Skip to main content

How these actors and filmmakers found success despite quarantine

andy samberg, cristin milioti, dave franco and delroy lindo image composite
Getty Images/Digital Trends Graphic

Despite Christopher Nolan’s best efforts, it has now been nearly five months since a major Hollywood theatrical release. But while audiences have felt the pain of No Time To Die, Mulan, and Black Widow’s absence, they have filled the void with an eclectic array of movies and TV shows — some of which have been made by filmmakers who are only now receiving long-overdue recognition.

Instead of being dominated by big-budget blockbusters at the theater, 2020’s biggest successes have largely been from smaller-budget affairs and less-known actors and directors whose films debut on streaming services and video on demand.

Smaller successes

The scant slate of releases has propelled the Western drama First Cow and its always magnificent writer and director Kelly Reichardt into the conversation. The Half of It, Alice Wu’s delightful return to directing after 15 years, has steadily grown in popularity. Dave Franco has been exalted for his directorial debut The Rental, while Josh Trank used early May to openly discuss his disastrous Fantastic Four reboot and then reposition himself as a risky and provocative director with the divisive Capone.

Actors have benefited, too. Delroy Lindo is now an awards season front-runner thanks to his incredible turn in Spike Lee’s Da 5 Bloods. Stand-up comedian Bill Burr was celebrated for his stirring portrayal in The King of Staten Island. Audiences fell in love with Andy Samberg and Cristin Milioti in the time-bending rom-com Palm Springs, and Extraction and The Old Guard reaffirmed Chris Hemsworth and Charlize Theron’s status as two of the biggest action stars on the planet.

Delroy Lindo
Delroy Lindo Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

For Paul Dergarabedian, a senior analyst over at Comscore, it makes perfect sense that large audiences have immediately pivoted to the above home releases, as “people are literally spending 24/7 looking for content.”

“In 2019, we had record-breaking box office figures around the world in theaters. At the same time, Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, even Disney+ and Apple+, were all making stuff. So all of that interesting content, both inside the home and outside the home, has now got really condensed into the in-home experience.”

Sorcha Ní Fhlainn, a senior film lecturer at Manchester Metropolitan University, says the lack of tentpole releases has “temporarily benefitted smaller releases and boosted” new talent because streaming services “enable them to find their audience.”

“People are going outside of their comfort zones to find new content,” adds Dergarabedian, who says Netflix’s ability to open up a “bigger audience for new filmmakers” should even lead to these individuals “being sought after for big-screen content.” That’s already started to happen, as Coffee & Karem’s Michael Dowse, Uncorked’s Prentice Penny, and Inheritance’s Vaughn Stein quickly set up their next directing projects during lockdown.

The challenges of releasing a movie during the pandemic

It shouldn’t be forgotten, though, that the disintegration of the theatrical model has devastated most aspects of the movie industry, especially when it comes to smaller, independent movies.

“Films really need some kind of major boost out of the gate, whether from a film festival or a theatrical release,” says Sasha Stone at Awards Daily, who says that it has been “nearly impossible” for any film to register with audiences because “so many people are focused on the pandemic.”

NEVER RARELY SOMETIMES ALWAYS - Official Trailer [HD] - At Home On Demand April 3

Box Office Pro’s editorial director, Daniel Loria, believes that only Universal’s Trolls: World Tour, ESPN’s The Last Dance, Netflix’s Tiger King, and Disney+’s Hamilton have captured any “part of a national conversation” since the pandemic began. He even suggests that the likes of Da 5 Bloods, Palm Springs, and The King of Staten Island “might have fared better with an additional platform like theatrical to complement them,” as fewer platforms mean less potential for films to break out.

That feels especially true for the critically acclaimed but mostly unseen Never Rarely Sometimes Always. After winning the Special Jury Award at the Sundance Film Festival, it was released with a 99% Rotten Tomatoes score on March 13, just as the pandemic was closing American cinemas — and it only made $16,565 at the box office.

Netflix comes out on top

The big winner throughout all of this, though, is undoubtedly Netflix. “Their money is in subscriptions,” says Stone, “which have been on the rise during the lockdown.” This stranglehold is probably only going to get tighter over the next few months.

The continued closure of cinemas — and audiences’ likely reluctance to immediately return to them even once they do open — means Charlie Kaufman, Aaron Sorkin, and David Fincher’s new movies will arrive on the streaming service uncontested.

Not only does Ní Fhlainn see this “unique set of circumstances” as the catalyst to a huge “shift in Hollywood history,” but Dergarabedian predicts that conversations over “theatrical windows, the power of streaming to give filmmakers a voice, exposure, and a platform,” and the legitimacy of Netflix as a Hollywood power will all be accelerated, too.

“This is going to have an impact,” he adds. “But any big pronouncements on big shifts in entertainment should be tempered with an understanding that anything is possible.”

Editors' Recommendations

Gregory Wakeman
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Gregory Wakeman is a Los Angeles based freelance film writer, journalist, and critic.
Netflix is streaming the craziest action movie of 2024. Here’s why I loved it
A man floating in air kicks another man in the face in City Hunter.

This month seems to be the time to release action movies that color outside the lines. We've already had Dev Patel's Monkey Man, a messy, throw-everything-at-the-wall action movie that blends intricate fight sequences and on-the-nose social commentary in an entertaining package that will surely gain cult status in the near future. Just this weekend, Boy Kills World dished out loads of cartoon violence and over-the-top gore in a bid for John Wick-level fandom. Both movies bend or break the rules of reality to deliver quickly cut fight scenes that push the boundaries of the genre, all in an attempt to one-up the high standards set by the best movies in the Mission: Impossible and Fast and Furious franchises.

Yet the best of the April bunch is the one that has the lowest profile. City Hunter doesn't star anyone you'd recognize like It actor Bill Skarsgård in Boy Kills World and hasn't been backed by an extensive marketing campaign like Universal's Monkey Man. But the movie is a blast; it's like putting Pop Rocks in a can of Mountain Dew and chasing it down with a couple of Pixy Sticks. It's ludicrous, immature, and totally unrealistic. It's also my favorite action movie of 2024. Here's why you need to stream City Hunter pronto.
It's an adaptation of a massively popular franchise

Read more
7 great free action movies you should stream right now
Guns are pointed at John Wick

There's nothing wrong with a gripping and compelling Oscar-winning drama that's full of complex characters ... but sometimes you just wanna watch stuff get blown up. You wanna see high-speed car chases. You wanna practically feel the shrapnel fly past your face. Artful films like Oppenheimer and The Iron Claw certainly have their place, but that place isn't here. Instead, we're diving into some of the best action movies you can stream right now for free.

Thanks to ad-supported streaming services like Amazon Freevee, Tubi, Pluto TV, and more, there's a huge selection of great free action movies streaming right now. Whether you want to watch a guns-blazing revenge movie, giant animals attacking unsuspecting victims, or even a kinetic video game adaptation, we've got you covered. So, what are the best action movies streaming right now completely for free? Read on to find out.

Read more
10 best Netflix shows with more than 5 seasons, ranked
A woman puts a crown on a man in The Crown.

Netflix is home to many great shows. It's also the most prolific and well-known streaming service of them all, with a large catalog of original and acquired content. However, the King of Streamers is also famous for being quite trigger-happy. Indeed, Netflix is no stranger to canceling its shows, even if it spent millions producing them; if they don't yield immediate results, the streamer will pull the plug without blinking an eye.

Still, many original shows have beaten the cancellation curse and had a successful life, at least by streaming standards. These shows are Netflix's best efforts that actually got to enjoy a full life cycle, receiving more than five seasons. None might come close to the 100-episode mark, but these beloved series prove to hopeful showrunners everywhere that there is indeed life on Netflix after season 5.
10. Virgin River (2019-present) - 6 seasons

Read more