It may be much-loved, but the streaming service’s winning formula has insidiously changed films into formulaic franchise fare

It’s a shame the German-American philosopher Herbert Marcuse died in 1979, because he would have loved Disney+. Not because he might have been a secret Muppets obsessive, thrilled to have their collected work available in one place; nor because he’d caught the Star Wars Holiday Special in the year before his death and pined for a rewatch. No, Marcuse would have loved Disney+ because it proved his theories right.

Related: ‘Feasting on fantasy’: my month of extreme immersion in Disney+

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

OBR confirms UK enters ‘year-long’ recession with half a million job losses likely

Spending watchdog says squeezed wages and interest rate rises will wipe out…

Wales announces discovery of its first monkeypox case

Director of health protection says they are ready to respond but that…