Regardless, it's a low budget movie and will no doubt be profitable once all revenue streams are factored in.
I liked Bros and thought it was a pretty good movie, but I think it was a huge mistake to market the movie over how important it is instead of focusing on how funny and romantic it is.
Billy Eichner made the movie seem like homework that people should watch out of moral obligation instead of the fun movie it actually is. Blaming straight audiences also was stupid, as it just led to everyone — both gay and straight — making fun of Eichner online.
OMG that was such a great movie! btw you forgot to mention Paul LyndeI rarely go to movies, and I didn't even know this movie was happening until I saw the commercials on TV a few weeks ago. How is it "important"? Please don't tell me because it's gay.
RomComs have been way gayer than this, and those are the RomComs I like to watch as a guilty indulgence on a rainy night in winter; Pillow Talk, Lover Come Back, Send Me No Flowers, That Touch of Mink, etc., etc.
I mean seriously! Doris Day, Rock Hudson and Tony Randall in a 1960's RomCom is way gayer (and much funnier!) than anything Mr. Eichner scolds us as "important".
Folks like Mr. Eichner, coming off to most people as bitter scolds, just make things so difficult now. They have to be "first" at victimhood, as if the 20th century never happened and no human walked the earth before them. It's just very tiring. And not fun.
I don't blame American audiences for staying away from his movie in droves. But it's going to leave a bad taste for Universal after losing at least $40 Million on Bros.
OMG that was such a great movie! btw you forgot to mention Paul Lynde
How's your convertible shop where all the nice young men hang out at?
My grandma loved him and PL, I'll see myself back under my rockI just Googled "Charles Nelson Reilly neckscarf" to confirm that my increasingly hazy memories were accurate, and...
Google is FULL of photos of Charles wearing all manner of neckscarves on Match Game.
I died.
It's apparent Bros will come in at #6 or #7 this weekend, perhaps crossing the $10 Million mark. Bros needs to make $60 Million to break even for Universal.
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever and Avatar: The Way of Water should compensate for the financial losses.Quoting myself here, as Bros had an even worse second weekend than even I thought.
Bros slid down to #8 this weekend, fell off a cliff in dollars and viewers, and didn't even make it past $9 Million after 10 days in theaters.
It's still in over 3,300 theaters nationwide, and it has exceptionally low Per Theater grosses at only $179 per theater, compared to the weekend's winner Smile with $1,310 per theater. Assuming $15 per ticket, that's an average of twelve (12) people per screening this weekend in Bros theaters.
It seems Mr. Eichner's very abrasive marketing strategy backfired on him, the poor lad. But... at least he got to make out with a younger and far more handsome man in his movie no one saw. So he's still at least got that.
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And not LGBT related, but Disney's Amsterdam movie really underperformed this weekend. It's not the unmitigated flop like Bros, but it was a big budget movie full of pretentious A-Listers who are better people than you, and it cost Burbank $80 Million to make.
Using the "Triple The Production Budget" formula, it needed to make $240 Million to break even for Burbank. But it's very weak opening and middling reviews look like it's going to lose at least $100 Million or more for Burbank. I imagine at some point the losses on Burbank's turkey movies this year will begin to add up... to something.
So was the trailer. (IMO)Unfortunately, the reviews were poor.
I'm honestly surprised people found Billy Eichner's promotion of the film so obnoxious. His comedic persona is kind of aggressive, so if you don't enjoy that then I would imagine he probably isn't generally going to rub you the right way.
Whatever the reason, I think this will be cited by studios for a while yet as proof that beyond the broadest of representations, LGBTQ-centric stories are still relatively niche entertainment.
I agree in the sense that gay people always going to be in the minority, but my interpretation of his interviews was that he was specifically asking straight people to go and see the movie because it was a funny Judd Apatow comedy beyond its 'importance.' Everyone involved, I think, understood fully that the film couldn't succeed on an LGBT audience alone and this was kind of a test of whether straight audiences would embrace a 'mainstream' gay film.I agree. But by our very definition we are a niche. I'm pretty confident LGBT makes up about 10% of humanity. And then making a movie aimed very, very specifically at 5% of Americans (the G's in LGBT) isn't going to automatically pull in the other 95%.
It would almost be like making a movie about Swedish-American Plumbers, filling the dialogue with inside jokes about quarter-turn valves and Lutfisk dinners, and then marketing it as "If you aren't a Swedish-American in the plumbing industry, this movie isn't for you. You other people had a good run though!"
I am maybe just a very forgiving person, but I kind of got his frustration after a long promotional tour imploring people to see the film and it flopping so hard. It would have been better if he hadn't of said 'straight' as I don't know if there is any breakdown of the audience on opening weekend by sexuality. Who knows, maybe it was mostly straight people who went to see the film?And then when the movie bombs at the box office, the producer goes on a Twitter rampage blaming the people who aren't Swedish-American Plumbers for being bad people by not going to his movie.
Not that there's anything wrong with Swedish-Americans who work in the plumbing arts. I'm sure they are lovely people.
They could also make the film more interesting, though, as dating apps, for example, are pretty mainstream now but people might be interested to learn the quirks of gay dating apps. Or not, I guess!
So one of the things I thought Bros captured well was the dynamics of using gay apps like Grindr and how absurd the conversations could be on there. It was really funny. However, it was an example of a joke that probably wouldn't resonate with straight people as they would have never used that app.Agreed.
Hell, I would love to have some of these dating apps explained to me as an old gay man.
In my day, we didn't have apps, we just ran up bar tabs until we hit the jackpot.
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