• The new WDWMAGIC iOS app is here!
    Stay up to date with the latest Disney news, photos, and discussions right from your iPhone. The app is free to download and gives you quick access to news articles, forums, photo galleries, park hours, weather and Lightning Lane pricing. Learn More
  • Welcome to the WDWMAGIC.COM Forums!
    Please take a look around, and feel free to sign up and join the community.

Disney (and others) at the Box Office - Current State of Affairs

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
Yes, there are some who can perform well at home superior to theaters. Does not change the primary money maker method for studio for those releases, which...did you notice how typically the higher gross in box office correlates to higher income at home?
Hmmm...almost like the box office is still...tje primary driver of successful revenue?
For Disney…I disagree with this…sorta

Their primary easy profits centers are the legs and ability to sell other things that hit movies get them. The “machine”

Even in changing times…that’s how you get the easy money

What good box office does is be an indicator of that potential. Still by far the best indicator. It shows audience commitment. D+ does not.

I said it earlier: this is a huge week for them…the biggest of the year. The success of the “Disney machine” is gonna be showcased.

It better be
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
Absolutely true. You don't think that the movie with the 2nd highest gross income at the BO so far this year (Cap 4, which would have been 14th overall last year) will correlate to a correspondingly high income in the home market?
You’re correlating some of there’s flops as being a new sub or sustained sub…which is pretty silly. It doesn’t “generate income” in the home market otherwise.

You know what does?

Bluey

A good original series…if they can get one?
 

celluloid

Well-Known Member
For Disney…I disagree with this…sorta

Their primary easy profits centers are the legs and ability to sell other things that hit movies get them. The “machine”

Even in changing times…that’s how you get the easy money

What good box office does is be an indicator of that potential. Still by far the best indicator. It shows audience commitment. D+ does not.

I said it earlier: this is a huge week for them…the biggest of the year. The success of the “Disney machine” is gonna be showcased.

It better be

Without a doubt we can get into ancillary of merch and other synergy.

The reality is box office to box office, it is science or marketing and business that theater has greater impact.


Even marketing to theaters is often more beneficial than television. This is because it is proven that theatrical ads get more results than ads seen at home. In this distracted world it probably even has to ring true more than ever.


Business has so many risks, but they love mitigating the odds with what things show. And theaters still show success there is the primary driver for all other aspects.

That is why while Jaws has yet to stream a series or revival(thank goodness) and is often not streaming anywhere. It has an entire summer of festivities at Universal and it has remained in pop culture zeitgeist. The theater is the fastest and primary driver for that zeitgeist.

In terms of flops that eventually find an audience: they can't all be cult classics.


The majority of THE BEST for the machine have always been successful at box office first.

Disney re-releasing Star Wars films for easy profit is just one recent example of how they know this works and keeps the machine healthy.
 
Last edited:

Disney Irish

Premium Member
Even if the dynamics have changed…which they certainly have…ignoring how these flicks aren’t being well received/consumed is borderline clueless
I'm glad you acknowledge the market has changed, something you've been hard pressed to do even in recent conversations. Also no one is ignoring the fact that some of their movies haven't been well received at the box office.
 

coffeefan

Well-Known Member
Who said you can't have content streaming success? Not mutually exclusive and does not change the fact that the theatrical box office is still the best and fastest way to make your money.

You will notice that many things people want to watch on Netflix are also box office hits of recent are old. With just their own content, they would habe a rougher go. This was an odd comparison.

But nobody is saying the contrary. They're just saying that it's not black and white like it was before the steaming era.

 

celluloid

Well-Known Member
But nobody is saying the contrary. They're just saying that it's not black and white like it was before the steaming era.



It was never black and white. TV, HBO/Cable and Home Video all did this before.



Box office has always and still the primary correlator to success for most.

The reason you can share videos like that is...because it is surprising it happened. Meaning a luck and risky, can't count on it.

Not sure why it is so shocking to say that box office is primary driver of success for the major motion picture industry. It is not controversial.

If we want to talk cult classics and minor releases getting second life...we can do that as it is more common there.

But this is a box office thread.


There is still no evidence to the claim that the box office is not the primary driver. That was a black and white statement.

It is not the ONLY driver. But it is the primary one.
 

coffeefan

Well-Known Member
Not sure why it is so shocking to say that box office is primary driver of success for the major motion picture industry. It is not controversial.

Where did someone say that information was shocking? Let's include some quotes here.

It is not the ONLY driver. But it is the primary one.
Again, where did someone say otherwise? People are saying it's not the only factor, so it looks like you agree without realizing it.
 

celluloid

Well-Known Member
Where did someone say that information was shocking? Let's include some quotes here.


Again, where did someone say otherwise? People are saying it's not the only factor, so it looks like you agree without realizing it.

Because people are arguing like it is the norm for a movie to make more money at home than at box office.

It is the exception, not the norm.

This was all in repsonse to @Disney Irish saying that box office is NOT the primary driver.

Which everyone but Disney Irish seems to see that it is not true.
 

brideck

Well-Known Member
You’re correlating some of there’s flops as being a new sub or sustained sub…which is pretty silly. It doesn’t “generate income” in the home market otherwise.

I'm really not. I'm just reporting the numbers from a variety of studios that are attributed to non-Theatrical income. I'm making no assumptions as to what specific sources that income is coming from (like you are).

To use Cap 4 as an example, I am not saying that it's some dramatic moneymaker. But in Disney's ledger in the end, there's probably a "small" black number next to it, like $10m.
 

easyrowrdw

Well-Known Member
And as always you avoid the actual point like its the plague.

Follow along with me here -

The goal is not for a movie to have a loss overall, of course the goal is to have a movie that is profitable at the end of the day, its just that the box office is no longer the goal of where those profits need to happen. The box office is now secondary to where a movie makes its profit, it is use to setup the primary market for profit which is the post-theatrical space.

The short answer, if a movie fails at the box office as long as those losses are minimized Disney is able to absorb those losses and turn a profit on a movie due to its post-theatrical strategy, ie the primary driver of where a movie now makes profits.

You're a rather intelligent guy, as is TP, and I know you actually both get this point, even if you're being stubborn and won't admit that Disney has positioned itself for this new era of post-theatrical earnings.
The statement you’re quoting from Disney doesn’t say these things. That doesn’t mean they can’t be true - gotta check the breakdowns for Disney movies. But it’s still not what Disney’s statement says.
 

celluloid

Well-Known Member
I'm really not. I'm just reporting the numbers from a variety of studios that are attributed to non-Theatrical income. I'm making no assumptions as to what specific sources that income is coming from (like you are).

To use Cap 4 as an example, I am not saying that it's some dramatic moneymaker. But in Disney's ledger in the end, there's probably a "small" black number next to it, like $10m.

And that is great, but literally but a waste and bad business relatively to exist if it made ten million.

None of us would say an investor giving us five bucks after letting them borrow 200 bucks for two years was a solid deal.

Diney is not making 200 million dollar budget films to make ten million on a ledger years later.

And no one saying Cap 4 was a flop, but it is showing the tired grouping.


And it proves my point that box office is still the primary driver, not against the point.
 

celluloid

Well-Known Member
Again, untrue. Only the top 4 or 5 movies last year clearly made more money at the box office than elsewhere. Source: Deadline

Again, not isolated to time in theaters, but directly correlated.

You are confusing primary driver of success in revenue to "just counting how much it made in theaters"

You joined a conversation with a different argument proposed.
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
The statement you’re quoting doesn’t say these things. That doesn’t mean they can’t be true - gotta check the breakdowns for Disney movies. But it’s still not what Disney’s statement says.
Ok, if you don't believe that, then please quote directly from the FY24 earnings where it says otherwise. Please include the page number so we can review it, because I have provided that and quoted directly from it.
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
And that is great, but literally but a waste and bad business relatively to exist if it made ten million.

None of us would say an investor giving us five bucks after letting them borrow 200 bucks for two years was a solid deal.
If you want to get exact on an analogy it would be 10 on 180 investment, and that would be a 5.56% return on investment. Which to many would be a good return. ;)
 

celluloid

Well-Known Member
Ok, if you don't believe that, then please quote directly from the FY24 earnings where it says otherwise. Please include the page number so we can review it, because I have provided that and quoted directly from it.

Common sense should tell you that they are explaining they also make money outside of the box office when reporting about bad box office results. Cushioning the blow.

It is no secret that there are ways for home viewing to make the loss less or reach an audience for profit.
It is hopeful and explainining how it works.

You are jumping to a conclusion that this is the new norm.

Common sense shows that if a movie's marketing budget so it can get to theaters is still near half the budget for the film or more, than they would save a ton if they did not feel box office is the primary driver for success.

So again, your stance has no basis.
 

Disstevefan1

Well-Known Member
Again, untrue. Only the top 4 or 5 movies last year clearly made more money at the box office than elsewhere. Source: Deadline
There it is folks. The box office does not matter any more.

In the old days the box office mattered because it was the only place to see a movie.

So if the box office is no longer the measuring stick, the media should stop reporting it and sites like The Numbers should shut down.

The reality is, everyone still uses it as a measuring stick whether we like it or not.
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
So wait, is it the primary driver or not?

You guys took a long walk around the block to agree.
I think you've missed again on this one. As its me you keep referencing with these "primary driver" things, let me try to clear it up since people seem to have gotten it confused.

What I've said is that the box office is no longer the primary driver of PROFITS for a movie, not that it wasn't the primary driver of revenue.
 

Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.

Back
Top Bottom