I'm talking movies and TV. And yeah, every year or two there's a journalistic burst of "Everything at the cinema/on the streaming service is a sequel and/or a superhero movie. Where's the mature cinema/TV for adults we used to enjoy? Why can't Hollywood give us more original stories? etc etc" Perhaps the Covid break from cinema going cooled down that talk for a while, but now that we are out of that, I get the feeling we genuinely are in a particularly clear "stale idea" crisis.
I don't write this out of particular disappointment with current movies - I still haven't even seen the Top Gun movie, or the new Thor. The latter is definitely suffering a bit of a Marvel fan backlash (it's too jokey for many, apparently, and feels more like a parody.)
But more generally, based on watching quite a few Youtube reviewers, it's safe to say that:
a. it's clear that Disney has milked the Star Wars universe dry. The critical reception to their series is just getting worse and worse, and as I didn't even care for the Mandalorian, it's not like I'm hanging out for anything new from that world. The universe, as I have written before, has a fatal flaw: no consistent view of the Force, which was the key appeal of the first couple of movies. The TV shows are not fixing that. It's incapable of retrospective correction, probably.
b. Similarly, the same can be said of their Marvel content, with general dissatisfaction growing with the way the movies and series are messily dealing with a multiverse. (I also watched a long Youtube video by someone very keen to explain that the Endgame movie, and subsequent stuff, has dealt with time travel inconsistently. I never did like the Endgame explanation.)
c. The Jurassic franchise is dead - there are so many terrible reviews for the current one.
d. Hard to believe the (not Spielberg directed) Indiana Jones movie will be good. Due out next summer.
e. Honestly, who cares that there are at least two Avatar movies coming out. Had no interest in the first movie, less in any sequel.
f. People went to see (yet another) dark Batman. But I don't get the feeling it re-started any particular new enthusiasm for the character. DC based movies, few of which interest me, have a very high "miss" rate.
g. Has their ever been more knives sharpened to attack a series than those waiting for the Amazon Tolkien prequel-ly show to start?
It just truly feels that everything has been sucked dry, and everyone can see it.
Sure, there will always be a couple of exceptions such as the surprise quality, apparently, of the Top Gun sequel - although it is not like that is going to be a franchise as such. There's a good chance the next Mission Impossible will still be good, too. (Although I found the last one underwhelming.)
But overall, at no time have I have felt that the complaints about lack of creativity from Hollywood were ever more deserved.
Is it the fault of the culture wars, perhaps? It probably does have something to do with it, as even allowing for Disney and other studios being super keen to have "representation" of women and gay or trans, it is hard to imagine stories now that are unifyingly appealing to the extremes of politics now. The world views have become so divergent.