Celebrating movies, and our ability to see them in public after a pandemic, is normal. What made it strange was the real world was not on display. Everyone knows that the theatrical release is an option, not a necessity. Consider everything that’s happened in the two years since the last CinemaCon in 2019:

We have reached a point where “major movie studio” has begun to sound like an anachronism. Certainly, Warners and Universal and Paramount and Disney and Sony remain premier global suppliers of films that generate billions — but the studio bosses occupy a lower position on the power charts because it’s no longer the movie business that drives the industry. Related ‘1899’ Canceled By Netflix After One Season ‘Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story’ Sneak Peek: Adjoa Andoh’s Lady Danbury Origin Story Is Revealed Related Oscars 2023: ‘Everything Everywhere,’ ‘Nope’ Among Early Favorites The 225 Best Horror Movies of All Time
Is that a problem? Not necessarily; things change. Projectionists used to link film reels on enormous spools for a continuous feed through giant projectors. Studios used to strike thousands of prints (hence the term P&A, or prints and ads) from the original negative (hence the term, “negative costs”) to ship celluloid 35mm prints to theaters, which would then have to return them. The late mogul Bob Evans loved giving a souvenir to his home screening room guests — an expired rod from his prized carbon arc lamp projector, long deemed too dangerous for commercial use, like the gorgeous silver nitrate prints now preserved in studio vaults.

When Silicon Valley’s Netflix sent cinephile Ted Sarandos to Hollywood, he slowly but inexorably turned the streamer into the top movie and television employer in Hollywood and around the globe. Netflix forced studios to adapt or die, resulting in a desperate game of streaming-platform catch up. ©Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection / Everett Collection Streamers may not have the patina of old-fashioned movie studios, but they’re dynamic; studios are not. They develop fewer projects, guided by a narrow sense of what’s sufficiently commercial to justify a theatrical release. At this point, how effectively can any movie star put butts in seats? James Bond has been played by seven actors, and after “No Time to Die,” a new one is in the offing. Tom Holland is not as popular in “Cherry” as he is as Spider-Man. Even energizer bunny Tom Cruise is more valuable as Ethan Hunt than anyone else. Immersive universes like “Star Wars” and the MCU lure audiences, platform be damned. It was a disturbing revelation for the studios to be outmaneuvered by Netflix dollars they couldn’t match, but at least they held an ace: Only they could put filmmakers’ movies in theaters. Today, Netflix has its own theaters as well as newfound willingness from exhibitors to play their titles. Last week, Netflix debuted Zack Snyder’s “Army of the Dead” as a three-week theatrical, one-week exclusive wide release. Many have long believed that this is the paradigm distributors should follow to brand, market, and launch a title.

— Steven Gaydos (@HighSierraMan) May 17, 2021 Warner Bros., bought and sold many times, is a small planet in the Warner Media galaxy. Cost-cutting sent billions to HBO Max, the new crown jewel, while reorganization threw out an entire tier of legacy executives in favor of newbies Ann Sarnoff and ex-Hulu exec Jason Kilar. A-list director Christopher Nolan, who could once call his own shots — including a theatrical release for “Tenet” — is looking for a new home that will support his theatrical habit. Warners’ current movie studio chairman, Toby Emmerich, does not have the stature that prior Warner chiefs Terry Semel and Alan Horn once commanded. No studio chief does. As their corporate parents spend on streamers (except for Sony, which prefers to make money by selling to them), the studios are likely to suffer trimmed budgets. On the cutting block: cushy expense reports, travel allowances, car leases, fat salaries, vanity projects, and inflated development slates. Many deal contracts are as archaic as the old lexicon. Financiers and studios need new language and flexibility. Slammed by global lockdowns, the biggest theater chains are also the victims of their overspending, debt burdens, real-estate deals, and mostly, denying reality. Before the pandemic, they could have struck better terms with the studios on shorter windows and revenue sharing. They held out too long.

Companies adjust. Disney’s specialty distributor Searchlight, under its new management team David Greenbaum and Matthew Greenfield, plans to release six films a year to theaters from directors like Wes Anderson and Guillermo del Toro; it will also produce and acquire for Hulu and Star and is now in preproduction on its first limited series, “The Dropout,” for Hulu and 20th TV. Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP Even venerable Sony Pictures Classics learned a few things during lockdown about how to make money on PVOD — although their big Oscar wins for “The Father” came after a late theatrical release with maximum impact during the Academy voting window. Michael Barker and Tom Bernard recognize that theaters are a unique asset in building word of mouth. If the studios ignore or diminish that value, they will regret it. There was a moment at The Big Screen is Back where the present snapped into focus. “We’re at an inflection point in our world,” said Blumhouse founder Jason Blum. “It feels like our industry is, too. The collision of recovery from the pandemic and shifting business models and crazy corporate consolidation of the past week puts us at the intersection of recovery and also of change. … With change comes opportunity. Every studio is experimenting with different windows and bespoke business models. Movie theaters is where we want to see our work.” Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.