Soderbergh: ‘Movies Don’t Matter Like They Once Did’
The director weighs in on the impact of Marvel on theatrical releases, the popular movies debate around the Oscars.

Speaking to Rolling Stone in extensive interview about Magic Mike’s Last Dance, which included discussion about what Soderbergh thinks about the film’s and Hollywood’s portrayals of sex, sexuality and consent.
The director also addresses the impact of Salma Hayek’s replacing Thandiwe Newton.

“Nothing I ever saw was accurate, and there’s really no upside for anybody involved in litigating this or excavating it because I consider it private,” the director said about Newton’s departure.
“I don’t think anybody sees any benefit in running through this publicly. It becomes something you can’t control. Right now, to keep it private means all of us can control it, and I think that’s where it should sit for the time being.”
With Newton’s departure, Hayek stepped in, helping the team adjust for its more female-focused point of view. Soderbergh specifically unpacks how the movie’s intricate open sequence came together, noting that she reinforced that at some point, her character needed “to take it over” and “drive” her interaction with Channing Tatum.
Hayek Pinault’s arrival also changed the dynamic of the mother-daughter relationship in the film, which was originally cast with Newton in mind. After Newton’s departure, the movie kept the same actress who played her daughter, pivoting the duo from biological to an adopted relationship.
“It played to the dynamic she has with her daughter and resulted in one of my favorite lines in the whole movie — when she says, ‘Mom.’ Now I look at it and go, that’s how it always should have been,” he wrote. “We had to recalibrate. There’s no question. We all spent hours and hours in rooms rebuilding it, rethinking it to make it specific. At a certain point, you have to surrender to what the cinema gods want for you.”
Soderbergh explains why his list of what he watched and read in 2022 doesn’t include any superhero titles.
The director emphasizes that he has “no philosophical issue with those movies” and is “agnostic about them.” But as someone who didn’t grow up with comic books or isn’t into fantasy, he’s not their audience and has never been. While they’re not of particular interest, he does express an understanding of what’s required to make them.
The Magic Mike director doesn’t fault superhero movies for the declining box office success of adult movie fare. Nor does he believe exhibitors are the villains, even as Marvel sequels take up chunks of showings at theaters across the country.
“The issue of what happens to the audience is truly a chicken-and-the-egg thing.
The reason they are pushing other movies off the screen — mid-level adult dramas for grownups — is because people are spending more money to see those movies than mid-level adult dramas,” he said. “The exhibitors are just trying to survive, which is becoming increasingly difficult for them, so it’s this weird mélange of forces, both economic and cultural, that have landed us here.”
He added that even as he laments whether the state of theatrical is “stuck here” topically, there is someone out there making a movie “that’s gonna come out six months or a year from now that’s gonna invert the trajectory we think we’ve been on, and things will start moving in another direction.”
“I always believe in the ability of filmmakers to turn the direction of the industry around,” he adds. “I believe in artists’ ability to figure shit out.”
State of award shows:
Soderbergh, who produced the poorly received 2021 Oscars, noted that this year’s nominated class leaves little room for people to complain that the Academy “didn’t nominate any popular movies!”