks for my Oscar pool?  Especially in Best Supporting Actress: could the Fighter’s actresses cancel out each other’s support and let Ms. Steinfeld slip through with the win?
Personally, I’m pulling for the King’s Speech and Colin Firth, but I think the overall crop of best picture nominees is filled with good but not great choices (at least of the five I’ve seen).

Oscars coming up in a few hours — anyone have good advice on picks for my Oscar pool?  Especially in Best Supporting Actress: could the Fighter’s actresses cancel out each other’s support and let Ms. Steinfeld slip through with the win?

Personally, I’m pulling for the King’s Speech and Colin Firth, but I think the overall crop of best picture nominees is filled with good but not great choices (at least of the five I’ve seen).

So sayeth Nate Silver:

Since I last wrote about this year’s Academy Award nominees for Best Picture, there has been a significant shift in the conventional wisdom about the probable winner. “The Social Network,” which was once considered as likely as 90 percent certain to win by betting markets, is now given only about a 20 percent chance. “The King’s Speech,” instead, has become the heavy favorite. It’s tempting to say that the conventional wisdom has gotten ahead of itself.

Even if “The King’s Speech” seems to have some momentum, recently having picked up awards from the directors’ and producers’ guilds, “The Social Network” has still won significantly more hardware over the course of the entire season, including the Golden Globes.

Not all awards are created equal, however. And “The King’s Speech” has been winning the awards that matter the most. I have more over at the Carpetbagger blog. Read more.