Now that we have a general sense of where this movie's box office performance is heading (although with each day its forecast is reduced) we can begin to put it in historical perspective.
Variety referred to the opening as "catastrophic", but its failure is truly historic for a major big budget holiday release.
The film reportedly cost $180M, opened on 4,174 screens, and achieved the lowest CinemaScore in the history of Disney animation at a B from those that rushed out to see it.
Its domestic box office over the three day holiday Thanksgiving weekend is projected to be approximately
$12M (approximate $19M for the five day).
For some perspective on the
$12M three day holiday weekend domestic opening (all numbers in today's dollars):
- Family animated film (destined to Peacock less than 90 days later) "Minions:Rise of Gru" opened to
$107M over a holiday weekend four months ago
- Blockbuster films (destined to Disney+) such as "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever" opened to
$180M on a non-holiday weekend two weeks ago and "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness" opened to
$187M on a non-holiday weekend just six months ago
- For a film opening on over 4,000 screens, it is the
third worst opening in history, only about $2M behind the all-time champion "The Nut Job 2:Nutty By Nature" which opened in the middle of August on a non-holiday weekend
- In comparison to the "Mount Rushmore of Disney Box Office Flops" (note it played in more theaters than any on this list), only "Mars Needs Moms" had a lower opening and that was on over 1,000 less screens on a non-holiday weekend:
- "Mars Needs Moms" -
$9M, March 2011, 3,117 screens
- "Strange World" -
$12M, Thanksgiving 2022, 4,174 screens
- "Treasure Planet" -
$20M, Thanksgiving 2002
- "Home on the Range" -
$22M, Easter, 2004
- "The Lone Ranger" -
$37M, July 4th weekend, 2013
- "John Carter" -
$39M, March 2012
- "Chicken Little" -
$61M, non-holiday November, 2005
- In terms of financial loss, this is more difficult as studios do not expose their accounting so there are only very rough industry estimates, but at a
projected loss of $150M, it would place it in approximately the
top 20 box office financial disasters of all-time
en.wikipedia.org