Most of those movies cover Depression life, institutional corruption and wrongful imprisonment. Maybe audiences are tiring of movies about what writer/comedian Demi Adejuyigbe boils down to as "black pain?" I name-dropped him because I still remember something he wrote about Mudbound on Letterboxd:
"I'm over watching black pain like this. There's merit to it for sure, but I'm just... exhausted by it. I want more black movies that aren't concerned with delivering a modern-day moral about race in old settings. I want more stories that let black actors do more than live out the terrible history of their ancestors in the hopes that they get awards for it. I want to get to the end of one year and be able to see that the year's most acclaimed black performances aren't performances they were racially-necessary for, but performances they absolutely killed while they happened to be black. Why is black pain always en vogue?"
Yes, he's only one guy, and yes, I know some of those 2024 movies are set in modern times. Still, look how well black movies that cover high points rather than low points like Hidden Figures and BlacKKKlansman did at the box office.
"I'm over watching black pain like this. There's merit to it for sure, but I'm just... exhausted by it. I want more black movies that aren't concerned with delivering a modern-day moral about race in old settings. I want more stories that let black actors do more than live out the terrible history of their ancestors in the hopes that they get awards for it. I want to get to the end of one year and be able to see that the year's most acclaimed black performances aren't performances they were racially-necessary for, but performances they absolutely killed while they happened to be black. Why is black pain always en vogue?"
Yes, he's only one guy, and yes, I know some of those 2024 movies are set in modern times. Still, look how well black movies that cover high points rather than low points like Hidden Figures and BlacKKKlansman did at the box office.