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If Hollywood 2023 Was a Movie…
If Hollywood 2023 Was a Movie…,Comedy writer Joel Stein envisions the year ahead plus Damon Lindeloff, Jason Bateman and others offer their own loglines.

If Hollywood 2023 Was a Movie…

Illustration by Jesse LenzIllustration by Jesse Lenz; Uri Schanker/Getty Images; National Motor Museum/Heritage Images/Getty Images; Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images; Bob Riha, Jr./Getty Images; Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

So it’s a two-hander, a buddy comedy, kind of King of Comedy meets The Odd Couple — but it’s in 3D, like all the movies are now since Avatar: The Way of Water made you forget that it doesn’t work for anything but Avatars.

We open with a crane shot on a crowded theme park. From behind, we see a man waiting in a long line with his four grandkids, miserable because his Disney Genie+ card is stamped “inactive.” We close in to see that it’s former Disney CEO Bob Chapek (picture Dwayne Johnson). While a Mickey Mouse castmember poses with his grandkids, a stewing Chapek looks away. His eyes light upon a Steamboat Willie poster. And, for the first time, we see him smile. In 3D!

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Chapek drops off his grandkids and then speeds through town, cutting hard turns around detours because all the streets are blocked for the seven different films being made about the FTX scandal, all starring Jonah Hill.

Eventually, Chapek runs onto the It Chapter 3 set, where a man is making peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, putting them in a pile on a table. We see that it’s Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav (Rick Moranis’ comeback role) working at craft services to make sure director Andy Muschietti brings the film in under $10 million. He’s also crossing out all the script pages about the kid bent on avenging his murdered puppy, given all the buzz Dave Chappelle has generated for SNL with his opening monologue defending dog fighting.

Chapek tells Zaslav that at midnight on Dec. 31, the copyright runs out on Mickey Mouse. And he’s got a plan for revenge on Bob Iger. It’s a movie called Mickey Mouse: Rodent’s Wrath.

They agree to make the movie. Problem is, they need a star. One that, Zaslav insists, works for $35 an hour.

We cut to the 2023 Oscars ceremony, where the Academy’s new president (and owner), Elon Musk, is presenting all the awards. When he announces Will Smith as best actor, Smith — who was banned, then unbanned, then rebanned from the ceremony — has instead sent a hologram of Chris Rock to accept the award on his behalf. In 3D! (Rock decides not to sue.)

Chapek races over to the Tower Bar, where Smith is making an acceptance speech to drunk tourists. Chapek tries to talk Smith into starring in Mickey Mouse: Rodent’s Wrath, but Smith passes, afraid of angering Iger.

Chapek leaves the restaurant, where he then spots Ezra Miller — who has been banned from all restaurants — berating the doorman. Chapek offers Miller a part as a serial killer in Rodent’s Wrath, to help soften Miller’s image. They drive off to Zaslav’s house.

As the two execs work with Miller on his role, the producers get a news alert. Kim Jong Un has issued a statement commending the results of the WGA vote: 114 percent of the members agree to strike. And they’ve gotten the DGA and SAG-AFTRA to join. Miller is out.

Worse yet, their marketing plan for the film falls apart when it takes the networks six months to notice that Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon, Stephen Colbert and Seth Meyers have all stepped down from their jobs. Contract negotiations are holding up their replacements, which is tricky since they’re all being replaced by Kevin Hart, who is available only during meal breaks. And there’s no way Zaslav is going to pay the kind of ad rates being commanded by She’s Fantastic Made of Plastic, the country’s No. 1 podcast, in which the original cast rewatches Small Wonder.

Then, in a montage that’s an homage to the Judy Garland-Mickey Rooney movies, Zaslav and Chapek make the movie themselves. And it’s a hit! Rodent’s Wrath brings in $7 million, which makes it the No. 1, non-Avatar theatrical release of the year. Unfortunately, people love vengeful Mickey so much that he becomes the new baby Yoda — but because Mickey Mouse is now in the public domain, everyone can use Chapek’s hit character however they want. Iger seizes on this and starts merch-ing. Disney stock rises 30 percent by bringing boys to the theme parks with Rodent’s Wrath rides and selling plastic as-wielded-by-Mickey scimitars. Which slice at us in 3D!

Iger, thinking Chapek is a genius, brings him into his office to hire him back as his successor. Until Iger receives an alert on his phone. We fade out on Iger’s iPhone, which displays a poll showing Biden behind by 15 points to Ron DeSantis.

two people in beach chairs with Netflix and Disney towels draped on them
Illustration by Zohar Lazar

Loglines From Your Future

THR asked creatives to quick-pitch an idea for a movie set in the not-too-distant industry (the fact that they are all so dystopian was not part of the assignment … but is telling)

Damon Lindelof

Writer-producer (Watchmen, The Leftovers)

Damon Lindelof
Damon LindelofFrazer Harrison/Getty Images

A reality show that’s a mix of The White Lotus (because it’s self-aware) and Love Island (because sex) where all the entertainment CEOs get drunk and flirt with one another until they all hook up and pair off into new mega-conglomerates like DisFlix and AppleCast.

Patton Oswalt

Actor-comedian

Patton Oswalt
Patton OswaltAmy Sussman/Getty Images

A Dr. Strangelove-style limited series about a collapsing streamer that announces a “reboot” of a franchise that never existed and uses existing social media (Twitter, YouTube, Insta) to start planting “clips” of the franchise (a supernatural horror action-comedy) into the mass mind, creating a general “false memory” of this beloved property before unveiling its shiny new reboot. Problem is, they do such a good job “meme-ing” this false memory into people’s brains that it triggers a mass Mandela Effect, and American society begins to actually doubt recent history, leading to an apocalyptic crisis.

Aisha Tyler

Actress-comedian-director

Aisha Tyler
Aisha TylerAmy Sussman/Getty Images

In this absurdist sci-fi buddy romp, Kanye West’s and Elon Musk’s online personalities merge into a self-reverential auto-aware Skynet, but their hubristic fantasies of world domination are foiled spectacularly when a more powerful AI entity with Ali Wong’s consciousness blocks them on Raya.

Jason Bateman

Actor-director-podcaster

Jason Bateman
Jason BatemanJamie Mccarthy/Wireimage

In this Red Dawn meets Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid buddy comedy, the talent guilds unite in a strike for better fees in newly booming VR and Bryan Lourd and Ari Emanuel fly to the Sun Valley conference for some high-level-shit disturbance on their Big Tech counterparts.

Michael Green

Writer (Death on the Nile, Blade Runner 2049)

Michael Green
Michael GreenJesse Grant/Getty Images

In this fish-out-of-water comedy titled Come From Atlay, a tiny farm town in Colorado instantly becomes home to Hollywood’s most eccentric personalities after every single production leaves Georgia because of its unsafe reproductive health laws.

Marvin Lemus

Director-showrunner (Gentefied)

Marvin Lemus
Marvin LemusMichael Tullberg/Getty Images

A Mad Max meets Hellraiser dystopian sci-fi where Elon Musk buys Netflix because they canceled Wednesday after its second season. Elon then greenlights no less than 24 scripted and docuseries explaining how Twitter’s demise was not his fault.

Samantha Irby

Comedian-writer (And Just Like That)

Samantha Irby
Samantha IrbyE. Jason Wambsgans/ Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service/Getty Images

Hackers meets Before Sunrise meets Robin Hood: Men in Tights. A two-hander about a couple of IT nerds who may or may not fall in love while rescuing all the beloved shows that have been unceremoniously zapped from streaming services and burning them onto DVDs before dropping them into the mailboxes of random people under the cover of night. Obviously, the head honchos at the networks want to hunt them down and break their fingers. Will they be caught before they have the chance to bone atop a pile of discarded episodes of Westworld??? Gotta watch to find out!

Rodney Rothman

Writer (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse)

Rodney Rothman
Rodney RothmanJon Kopaloff/Getty Images

In this suspense thriller called Untitled Tax Write-Off, a movie star (Mark Wahlberg) has 119 minutes to get MrBeast to agree to co-star with him or his new boss will cancel the release of Untitled Tax Write-Off.

This story first appeared in the Dec. 16 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.