Cmdr_Crimson
Well-Known Member
It's Disney's attempt at "what would these characters would do in a war" clicheAnd that's not a good thing. It adds in some of the most ridiculous and ineffable plot points imaginable.
It's Disney's attempt at "what would these characters would do in a war" clicheAnd that's not a good thing. It adds in some of the most ridiculous and ineffable plot points imaginable.
I think I'll press the "excessive cgi" button.The film trailers are presented like a Blendtec infomercial taking the best bits of Alice, Oz and Narnia and pureeing them into an incoherent, chunky slurry of CGI "razzle-dazzle" without any substance. In short... No, it will not blend.
The Nutcracker and the Four Realms looks terrible!
The recent movie's plot points is almost completely unrelated to the Nutcracker by Hoffman, Dumas, or Tchaikovsky.
It hews to the traditional story as close as Disney's recent live-action Alice movies have anything to do with Carroll's works.
And that's not a good thing. It adds in some of the most ridiculous and ineffable plot points imaginable.
It's Disney's attempt at "what would these characters would do in a war" cliche
Lol why does Disney even bother with these movies that they know will bomb? They should stick with the great original animated/CGI films and franchises that they're known for.
They're hoping the live action girl-power fantasy movies can do as well as the animated versions (Moana) or their live-action remakes (Cinderella, BatB). They're hoping for a female Harry Potter. They're hoping the popular IP (whether it's from a book or a ballet) can kickstart a franchise. A Hunger Games situation.
They just keep forgetting to bring us engaging characters and a plot that makes sense. Many of the childrens' books these are based on are children's books for a reason. They forget to adapt the story to resonate with all ages and thus limit their audience to pre-teens.
Bombing at the box office. But this was much expected within the industry.
I wouldn't call it a flop. It should make the investment back between the theatrical run and digital run.
Being overly optimistic isn't the same as reality.
After opening in almost all the markets it will open in, N&4R only made about $60 million world wide. With a CinemaScore of a B+ (not a good score since the scorers are people who chose to go see the movie and thus is selecting out those for whom this movie isn't their thing), that means the expectation is that it will make, at most, 3 times that amount in the end, so, about $180 million.
That $180 million is split between theaters and production company, and so, Disney will get $90.
Disney spent about $125 million to produce the movie and about another $60 million to advertise it. So, after it's theatrical run, this will be a $100 million dollar loss for Disney Studio (the majority of movies that Disney Studios make are at a net loss at the end of their theatrical run).
$100 million is a lot to make up in the digital after market. It's a Box Office flop, financially.
It has a RT Thumbs Up of 35. Combined critical score of 44. And between IMDB and RT, a user score of 55. Of those who saw it, just slightly less than half would "recommend it" (as per PostTrack). It's a flop.
Most importantly, tho, is that I hated it. The more I think about its plot, the angrier I get.
IMO, YMMV.
I have heard good reviews and will definitely be seeing it. Then I will be better able to evaluate its long term value. Thanks for the thoughtful response.
Your hearing is quite selective, then, if all you're hearing is good reviews since the majority of people who've seen the movie weren't happy with it.
I'm a contrarian as you know. Always suspicious of consensus.
So if the consensus was how wonderful everything is in the Disney parks, you'd start posting about how awful things are?
And how is that anything different than the definition of a troll?
The consensus isn't always wrong. I call it as I see it but lean toward favoring the narrow road. No trolls there.
That still sounds like you're skewing what you really believe in response to the opinions of others. Which is still trolling. Or lying. Either categorization is appropriate.
Being overly optimistic isn't the same as reality.
After opening in almost all the markets it will open in, N&4R only made about $60 million world wide. With a CinemaScore of a B+ (not a good score since the scorers are people who chose to go see the movie and thus is selecting out those for whom this movie isn't their thing), that means the expectation is that it will make, at most, 3 times that amount in the end, so, about $180 million.
That $180 million is split between theaters and production company, and so, Disney will get $90.
Disney spent about $125 million to produce the movie and about another $60 million to advertise it. So, after it's theatrical run, this will be a $100 million dollar loss for Disney Studio (the majority of movies that Disney Studios make are at a net loss at the end of their theatrical run).
$100 million is a lot to make up in the digital after market. It's a Box Office flop, financially.
It has a RT Thumbs Up of 35. Combined critical score of 44. And between IMDB and RT, a user score of 55. Of those who saw it, just slightly less than half would "recommend it" (as per PostTrack). It's a flop.
Most importantly, tho, is that I hated it. The more I think about its plot, the angrier I get.
IMO, YMMV.
Disney has a far more favorable deal with theaters than 50/50. That 50/50 number is a thing of the past especially for Disney. Rumor has it on Star Wars films Disney gets close to 75% of the take.
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