From the UK and Canada to South Korea and Saudi Arabia, a network of new global film production hubs is reshaping the movie industry. Tax incentives, talent pools, and diverse locations are creating a decentralized future for cinema worldwide.
The U.S. filmmaking industry is undergoing massive change, balancing streaming and theatrical models, navigating AI and labor tensions, and adapting to a globalized creative economy. At stake: its leadership in a rapidly evolving cinematic world.
Hollywood is no longer the sole engine of storytelling. With OpenAI’s Jony Ive merger and AI’s rise continuing to hockeystick, the industry faces both a reckoning—and a renaissance.
Hollywood is no longer the sole engine of storytelling. With OpenAI’s Jony Ive merger and AI’s rise continuing to hockeystick, the industry faces both a reckoning—and a renaissance.
From the UK and Canada to South Korea and Saudi Arabia, a network of new global film production hubs is reshaping the movie industry. Tax incentives, talent pools, and diverse locations are creating a decentralized future for cinema worldwide.
The U.S. filmmaking industry is undergoing massive change, balancing streaming and theatrical models, navigating AI and labor tensions, and adapting to a globalized creative economy. At stake: its leadership in a rapidly evolving cinematic world.
As budgets tighten and streaming models shift, the film industry is reinventing itself. Mid-budget films, virtual production, and global incentives are shaping a leaner, smarter Hollywood poised for a new hybrid theatrical-streaming future.