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

Ayla

Well-Known Member
Sure anything "can" happen. And I'm not saying that theatrical will go away next year, but in the next 15-20 yeah I can see it.

But take your point and flip it, why are more people now watching movies at home instead of going to the theaters? Which is the whole point that we've been talking about this year as the box office is down overall. And there are 3 main factors, 1. Cost, its cheaper to watch at home, 2. can get almost the same quality at home as you can at the theater, and 3. the ability to pause and not have to miss anything if you get interrupted or need to go to the bathroom.
4) Because the general public are morons who have no manners.
 

DKampy

Well-Known Member
Remember it was just 5 years ago where we all were having this same discussion as the pandemic looked to really shutdown theaters forever. So just because something doesn't seem possible doesn't mean its not.

So yes for now it seems that theatrical props up streaming/PVOD, but for how long? As the saying goes nothing lasts forever. And its clear that theater owners themselves are worried about it, and studios are planning for it. So this idea that it "can't happen" is more wishful thinking than anything.

So for this isn't not an "if" its more of a "when" type of situation. Will it be, 10, 15, 20, 50 years down the line, who knows but I can almost with 99% certainty guarantee theatrical will go away eventually. The technologist in me knows it'll happen. And so far with these type of predictions I've been batting almost 1000. Its why I was able to predict the D+ stuff with fairly reliable accuracy, including the merging and shutting down of Hulu as a standalone app which was just announced today.

So some can say it won't happen, fine by me. But time is not on our side here. As every year the box office on average is getting worse and it doesn't look to be getting better. But hey maybe 2026 will be the year it all comes back. 🤷‍♂️
Well if studios lose theaters….either the price of movie tickets will be nothing compared to the cost of streaming/PVOD…or the quality will drop…. most studios have cut back on the production costs on their streaming content…. Which tells me streaming has not proven to be the cash cow many thought it would be

As someone who has every major streaming service since I cut the cord… the streamer I watch the least is Netflix…The one streaming service that does not rely on theaters…. They Probably have about 1 item that breaks through the mainstream a year and most films are generally awful
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
Well if studios lose theaters….either the price of movie tickets will be nothing compared to the cost of streaming/PVOD…or the quality will drop…. most studios have cut back on the production costs on their streaming content…. Which tells me streaming has not proven to be the cash cow many thought it would be
Or they choose to focus their money on the current model which is still theatrical rather than to split it on both streaming and theatrical releases. But as theatrical dries up you will see a return to the focus on streaming content. This is exactly what happened in the early days of the pandemic, studios started to gear up toward streaming only because it was unknown if theatrical would survive. The same will happen again if theatrical does start to go away in the future. Its not like Hollywood will just stop making movies just because theatrical ends, that I would imagine would be a collapse of Western Civilization if that ever happened.

So yes if streaming/PVOD becomes the main distribution model you can for sure expect prices to change to reflect that. You can sort of already see that with the recent price increases in all streaming services.

As someone who has every major streaming service since I cut the cord… the streamer I watch the least is Netflix…The one streaming service that does not rely on theaters…. They Probably have about 1 item that breaks through the mainstream a year and most films are generally awful
And I'm not saying that a majority of current streaming content isn't of lower quality, but that won't be the case forever. If streaming/PVOD becomes the main distribution model you can for sure bet that the quality will rise. But also its not like streamers don't have content that is of quality, Netflix, Disney, Amazon, and even Apple all have streaming exclusives that have been quality content.
 

Tony the Tigger

Well-Known Member
And in other news, other movies are opening this week -

This is one of the few films that I have such an affinity for the original version, I never saw the remake, so I wouldn’t see the sequel. I don’t want to taint the Jodie Foster version in any way.
can get almost the same quality at home as you can at the theater
only to a point. Barely anyone has giant screens, they might have large screens, but not giant. Even those who have very large screens are not a huge percentage.

Home is fine to just “watch a movie.“ I don’t think it compares to going to the movies.
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
This is one of the few films that I have such an affinity for the original version, I never saw the remake, so I wouldn’t see the sequel. I don’t want to taint the Jodie Foster version in any way.

only to a point. Barely anyone has giant screens, they might have large screens, but not giant. Even those who have very large screens are not a huge percentage.

Home is fine to just “watch a movie.“ I don’t think it compares to going to the movies.
Can’t go wrong with the classics Jodie Foster and Barbara Harris version.

Obviously enough people think it compares enough to skip going to the theater and watch them at home. So yeah it’s not 1:1 but many home set ups can rival the theater experience in terms of sound and picture quality even if the physical screen size is smaller.
 

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