Agent H
Well-Known Member
They tend to do that a lot to the people here.Elio currently has 81%…. Figures just after I mention most movies wait till the wed before release…. Disney/Pixar prove me wrong
They tend to do that a lot to the people here.Elio currently has 81%…. Figures just after I mention most movies wait till the wed before release…. Disney/Pixar prove me wrong
And I’m sure the highlight of your day.In my deep defense, I also got a Scrub Daddy (ahem), a refill bottle of that shower glass spray I like so much, and a jumbo box of Purina Milkbones. All while riding out my Crumbl cookie sugar high. It was a rather good Target Run.![]()
I think the toy production has to be largely about current confidence and vibes, right?... So my guess is more a crisis of confidence - it's not a sequel, it's a sci-fi movie which has traditionally been a really tricky area for Disney / Pixar, and the Disney / Pixar box office has been vacillating wildly between huge hits and huge... not hits... recently.
I think you're on to something!
When discussing Pixar's track record at the box office the past decade, I think it would be fair to ignore the four Covid era movies that basically had no theatrical run. This likely benefits Pixar, as my gut tells me Turning Red would have been a giant bomb, and the others (Onward, Soul, Luca) wouldn't have done very well in a normal box office run.
There may be some internal numbers that reflect that for Pixar though, so they likely now understand they would have lost big money on at least a couple of those had Covid not prevented them from running normally. Which could feed into their crisis of confidence.
The rest of Pixar's stuff the past decade, has mostly been big Billion dollar hits (inflation adjusted). It's really just the bomb that was Lightyear and the money-losing Elemental that would cause this crisis of confidence.
Still, it's a weird new world when the mega-budget summer tentpole from Pixar has no toys for sale at Target.
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Yeah, I'm kind of puzzled about a certain amount of glee around predicting Elio's failure.The commercial expectations for Elio are not high. The best we can hope for is a run similar to Elemental if it gets good reviews/WOM. Not sure why some are wishcasting it flops though. Like just ignore it if it doesn't interest you?
The MyPillow guy??! What is his connection to Disney or movies? Or is this a typo?All I can think is that it is part of a broader desire to see Disney fail, perhaps with the idea it will lead to Iger being ejected from his position and replaced by someone more like Mike Lindell.
I don’t think there is any connection, or that anyone wants him to specifically be Disney CEO. More that is what the poster thinks the anti-Disney crowd believes is an ideal CEO these days.The MyPillow guy??! What is his connection to Disney or movies? Or is this a typo?
I think you're on to something!
When discussing Pixar's track record at the box office the past decade, I think it would be fair to ignore the four Covid era movies that basically had no theatrical run. This likely benefits Pixar, as my gut tells me Turning Red would have been a giant bomb, and the others (Onward, Soul, Luca) wouldn't have done very well in a normal box office run.
There may be some internal numbers that reflect that for Pixar though, so they likely now understand they would have lost big money on at least a couple of those had Covid not prevented them from running normally. Which could feed into their crisis of confidence.
The rest of Pixar's stuff the past decade, has mostly been big Billion dollar hits (inflation adjusted). It's really just the bomb that was Lightyear and the money-losing Elemental that would cause this crisis of confidence.
Still, it's a weird new world when the mega-budget summer tentpole from Pixar has no toys for sale at Target.
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Metrics were that Turning Red and Luca were the bigger of the four. Disney still seems to be reacting as if that was the case.
Well well, we finally have official word on what the ACTUAL budget for Disney/Pixar’s #Elio is thanks to actual reliable trades.
According to Deadline, the film cost $150M to make, not $300M like that lying grifting snake Mr. Jordan Ruimy claimed on World of Reel, and I doubt we should be surprised given Ruimy lied about Captain America: Brave New World had a budget of $380M, when the ACTUAL budget, according to the trades, was $180 million.
Let this be a lesson to all you people who post clickbait and lies from grifters like Jordan Ruimy here on this social media platform again.
Never, and I mean, NEVER post anything like what Jordan Ruimy said here on this platform again unless it’s confirmed by reliable trades like The Hollywood Reporter, Variety, DEADLINE, or The Wrap.
That means you too, @TsWade2.
It’s high time platforms like this went back to a vetting process for when people share info over movies, film budgets, and the truth about them.
So, no Elio toys, or even a t-shirt, at Target then?
Even though they spent over $200 Million to produce it?![]()
Which I believe will happen.150 apparently.
But I think that’s usually their MO. With two rare exceptions, they usually are overtly cautious on merch before new franchise releases until they know what they have on their hands.
Those two exceptions are Lightyear (which barely qualifies as new) and Wish, which they clearly had unbridled optimism over. Notoriously they were underprepared for Frozen. In this case it’s a good thing if Elio fails, which I’d give a moderate possibility unless word of mouth saves it.
Ps- I’m at the expo now!
Yes, my impression is that the days are long gone when a new Disney/Pixar animated feature was preceded by shelves stacked with merchandise and the characters showing up in the parks.150 apparently.
But I think that’s usually their MO. With two rare exceptions, they usually are overtly cautious on merch before new franchise releases until they know what they have on their hands.
Those two exceptions are Lightyear (which barely qualifies as new) and Wish, which they clearly had unbridled optimism over. Notoriously they were underprepared for Frozen. In this case it’s a good thing if Elio fails, which I’d give a moderate possibility unless word of mouth saves it.
Ps- I’m at the expo now!
I won't bring you down.I just purchased on online Elio movie soundtrack album on vinyl. Can't wait for it to arrive!!!
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Okay. I don’t think I’ve ever seen/read anything like that so that’s why I was confused.I don’t think there is any connection, or that anyone wants him to specifically be Disney CEO. More that is what the poster thinks the anti-Disney crowd believes is an ideal CEO these days.
They have happy meal toys!So, no Elio toys, or even a t-shirt, at Target then?
Even though they spent over $200 Million to produce it?![]()
Yes, my impression is that the days are long gone when a new Disney/Pixar animated feature was preceded by shelves stacked with merchandise and the characters showing up in the parks.
These days, they seem to err on the side of caution except, as you note, when they seem especially certain it will sell merchandise. Their problem is that they don't seem very good at anticipating what will and what won't sell merchandise!
As for the parks, they are even more cautious these days. It seems like it can take years for them to figure out how to represent something like Coco in the parks whereas films like Hercules and Mulan were preceded by full parades and even Emperor's New Groove had meet-and-greets despite the company's lack of faith in the film.
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