Jean Grey Will Rise
Banned
Citation neededPretty sure the standard is somewhere between 2x and 3x budget (not including advertising) to make a profit.
Citation neededPretty sure the standard is somewhere between 2x and 3x budget (not including advertising) to make a profit.
So we can officially declare Squad a box office success right
What have they changed? I genuinely don't know what has been done. Of course we all want better quality movies and we'll see what next year brings us. WW trailer looked good, Justice League not so much (and I will never get used to Affleck as Bruce Wayne). So far, though, I don't think execs are sweating too much.
I'm not sure I agree SS should have made a lot more money than it did. As a non comic fan I only knew Harley Quinn (barely, mainly due to the Arkham games) and Joker, everybody else was as known as pre-GoTG Groot to me. I think its performance is within expectations given the amazing marketing job it received. I know a fair amount of people who went to see it because of Will Smith. BvS should have indeed crossed a billion, but I think that movie still made money, not counting home release and merchandise sales.
What part?
A good general rule of thumb is to take a movies' budget and times it by two. That's how much it really cost a studio, marketing included.
Then you take the worldwide gross and cut it in half. That's an approximation of how much a studio gets back.
If you do these two things, both BvS and SS end up in the red.
Now again these are very rough tools, but for example if you use them the SS numbers end up being around what was reported as the break-even point.
At the end of the day it made money, just not a lot.
What part?
A good general rule of thumb is to take a movies' budget and times it by two. That's how much it really cost a studio, marketing included.
Then you take the worldwide gross and cut it in half. That's an approximation of how much a studio gets back.
I mean, here is The Hollywood Reporter story that said SS needed $750-$800 million to break even, which is a bit more than the times two divide by two formula.Again, [citation needed]. Your post is just a fancier version of tales from your ass.
What part?
A good general rule of thumb is to take a movies' budget and times it by two. That's how much it really cost a studio, marketing included.
Then you take the worldwide gross and cut it in half. That's an approximation of how much a studio gets back.
If you do these two things, both BvS and SS end up in the red.
Now again these are very rough tools, but for example if you use them the SS numbers end up being around what was reported as the break-even point.
This is some ol' bullshit, come on.A good general rule of thumb is to take a movies' budget and times it by two. That's how much it really cost a studio, marketing included.
Then you take the worldwide gross and cut it in half. That's an approximation of how much a studio gets back.
Read that wrong thanks.It supposedly cost $20m according to BOM. It grossed $100m (domestically).
Insider report which has been debunked many, many times, by other reporters with a face like Mark Hughes.I mean, here is The Hollywood Reporter story that said SS needed $750-$800 million to break even, which is a bit more than the times two divide by two formula.
That article actually says the movie lost $75 million in theaters, although with Sony insiders saying it's less than that due to co marketing and branding deals.I don't know where you got that from but its a terrible, terrible rule of thumb that no one should ever use. Lets look at a real example in Ghostbusters. The rumored budget is $144 million so that times two is $288M. The worldwide gross is $217M (/2 = $108M). Per your rule of thumb it lost roughly $180M but the best expectations are the loss will only be $25 - 50M per Variety, which is a tiny fraction of what this rule would tell you.
http://variety.com/2016/film/news/ghostbusters-loss-sony-50-million-1201834911/
By your example, your calculations had an error percentage of 140%. That's a REALLY AWFUL result. You know nothing about how this stuff works, just hold that L.That article actually says the movie lost $75 million in theaters, although with Sony insiders saying it's less than that due to co marketing and branding deals.
It's not a perfect formula, but it's not a awful one
If a movie makes any money in theaters, that's pretty good, as then the ancillary income streams are all profit (not really but you get the idea).This calculation seems far too pessimistic.
Civil War was only marginally profitable? That seems like a stretch.
Iron Man 1, which launched the MCU into the stratosphere would be slightly ahead of breaking even.
Look at what gets sequels - Olympus has fallen had a budget of $70 million. It made $161 million worldwide. By your math it would be $140 spent and $80.5 lost (and it's not like Olympus has fallen has toys or shirts to sell). It got a sequel (albeit an awful one) which seems to indicate that it was profitable.
Thor 1 cost $150, so $300 if you double it. It made $449, so $225 if you half it. If Thor 1 lost money why make a sequel?
Damn that's good.Ben Hur, Gone Tomorrow
Dude, calm down. I just talking about a general rule of thumb, a lot of things like co marketing and co finance and if a movie is released in China and if the movie did in proportion way more domestically and a ton of other things can affect it. If you have a better idea, post it.By your example it had an error percentage of 140%. That's a REALLY AWFUL result. You know nothing about how this stuff works, just hold that L.
If a movie makes any money in theaters, that's pretty good, as then the ancillary income streams are all profit (not really but you get the idea).
What part exactly do people disagree with? That studios get back half of the worldwide gross, or they amount they spend in marketing and other costs?
I'm gonna go ahead and throw this out there: the amount of money needed for profitability is different from movie to movie and it is impossible for us, with the information we have available to us, to declare whether or not a movie was profitable.
Suicide Squad already passed 3x, incluiding advertisement budget.
No. Get off your own ass and do your own research.Citation needed
If a movie makes any money in theaters, that's pretty good, as then the ancillary income streams are all profit (not really but you get the idea).
What part exactly do people disagree with? That studios get back half of the worldwide gross, or they amount they spend in marketing and other costs?
[Citation needed]Insider report which has been debunked many, many times, by other reporters with a face like Mark Hughes.
I don't but I won't go around like I do. Your stand just goes against all logic, like, companies wouldn't be making these movies, at all. Or any movie, by your formula, just put that money into some index funds and they'll get better profits in the same 5 year long cycle.Dude, calm down. I just talking about a general rule of thumb, a lot of things like co marketing and co finance and if a movie is released in China and if the movie did in proportion way more domestically and a ton of other things can affect it. If you have a better idea, post it.
I gladly admitted upfront it was an oversimplification, and I agree with all your points.The half of the gross thing is an oversimplification. Studios make the highest % in the US and the lowest in China, so a movie that does well in the US and poorly in China (or doesn't open at all in China) will be more profitable at $700 m than one that does strong business overseas and in China.
The percentage also changes over time. Studios make more the first week than later weeks, so a front loaded picture with poor legs would earn the studio a higher percentage than a slow burn would.
I also think it's too simplistic to say that marketing is equal to the cost of production. There are then tax breaks, military propaganda benefits (which I suspect both BvS and Suicide Squad took advantage of, etc... all of which factor into the equation.
Just go to his twitter or something, it's all he tweets about.[Citation needed]
If a movie makes any money in theaters, that's pretty good, as then the ancillary income streams are all profit (not really but you get the idea).
What part exactly do people disagree with? That studios get back half of the worldwide gross, or they amount they spend in marketing and other costs?
Most films do lose money in theaters. It's like the game industry, you use the few big hits to finance the rest.I don't but I won't go around like I do. Your stand just goes against all logic, like, companies wouldn't be making these movies, at all. Or any movie, by your formula, just put that money into some index funds and they'll get better profits in the same 5 year long cycle.
Then what about non merchandising heavy films? like those action films and stuff. I doubt very much these people are putting hundreds of millions is stake for hopefully turning a profit. I understand where you come from, there have been documented cases of marginal profits being had but just use your common sense, Hollywood accounting is a thing for a reason, these capital moguls are not putting the hopes on anything.Most films do lose money in theaters. It's like the game industry, you use the few big hits to finance the rest.
And once again, you have the other revenue streams outside of the theater to help out, and hopefully put you in the black.
Then what about non merchandising heavy films? like those action films and stuff. I doubt very much these people are putting hundreds of millions is stake for hopefully turning a profit. I understand where you come from, there have been documented cases of marginal profits being had but just use your common sense, Hollywood accounting is a thing for a reason, these capital moguls are not putting the hopes on anything.
The Kubo strikes back. At this point I hope it's loss is at a minimum.
Yeah it'll do alright there. Hopefully 100mil + if you're Paramount
Bronsonlee is the worse
Into Darkness only made $57 million there.
Ancillary income isn't just merchandise. It's home sales, VOD, tv rights, foreign licensing, etc.Then what about non merchandising heavy films? like those action films and stuff. I doubt very much these people are putting hundreds of millions is stake for hopefully turning a profit. I understand where you come from, there have been documented cases of marginal profits being had but just use your common sense, Hollywood accounting is a thing for a reason, these capital moguls are not putting the hopes on anything.
This is some ol' bullshit, come on.
Independence Day Resurgence somehow did $75 million there. Star Trek better do more.Into Darkness only made $57 million there.
This is like saying every publisher in the games industry should be making Minecraft.Lets be honestif Matt's math was even remotely true, everyone would be making horror films.
This is like saying every publisher in the games industry should be making Minecraft.
Most games lose money. So do most movies, at least up front.