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Post by xanady on Jun 8, 2019 13:45:37 GMT
Jan-March cinema admissions in 2018 was 45 million Jan-March cinema admissions in 2019 was 36 million
Aladdin did well but fell 31% last week despite it still being half-term in some areas.
Just looked at the Wednesday night sales Hair for July at the Grand Wolverhampton- can’t be more than 30 tickets sold in the stalls.
Hope BP comes over,but not optimistic now.
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Post by duncan on Jun 9, 2019 11:38:36 GMT
Jan-March cinema admissions in 2018 was 45 million Jan-March cinema admissions in 2019 was 36 million Aladdin did well but fell 31% last week despite it still being half-term in some areas. All films fall after opening week, its been a major hit and to claim otherwise is odd.
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Post by xanady on Jun 9, 2019 13:08:51 GMT
Please re-read my two posts.I DID say it had done well but I also said that when I saw it there were only 6 people in a massive auditorium.The fact is that cinema audiences are down considerably on last year so far and as the Monkey pointed out in an earlier post,one of the major theatre ticket agencies in this country is reporting worst sales since the late 90’s.One of my friend’s has recently lost her job in a major theatre because of staff cuts due to a financial downturn.Am no expert but there is a trend here imo. By the way this thread is supposed to be about BP so....BP the UK 🇬🇧 loves you and please come and see us soon xx
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Post by Deleted on Jun 9, 2019 16:41:30 GMT
Jan-March cinema admissions in 2018 was 45 million Jan-March cinema admissions in 2019 was 36 million Aladdin did well but fell 31% last week despite it still being half-term in some areas. All films fall after opening week, its been a major hit and to claim otherwise is odd. But is it? Its budget is reported at 183 million which you then double to take into account marketing etc which takes it to 366 million budget. It has taken 512 million worldwide so far but has been out for few weeks now so the majority that want to see it have seen it. However it has already done better than Mary Poppins Returns and Dumbo and i think they are considered flops So Aladdin a flop definitely not but also not a major hit.
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Post by xanady on Jun 9, 2019 17:07:12 GMT
betty is bang on with this summation...totally agree!
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Post by Deleted on Jun 9, 2019 17:14:00 GMT
Agree with Betty - the old doubling the film budget for marketing and promo costs then taking that figure as the profit making figure has always been an accepted rule of thumb.
The film is clearly well into profit with further takings and on demand/physical sales still to come.
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Post by danb on Jun 10, 2019 17:33:55 GMT
I still don’t get Disneys live action remake agenda. Surely the charm is in the animation. BATB was ok, but I’m not sure they’ll hit as big with Aladdin or Lion King.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 11, 2019 0:03:47 GMT
I still don’t get Disneys live action remake agenda. Surely the charm is in the animation. BATB was ok, but I’m not sure they’ll hit as big with Aladdin or Lion King. Like to see them try Fantasia!
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jun 15, 2019 11:41:39 GMT
Moved out from the Bernadette Peters thread.
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Post by Jon on Jun 15, 2019 11:51:21 GMT
One thing I’d point out is that admissions wise, the early part of the year had Black Panther which was a much bigger hit than Captain Marvel and also Peter Rabbit.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 15, 2019 12:25:25 GMT
Could someone clarify who or what BP is? And what they have to do with Disney's Aladdin remake profitability in cinemas?
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jun 15, 2019 13:52:17 GMT
Could someone clarify who or what BP is? And what they have to do with Disney's Aladdin remake profitability in cinemas? This discussion started in the Bernadette Peters thread, relating to her concert ticket sales (or lack thereof).
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Post by dontdreamit on Jun 15, 2019 14:23:53 GMT
Jan-March cinema admissions in 2018 was 45 million Jan-March cinema admissions in 2019 was 36 million Aladdin did well but fell 31% last week despite it still being half-term in some areas. Just looked at the Wednesday night sales Hair for July at the Grand Wolverhampton- can’t be more than 30 tickets sold in the stalls. Hope BP comes over,but not optimistic now. Could the drop be to do with cinema tickets dropping? For example, all tickets at Stratford City Vue are £6 and have been all year. Can’t remember how much they were before that but I think it was around the £13 mark for adults and £9 for children.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 23, 2019 17:18:21 GMT
Toy Story 4 has had a mildly ‘disappointing’ opening in the states - $118 million instead of the projected $140 million.
Is this a sign of sequel/remake fatigue?
I imagine the forth coming Lion King remake will be HUGE thou.....
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Post by kathryn on Jun 24, 2019 8:55:44 GMT
'Only' $118 million, how terrible! The press are sometimes insane in how they report box office takings - a film can make 4x its budget - which means it's well into profit on its theatrical release alone and will have a very healthy post-theatrical return - and be considered 'disappointing' because of overblown expectations. Then again, Hollywood accounting practices would have you believe that no film makes a profit ever, which is obviously nonsense or the whole industry would have collapsed long ago!
I don't think TS4's 'disappointing' opening weekend it's a sign of remake/sequel fatigue so much as a sign that many people thought that Toy Story 3 was a perfect trilogy capper and don't want to risk having that feeling spoiled. Once word gets around that this film doesn't do that I imagine it'll develop 'legs', and be making money all summer.
It has been a lackluster summer thus far, and just as a rising tide lifts all boats, it's bad for the entire industry when a string of films fail to find an audience. People get out of the habit of going to the cinema at all when there's nothing much on that they want to see there.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 24, 2019 9:37:57 GMT
Toy Story 4 budget is reported as $200 million so with the marketing that makes it in the range of $400 million. It’s made $238 million in first weekend worldwide. Generally if you’re gonna go see a film it’s in the 1st two weekends so doesn’t look as though being a mamouth hit.
This year we have had Mary Poppins (although I guess that came out last year), Dumbo, Godzilla, Men in Black 4, Shaft, XMen (63?) Dark Phoenix, Hellboy that have all under performed and if it weren’t for Avengers then the whole year would be underperforming. I can only guess it’s sequal/remake fatigue? Aladdin seems to be doing well though
Yeah, Brian May said recently that even thou BoHo has reached “billion dollars” at the box office he is yet to see a penny from I’m it!!! Utter ridiculousness!!
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Post by kathryn on Jun 24, 2019 9:58:57 GMT
Yeah, Brian May said recently that even thou BoHo has reached “billion dollars” at the box office he is yet to see a penny from I’m it!!! Utter ridiculousness!! The key word there is 'yet'. If they genuinely don't make money from it then they must have had hilariously bad advice from his lawyers when the contracts were drawn up. They must have sold the story and music rights up-front; they got exec music producer credits and they were employed by the film as consultants. Their deal would probably have been a combination of up-front payments for the rights and the actual consultancy work done plus some kind of back-end deal on box office takings over a certain profitability threshold, which can't have been that high because the studio didn't expect the film to do more than a few hundred million even in their wildest dreams. They'll have a royalty deal on soundtrack sales too. If they exchanged the up-front portion for box office points on the gross BO then they're laughing, though it'll take some time for that to come through - they'll just have to subsist on the increased royalty payments and ticket sale income from their tour until then. If they exchanged up-front payments for points on the net BO then their lawyers are idiots!
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Post by duncan on Jun 24, 2019 11:38:09 GMT
betty is bang on with this summation...totally agree! She's hideously wrong though - Aladdin has now taken over $800 million at the box office and is a palpable hit. ...and Toy Story 4 had the biggest ever opening weekend for an animated film at the UK box office and in several other territories, it'll make money - films like TS4 make their profit via merchandise sales. There is a new generation of kids who will be getting their own Buzz and Woody toys this year. That so many films are falling short of BO projections this year shows that its more the projection model that is flawed rather than the quality of the films.
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Post by duncan on Jun 24, 2019 11:41:20 GMT
Yeah, Brian May said recently that even thou BoHo has reached “billion dollars” at the box office he is yet to see a penny from I’m it!!! Utter ridiculousness!! The key word there is 'yet'. If they genuinely don't make money from it then they must have had hilariously bad advice from his lawyers when the contracts were drawn up. Writer of the original Men In Black points out that Hollywood accounting has always been "different" Ed Solomon @ed_solomon Jun 13 In honor of the release of MiB:International (I guess), I just got my new Men in Black profit statement.. which shows it STILL in the red. The fact that they've made a FOURTH ONE confirms, as I've always said, that the big studios are only in it for the art.
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Post by kathryn on Jun 24, 2019 11:55:33 GMT
The key word there is 'yet'. If they genuinely don't make money from it then they must have had hilariously bad advice from his lawyers when the contracts were drawn up. Writer of the original Men In Black points out that Hollywood accounting has always been "different" Ed Solomon @ed_solomon Jun 13 In honor of the release of MiB:International (I guess), I just got my new Men in Black profit statement.. which shows it STILL in the red. The fact that they've made a FOURTH ONE confirms, as I've always said, that the big studios are only in it for the art. Yes, I know about Ed Solomon - I saw that too. Hollywood accounting is notorious. It's precisely why no lawyer worth their salt allows a client to pass up on up-front payments for net box office points - as Scott Derrickson says, you're better off asking for a ham sandwich, as at least you can be sure you'll get that. This is so well-known that anyone in the position that Queen/Brian May were - of actually being able to withhold music rights and basically stop the film being made - would be hilariously badly advised to agree to it not knowing what it meant. If they did then they must have anticipated or negotiated other ways the band would benefit financially from merchandising and tie-ins - because I'm pretty damn sure they weren't in it for the Art. Given that Hollywood appears to have had a Queen-shaped blindspot about the band's enduring global popularity that the band themselves certainly do not suffer from - they know how well their stuff has sold globally over the years since the official sales certifications were published - I'd be very surprised if they didn't manage to get a very sweet deal on BO takings above what the studio thought it would make.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jun 24, 2019 12:00:46 GMT
Jan-March cinema admissions in 2018 was 45 million Jan-March cinema admissions in 2019 was 36 million Aladdin did well but fell 31% last week despite it still being half-term in some areas. Just looked at the Wednesday night sales Hair for July at the Grand Wolverhampton- can’t be more than 30 tickets sold in the stalls. Hope BP comes over,but not optimistic now. Could the drop be to do with cinema tickets dropping? For example, all tickets at Stratford City Vue are £6 and have been all year. Can’t remember how much they were before that but I think it was around the £13 mark for adults and £9 for children. Is this just a Vue thing? The one at Printworks MCR has been £4.99 all films every day since they took it over from Odeon who charged around the £12/£13 mark.
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Post by learfan on Jun 24, 2019 12:29:16 GMT
betty is bang on with this summation...totally agree! She's hideously wrong though - Aladdin has now taken over $800 million at the box office and is a palpable hit. ...and Toy Story 4 had the biggest ever opening weekend for an animated film at the UK box office and in several other territories, it'll make money - films like TS4 make their profit via merchandise sales. There is a new generation of kids who will be getting their own Buzz and Woody toys this year. That so many films are falling short of BO projections this year shows that its more the projection model that is flawed rather than the quality of the films. Agree wholeheartedly with this. People dont appear to understand how the Hollywood business actually works.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 24, 2019 12:42:26 GMT
betty is bang on with this summation...totally agree! She's hideously wrong though - Aladdin has now taken over $800 million at the box office and is a palpable hit. ...and Toy Story 4 had the biggest ever opening weekend for an animated film at the UK box office and in several other territories, it'll make money - films like TS4 make their profit via merchandise sales. There is a new generation of kids who will be getting their own Buzz and Woody toys this year. That so many films are falling short of BO projections this year shows that its more the projection model that is flawed rather than the quality of the films. To be fair it IS 15 days AFTER I said it wasn’t doing spectacularly! and TS4 DOESNT have the biggest opening weekend for an animated fil. At US BO if you factor in inflation
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Post by Deleted on Jun 24, 2019 12:46:12 GMT
Not entirely sure how I got your profile pic above! Magic of the movies!?
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Post by Deleted on Jun 24, 2019 12:47:26 GMT
She's hideously wrong though - Aladdin has now taken over $800 million at the box office and is a palpable hit. ...and Toy Story 4 had the biggest ever opening weekend for an animated film at the UK box office and in several other territories, it'll make money - films like TS4 make their profit via merchandise sales. There is a new generation of kids who will be getting their own Buzz and Woody toys this year. That so many films are falling short of BO projections this year shows that its more the projection model that is flawed rather than the quality of the films. Agree wholeheartedly with this. People dont appear to understand how the Hollywood business actually works. This is a FANTASTIC blog explaining how the industry work stephenfollows.com/blog/
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