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

brideck

Well-Known Member
4200 theaters, $10,049 per theater... so... lets say... $12 movie ticket average... (rough estimate across the entire country/formats)... so thats ~850 people per theater for the weekend....

What... 5 showings per day per theatre over a weekend.. so 15 showings...

56 people per showing. Average across the entire US.

Worse than that. Most theaters run it on multiple screens, which isn't reflected in the theater count. Locally, it was on ~3 screens per theater at our big multiplexes.
 

MoonRakerSCM

Well-Known Member
Worse than that. Most theaters run it on multiple screens, which isn't reflected in the theater count. Locally, it was on ~3 screens per theater at our big multiplexes.
Ah!!! I am under the impression that 4200 theatres is individual movie screens... but is it address theatres? I mean yeah, up in Bishop CA, theyre showing it on one screen... but irvine must've had 5+ screens showing it.

So the industry metric of theatre is address location, not individual screens?
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
Ah!!! I am under the impression that 4200 theatres is individual movie screens... but is it address theatres? I mean yeah, up in Bishop CA, theyre showing it on one screen... but irvine must've had 5+ screens showing it.

So the industry metric of theatre is address location, not individual screens?
Correct, as I think there are like ~40K screens in the US. Plus that number of theaters also includes Canada I believe.
 

HauntedPirate

Park nostalgist
Premium Member
When I looked on Saturday at 5pm, my preferred local cinema had 20 screenings of 'Snow White' on Sunday, and 40 total tickets had been sold at that time. It was roughly the same the day prior for Saturday as well, and Friday had even fewer tickets sold in advance. Their monster screen (well over 150 seats) had 3 of 4 showings on Sunday completely empty when I looked.
 

easyrowrdw

Well-Known Member
I only noticed because I searched on biggest Disney busts and this came up:

I’m guessing these are accurate numbers and if they are? Wow.

The noticeable thing is that for the biggest ones they are more recent (directionally.)
Those budgets are nuts.

Also, the Billy Bob Thornton Alamo is great. The audiences were wrong!! lol
the narrative "All Disney films used to be great but now none of them are," is a silly narrative largely fueled by a mix of nostalgia and concerns outside the quality of the film itself.

Lets take 2016, a year at which Disney is at the height of its power. Zootopia, Moana, Captain America: Civil War, Doctor Strange! Wow!

Also Pete's Dragon, Alice Through the Looking Glass, The BFG... oops. Also Finding Dory and Jungle Book, neither of which was awful, but neither of which was particularly great.
I didn’t love all of those (I never saw BFG) but I would probably only cite Alice as an example of poor Disney quality. I personally think Jungle Book and Pete’s Dragon are the best of the remakes.

Personal opinions aside, other than Alice, the Metacritic ratings for each of the movies listed are also pretty good.
Zootopia: 78; Moana: 81; Captain America: Civil War: 75; Doctor Strange: 72; Pete's Dragon: 71; Alice Through the Looking Glass: 34; The BFG: 66; Finding Dory: 77; The Jungle Book: 77.*

I don't think Disney movies used to always be good before and are now terrible, but I do think their hit rate on quality used to be higher.

*Disclosure: I used Copilot to compile the list for me and then I checked its work ;)
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
BTW, no one brought it up but Cap4 did cross $400M WW this weekend -

1742851413115.png


Not that that is anything but still a loss overall right now, but someone made the comment that is wasn't going to beat Eternals unadjusted WW number and it will.
 

easyrowrdw

Well-Known Member
BTW, no one brought it up but Cap4 did cross $400M WW this weekend -

View attachment 849637

Not that that is anything but still a loss overall right now, but someone made the comment that is wasn't going to beat Eternals unadjusted WW number and it will.
It was noted in this post but I don't think anyone talked about it

‘Snow White’ Bashful With $87.3M Global Bow; ‘Captain America: Brave New World’ Crosses $400M WW – International Box Office​


 

brideck

Well-Known Member
Ah!!! I am under the impression that 4200 theatres is individual movie screens... but is it address theatres? I mean yeah, up in Bishop CA, theyre showing it on one screen... but irvine must've had 5+ screens showing it.

So the industry metric of theatre is address location, not individual screens?

Yeah, this is why I like to report number of screenings for my local theaters when big movies open to compare just how big of an opening they're actually getting. 4200 could easily equal just 1 screen/theater or it could equal 5 screens/theater.
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
But, does Disney replace the live action remakes with other films or just reduce their overall content slate?
…they can’t

Because they pursued a bad policy In streaming that produces marginal returns and a content problem that costs more and matters more each day…

So they need more movies…they need huge box office from them…and then they need people to subscribe to the stream and watch ads on them…

…what can go wrong with that plan?
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
People don’t just want power. They don’t just want their agenda implemented. They want everyone, especially famous, glamorous people, to tell them they’re good and special and right. Otherwise they feel they’re being victimized.
You just explained a lot of the reality why Disney has had to change course on the direction they pointed their studios in…

Plenty of firings…and more desperately needed to come
 

TP2000

Well-Known Member
Here's how the first big three mega-budget tentpoles from Burbank look so far in 2025.

Right now, assuming Snow White is headed to a $200 Million loss this spring, they're looking at a total loss of about $234 Million so far at the box office.

Three's Company.jpg


Mufasa: $200 Production, $100 Marketing, $152 Domestic, $185 Overseas = $37 Million Profit
Captain America 4:
$180 Production, $90 Marketing, $115 Domestic, $84 Overseas = $71 Million Loss
Snow White:
$250 Production, $100 Marketing, $90 Domestic???, $60 Overseas??? = $200 Million Loss???
 

brideck

Well-Known Member
All right, I did some crunching based on Snow White's open, and if it gets holds like Maleficent: Mistress of Evil it'll end up around $130m domestic. If it instead gets holds like Dumbo, which performed really poorly, it'll end up around $105m domestic.

If it ends up higher than $75m after next weekend, then it'll have gotten a decent word-of-mouth bump and everything will need to be recalibrated. We'll see how much those school-age girls are talking to each other about it this week.
 

TP2000

Well-Known Member
All right, I did some crunching based on Snow White's open, and if it gets holds like Maleficent: Mistress of Evil it'll end up around $130m domestic. If it instead gets holds like Dumbo, which performed really poorly, it'll end up around $105m domestic.

If it ends up higher than $75m after next weekend, then it'll have gotten a decent word-of-mouth bump and everything will need to be recalibrated. We'll see how much those school-age girls are talking to each other about it this week.

Oh, geez. Without going into finer detail like you just did (I hate math), I had it broadly headed to about $150 Million domestic, and overseas, for a total of $300 Million at the global box office which gets it to about a $200 Million loss.

If Snow White only does $115 Million or so domestic, that puts it on a trajectory for a loss north of $250 Million.

That's gonna leave an ugly mark on the 2025 box office data, to be sure. :oops:
 

Disney Irish

Premium Member
Oh, geez. Without going into finer detail like you just did (I hate math), I had it broadly headed to about $150 Million domestic, and overseas, for a total of $300 Million at the global box office which gets it to about a $200 Million loss.

If Snow White only does $115 Million or so domestic, that puts it on a trajectory for a loss north of $250 Million.

That's gonna leave an ugly mark on the 2025 box office data, to be sure. :oops:
It'll all depend on how international goes. For comparisons using Maleficent it had almost 3.5x international than it did domestic. So we'll have to wait and see if international picks up in the big way over the next couple weeks.
 

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

Back
Top Bottom