LittleBuford
Well-Known Member
I sort of feel the same way I have to say.Was going to mention the same thing. Super weird to me personally.
I sort of feel the same way I have to say.Was going to mention the same thing. Super weird to me personally.
…it’s almost like they are admitting they regret the “live action” fish in the live action remake?It's interesting that 2023 Ariel is combined with 1989 Flounder. I wonder what they'll do with the other characters.
As I’ve mentioned before, I find the live-action Flounder really cute. I don’t necessarily feel the same about the other two, though.…it’s almost like they are admitting they regret the “live action” fish in the live action remake?
The fish are creepy. Hadn’t thought about it…but a lot of the charm of the original was Sebastian, flounder, scuttle
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That means it has to gross $570 by that math…The rule of thumb is that marketing is half of budget, not twice as much.
And while the split between studio and theaters isn't 50% all the time, the 50% works as a rule of thumb. A studio may get 60% of the BO when the film opens, but over the weeks, that drops to below 50%. And studios get less than 50% internationally.
And that's why 50% is used *as a rule of thumb.*
We will never know the exact breakdown of marketing or theatrical split. So, what works *on average* is the rule of thumb to use. This means if a movie makes or loses about $10M, that's a break-even range.
It's what Deadline uses when they're not gullibly accepting a studios' specific spin (cf. Black Adam)
The Sebastian looked creeps. The flounder was better.As I’ve mentioned before, I find the live-action Flounder really cute. I don’t necessarily feel the same about the other two, though.
Could be part of it. I will say, go Google "Flounder Little Mermaid" and look at the image results. I never found an image that wasn't the animated version. Heck, I went and googled "flounder live action little mermaid" and STILL haven't found an image of what he looks like in the movie. All that to say I think there is just such a recognition of what the animated version looks like (and that could be in part cause the new versions are creepy). I'm just so lost on what the plans are here.…it’s almost like they are admitting they regret the “live action” fish in the live action remake?
The fish are creepy. Hadn’t thought about it…but a lot of the charm of the original was Sebastian, flounder, scuttle
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Nobody said that marketing was 2x the budget.The rule of thumb is that marketing is half of budget, not twice as much.
My apologies for misunderstanding.Nobody said that marketing was 2x the budget.
The "double it" was.... in order to overcome the marketing cost, you need 2x the box office (because of the rough 50% theater split).My apologies for misunderstanding.
Could be part of it. I will say, go Google "Flounder Little Mermaid" and look at the image results. I never found an image that wasn't the animated version. Heck, I went and googled "flounder live action little mermaid" and STILL haven't found an image of what he looks like in the movie. All that to say I think there is just such a recognition of what the animated version looks like (and that could be in part cause the new versions are creepy). I'm just so lost on what the plans are here.
Where are you getting this from?That means it has to gross $570 by that math…
Why would you double the marketing budget? I thought the rule was 2.5 times the production budget. Double the production budget to make up for making roughly half the take, and then the 0.5 is roughly how much marketing would cost. Since we have the marketing, it'd be just 2 times production plus the marketing, so $650 million.Where are you getting this from?
Production budget of $250 million.
Marketing budget of $150 million.
Total cost of $400 million.
Break-even is $800 million.
THIS IS THE PROBLEM - a loss of about 10 MILLION dollars is considered break-even - WOW!This means if a movie makes or loses about $10M, that's a break-even range.
I think he's talking more about our projections not what it actually is because it's too close to call. We don't have all the exact numbers. So if you're within a certain range, it's basically break even for our talking points.THIS IS THE PROBLEM - a loss of about 10 MILLION dollars is considered break-even - WOW!
Can I get a job in a company that stays in business who calls a 10 million dollar loss break-even please.
We're not using any rules because we know the marketing number.Why would you double the marketing budget? I thought the rule was 2.5 times the production budget.
You're using the 0.5 incorrectly. 0.5 is because the exhibitors (i.e. the theaters) keep half of the box office money. It's not how much you need to cover marketing costs.Double the production budget to make up for making roughly half the take, and then the 0.5 is roughly how much marketing would cost.
Do your math in reverse and it's obvious why it doesn't work.Since we have the marketing, it'd be just 2 times production plus the marketing, so $650 million.
This is the correct logic and math, but Deadline put the marketing budget at $150.With mermaid I've seen budgets from 80mil to well above 120mil. So unless Disney gives us exact numbers, and they never will, we have to give a best guess. So by my math the film cost $250mil and marketing about $100mil. That's $350mil total cost. They only average about 50% take home so that means it needs around $700 to break even.
Too bad talking points don't pay the rent.I think he's talking more about our projections not what it actually is because it's too close to call. We don't have all the exact numbers. So if you're within a certain range, it's basically break even for our talking points.
You misread.THIS IS THE PROBLEM - a loss of about 10 MILLION dollars is considered break-even - WOW!
Can I get a job in a company that stays in business who calls a 10 million dollar loss break-even please.
If you're not satisfied with the vagaries of the math of it all, then you're welcome to ignore all of it.Too bad talking points don't pay the rent.
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