xdan0920
Think for yourselfer
It's "hard facts" time folks.
Through this past weekend it made about 64 million dollars. It has one more weekend in the holiday season to post significant numbers. We are realistically looking at a domestic take of 80 to 90 million. And 90 million is optimistic at this point.
There is no way that Disney is happy in any way with the box office. No way.
Is it a financial failure? Honestly it will all depend on the overseas box office. Many films make 2-3 times their domestic take oversease. But will a film as "American" as a tale that takes place in turn of the century New Orleans play well in Japan? I haven't got a clue and neither has Disney at this point. Disney pulled out all the stops in its marketing campaign........and really leveraged every opportunity to sell the film. It didn't work.
From a quality standpoint, it is a well made movie. Classic or not really depends on your point of view. It rated 83% on Rotton Tomatoes fresh meter. It felt rushed to me, and lacked a real emotional punch, but my family liked it. We all liked Avatar and Blind Side much more in the current crop of competitors. Bolt and Up as well earlier in the season. The hook for us was the 2-D revival and the fact that it's the first real Disney musical in awhile.
But it's NOT going to cover it's marketing and production costs without doing about 250 million in world wide box office. And at the end of the day, that is how the studio going to evaluate its success. We can all debate a lot of things, but if this thing stalls at 150M in world wide box office, we are going to see a heck of a lot of spin come out of Disney, and probably a really hard look at future 2-D features. And if the next one falls flat the situation is going to get worse.
If Cars (Not the biggest producing Pixar feature by any means) had stalled at 150M in world wide box office, we would NOT be seeing a sequel in production, no matter how many little race cars it sold. But Cars did almost 500 million world wide, putting it in the black, and all the extra stuff was "gravy on the goose".
The thing that really puts cash in the piggy bank for these movies is repeat business. I saw Little Mermaid 3 times in the theater. I saw Beauty and the Beast 4 times and again when it went to IMAX. I am a total geek for a movie that gets into my heart. I bet P&TF is doing virtually zero repeat business right now. I will probably buy the DVD when it comes out, but that's it. I don't see raving reviews by fans on the internet. It's a solid, well made, above average box office performer that got stomped by the competition.
That's NOT what Disney needed. It needed a Lion King. It got an Oliver and Company.
Excellent take.
This movie has generated zero fan excitement. People all seem to like the film, but I have yet to have someone tell me, I have to go see this. When UP came out it was very exciting, everyone I know was seeing it and recommending it. There is talk of a best picture nod. PatF, nothing, it seems to me, an average movie bundled in pixie dust. And the general public is not biting.
However, this is not a signal that people need to see CGI. Alladin, Lion King, Little mermaid, these movies are the most rewatchable movies of all time. I defy you to find someone who doesn't like the Lion King. I defy you to find someone who cares thats its classic animation and not cgi.
PatF does not mean the end of Classical Animation. It is just not the relaunch we had all hoped for.