Fair enough for your opinion, but I am actually intentionally looking at how the British film industry is perceived in the rest of the world, relevant of some of the great stuff which comes out of the industry; it simply is not accessible to the audiences Hollywood can attract. Is it important whether the British industry should emulate the glamour of Hollywood? I don't know. That is what I am asking.
for me a music analogy is apt...hollywood churn out the huge budget well marketed films with what i consider to be little or no artistic integrity at all...the equivalent of chart pop music...britain produce the critically acclaimed yet poor in a commercial sense type films
i dont think britain could emulate the US in terms of huge blockbusters anyway...there isnt a british only film company capable of throwing $100,000,000+ at a film and i'd hate to see what happens if they did
regardless...when they do have a slightly bigger budget it generally produces great results...sunshine being a recent example
This is something I disagree with you on. Some British films can be very watchable, a la Richard Curtis penned films (even with a glorified view of Britain), but the gritty, gangster films never seem to have any universal appeal to me. Sure, they can by clever, even witty at times, but compared to the big budget films (when done correctly) that cater for everyone, they just don't hit the mark.
like any genre...it depends on the film...while lock stock and snatch are generally considered well liked but piss poor...films like the debt collecter and the long good friday are utterly brilliant
Yes, many other countries go wild for the period nonsense, but does that make it interesting? For me, it doesn't, and although making films like these may attract well to do middle class foreign markets and generate some money, it is a pain that people believe Britain is a quaint little backwards country. Yes, it is silly that it can be peoples perception, but none the less, they will think that.
i personally would rather british film companies churned out these films as cash cows to allow more adventurous film making and for the most part thats what they do...i, as with you, personally dont rate them at all...but they serve a purpose
where as in hollywood there is generally no interest in making films outwith certain characteristics...
everything is about the $$$$...a film HAS to gross so much in order to make the next film that has to gross so much...
there seems to be absolutely no interest in the art form anymore
there are obvious exceptions that people will still flock to see because of a particular director
perhaps that's what the UK lacks...enough credible directors who will attract money and are still given artistic freedom because the punters will still pay because its a given that the film will have a high standard
people like scorcese and spielberg for example