thismeinteil
Member
And Superman was there for Jurassic Park's 3rd weekend.Fantastic Four happened
And Superman was there for Jurassic Park's 3rd weekend.Fantastic Four happened
Jurassic Park dropped 41% in its 3rd weekend. I thought you guys were saying how impressive Superman's hold was? The Numbers agreed with you and predicted just a 32% drop. What happened?
It was this guy:Again, who was saying 32% drop. Who? I want names.
It's no wonder why Universal keeps shitting out those Jurassic sequels with no care for quality: the international audience still shows up in droves.A 41% drop for JW in it's third weekned was great, and also expected because Dinosaurs rule the box office.
It was this guy:
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Yes, let's just ignore the standard 2.5x-3x used and reported by everyone just so you can desperately make your fave movie look like a hit instead of what it's actually doing, losing money for the studio.I mean let's be honest, he's definitely one of those guys that once read a film needs to make 2.5x it's budget to break even, and then thinks he knows how the Box Office works.
Screenrant article says that close to $600 million is the break even point and it will hit that. My prediction was that it will do around the same as Man of Steel. A bit more and less. There is no reason to expect anything else from a Superman movie.Superman had a bigger than expected drop. This thing ain't hitting $675M, break even point.
Yes, let's just ignore the standard 2.5x-3x used and reported by everyone just so you can desperately make your fave movie look like a hit instead of what it's actually doing, losing money for the studio.![]()
No the 2.5x-3x assumes a 50/50 split. That's because foreign box office takes more of the revenue, it's usually already starting out at 50/50 or less for the studios. The 60/40 split for domestic is only for the opening weeks. After that it begins to drop and within weeks will be the same 40/60 split that the foreign box office will drop to. That is the incentive movie studios use to keep their movies in theaters even when the revenue starts to go down.So you aren't content with how you looked like a clown with that 32% claim you made earlier, you want to expose yourself as being even more clueless? K.
The 2.5x baseline is, and always has been a rough estimate. Nobody, not even professional trackers know exactly how much a studio spent on the film. Nor do we know how much a studio recoups part of it's budget through cross promotion, foreign deals, product placement, and brand partnerships. This isn't even going into how much money they've already been making, and will continue to make, through merchanise and VOD sales.
But you know another reason citing 2.5x is flawed? It's generally because it assumes the film is having the typical 40/60 split between Domestic and Overseas that most blockbusters have. Only Superman isn't at 40/60. It's at 60/40, in the Domestic favor. So the studio is actually earning more revenue from ticket sales than the average blockbuster would, because the cut from domestic is larger than international.
Like I said, you're just a guy that read 2.5x one day and think you know how this shit works. But throw me another laugh emoji if it makes you feel smarter.
No the 2.5x-3x assumes a 50/50 split.
The 60/40 split for domestic is only for the opening weeks. After that it begins to drop and within weeks will be the same 40/60 split that the foreign box office will drop to. That is the incentive movie studios use to keep their movies in theaters even when the revenue starts to go down.
Also you mock the 2.5x multiplier but then just thumbs up someone siting an article that used a 2.67x multiplier? And you claim to have some kind of behind the scenes info that Superman is collecting more revenue than any other blockbuster before it, 60/40 split worldwide?
Who looks like the clown now?
As a reminder, The Batman and Joker came out around the collapsing Zynderverse, with flop after flop, yet were able to pull in $772M and $1.08B WW, respectively. There's no excuse for this film not to hit $700M+, other than people didn't like it as much as you guys did.
Not the gotcha you think, indeed.
"Last year, documents filed by the Superman production team with the Ohio government seeking incentives listed the gross budget of the highly anticipated July film as $363.8 million. When that number was reported, director James Gunn — who also runs DC Studios — lambasted the article. "How in the world do they think they know what our budget is?" he wrote on social media. In recent days, DC suggested the budget is a net $225 million after incentives and tax breaks.
Yet one longtime financier says the $363 million figure isn't incorrect. And sources say DC and its parent could spend as much as $200 million on the global marketing campaign, compared with the usual $150 million for an all-audience summer tentpole. It wouldn't be a surprise, since Superman kicks off the Gunn era and needs to work at the box office. Either way, between the production budget and marketing, it's certain to land in the $400 million club.
According to a veteran studio source, Superman, which opens July 11 in North America, is exploding on social media, with the first full trailer raking in 250 million-plus views, the most in Warners/DC history. Based on such metrics, a domestic debt of $175 million or thereabouts is within the realm of possibility; it even has a shot at finishing with $1 billion-plus globally. "There's no way to defend these budgets, because when you get into the $700 million to $900 million break-even point in regards to box office and ancillary revenue, it doesn't make any sense," says a veteran financier." - via The Hollywood Reporter
Even using the lowball of $100M for marketing estimate that was floating around, which probably isn't accurate, this film's absolute bottom for breaking even is $650M.
Don't use ChatGPT. Are you? I'm guessing I should take your response as you having no more rebuttal and have to resort to attacking the messenger. And never heard of That Park Place.Wow dude, you definitely aren't using ChatGPT to help you win an argument at this point.
And it looks like you or it pulled info from That Park Place? A well known right winged bias and click bait driven site? Whoa better watch out, this guy isn't fucking around anymore!
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Superman being in italics and the use of em dashes does very much make it feel like it was written by ChatGPT. There are a few other things about how it's written but those are the two that really stand out.Don't use ChatGPT. Are you? I'm guessing I should take your response as you having no more rebuttal and have to resort to attacking the messenger. And never heard of That Park Place.
Though, I'm glad my responses come off as intelligent enough to be mistaken for an AI. Can't say the same for you.![]()
Superman being in italics and the use of em dashes does very much make it feel like it was written by ChatGPT. There are a few other things about how it's written but those are the two things that really stand out.
I think we can all agree that there is no way to really know how much $$$ was spent, even the WB accountants probably don't know. They want to claim a high number for tax rebates from locations, but a low number for pay-outs to the folks able to negotiate back end points. Who knows how much of the $$$ spent really went into another project, paying for WB buildings, was siphoned off for crypto speculation or real estate deals, or who knows what. Marketing money spent that went to another WB owned advertiser and thus they are just paying themselves inflated costs.
In the end the only metric is if/when they greenlight the next film and if Gunn stays in charge.
Let's not kid ourselves. If this movie was more focused on telling a good Superman story, as opposed to being an obvious excuse to pump in as many characters for their upcoming DCU, this movie would have been more well received by the movie going public and would have performed much better. Even in the Hollywood Reporter article, they cited a studio insider expecting something around $175 million domestic opening weekend. And a possibility to do $1 billion worldwide.If you ignore all the discussion around why in hell Superman always did poorly around the world in comparison with other heroes, sure.
Not to mention Batman is the most popular DC hero.
Let's not kid ourselves. If this movie was more focused on telling a good Superman story, as opposed to being an obvious excuse to pump in as many characters for their upcoming DCU, this movie would have been more well received by the movie going public and would have performed much better. Even in the Hollywood Reporter article, they cited a studio insider expecting something around $175 million domestic opening weekend. And a possibility to do $1 billion worldwide.
Now, I agree those are probably a little far-fetched, but with a great focused movie instead of a mid movie that's stuffed with too much tone-killing humor and characters, who knows. Then you have the fact that Man of Steel, which wasn't the most well received Superman movie, either, ended up doing $668M WW, before taking into consideration ticket price inflation (which would put it at $800M+), something this movie isn't going to match.
The constant focus on break-even points, marketing budgets etc. has gotten pretty dull to me. It feels like this kind of discussion has become more common lately, maybe because people can just look at box office numbers or Rotten Tomatoes/Metacritic score and say "the number is X, but it needs to be Y" and engage with "the discourse" without needing to actually watch the film.I think we can all agree that there is no way to really know how much $$$ was spent, even the WB accountants probably don't know. They want to claim a high number for tax rebates from locations, but a low number for pay-outs to the folks able to negotiate back end points. Who knows how much of the $$$ spent really went into another project, paying for WB buildings, was siphoned off for crypto speculation or real estate deals, or who knows what. Marketing money spent that went to another WB owned advertiser and thus they are just paying themselves inflated costs.
In the end the only metric is if/when they greenlight the next film and if Gunn stays in charge.
Red, blue, and...yellow? America hate is just a poor excuse. How did Captain America, a character who has America in his name and actually does use red, white, and blue become so popular?Doesn't matter if the movie is good or not.
You keep ignoring that the movie did poorly outside USA dude. There are countries that hate USA, so of course an american super hero with use an american flag colors in his suit would do poorly as well.
Red, blue, and...yellow? America hate is just a poor excuse. How did Captain America, a character who has America in his name and actually does use red, white, and blue become so popular?
Very true. In the Woke Wars(TM) trying to ascertain revenue was more important, because studios would claim victory for their slop but you had to follow the money to see if they really succeeded (and now we know they did not as that stuff is getting rolled back extensively). In basically fanbase competition the amount made is less relevant to subsequent content. Is Supes enough to get us more DC stuff? Is FF4 successful enough to let Marvel carry on with their release schedule?The constant focus on break-even points, marketing budgets etc. has gotten pretty dull to me. It feels like this kind of discussion has become more common lately, maybe because people can just look at box office numbers or Rotten Tomatoes/Metacritic score and say "the number is X, but it needs to be Y" and engage with "the discourse" without needing to actually watch the film.
Like you say, what matters is if they're going to be making more of these and we already know that they are.
The constant focus on break-even points, marketing budgets etc. has gotten pretty dull to me. It feels like this kind of discussion has become more common lately, maybe because people can just look at box office numbers or Rotten Tomatoes/Metacritic score and say "the number is X, but it needs to be Y" and engage with "the discourse" without needing to actually watch the film.
Like you say, what matters is if they're going to be making more of these and we already know that they are.
Uh, they don't. The first ever Superman movie made 55% of its revenue outside of America, and that's the most American Superman movie ever. And while the next 2 entries' foreign take percentage dropped, surprisely Superman IV made 60% of its revenue overseas.Avengers?
And I don't think countries hating USA is a poor excuse, in fact is the new hotness. And I'm not saying this is the only 'excuse'.
But feel free to explain why Superman always do poorly outside of USA.
The hall of justice mural ,I was not into DC comics growing up so I could not name one of them![]()
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Yeh, I think it definitely gets used a lot by people who are really into identity politics. They don't need to watch the film but it can still be the latest battle line of the never ending culture war. The film goes from being something you can discuss on its own merits to being part of some grand societal narrative. "This film wasn't male/female/black/white/straight/gay enough and it not hitting this number is proof of that." So the numbers being in their favour is moral vindication for them. Because identity politics becomes a fixation for those who are into it then that alone must be the main reason for the film's success or failure. The big focus on identity politics has made discussing films online far less interesting to me in recent years. So I don't talk about them online as much as I used to because the culture warriors really shat the bed.Very true. In the Woke Wars(TM) trying to ascertain revenue was more important, because studios would claim victory for their slop but you had to follow the money to see if they really succeeded (and now we know they did not as that stuff is getting rolled back extensively). In basically fanbase competition the amount made is less relevant to subsequent content. Is Supes enough to get us more DC stuff? Is FF4 successful enough to let Marvel carry on with their release schedule?
I gotta think we are seeing budgets being slashed for films still in early production and that's good. The heavy over reliance on post-production effects is killing these films. The inability to have a solid script and figure out all the shots you need to avoid costly reshoots is another. Either these studios are rushing to meet release dates set before the filming even starts, they have become so unwieldy that the directors can't manage them well, or the execs micromanage the final product based on test screenings to the tune of millions in reshoots, something has gotta change.
Actor salaries need to come down. Cartoon final battles need to stop. Execs need to read the damned script, make their notes at that time, then LET THE DIRECTOR DO THEIR JOB and deliver a film. Of course they gotta hire a director who knows WTF they are doing, not these trendy auteur directors with social media presence but just 2 shorts made on an iphone to their name. Somewhere along the line we lost the pipeline for directors to hone their talent and learn their craft, now they get yanked from obscurity, given 250 million, and its sink or swim.
Nah, it's SUPER easy to figure out that actors demanding multi-million dollar payouts for a month or two of work is gonna lead to AI eliminating 95% of them. There will be cheaply paid mo-cap actors with AI skins, imagine a Sydney Sweeny that never ages, doesn't complain about taking off her clothes, and can do all of her own stunts because they are virtual. We are really close to that kind of hellscape for a broad portion of our entertainment because it's just too expensive otherwise and most folks won't care.Hard to reconcile the $300 million+ budget and sub $1 million acting salaries. Not like this had the best fx ever or anything groundbreaking of sorts...can only think a lot of that money indeed went to reusable props, buildings, etc. There are benefits of showing a loss
Red, blue, and...yellow? America hate is just a poor excuse. How did Captain America, a character who has America in his name and actually does use red, white, and blue become so popular?
This is actually common practice for a lot of these big budget movies and tv shows. I remember for Band of Brothers and Black Hawk Down they purposefully went out and go unknown actors so they didnt have to pay them a lot. Thjey used the rest of sets and explosions.Hard to reconcile the $300 million+ budget and sub $1 million acting salaries. Not like this had the best fx ever or anything groundbreaking of sorts...can only think a lot of that money indeed went to reusable props, buildings, etc. There are benefits of showing a loss
That sounds pretty good then if they are following very similar pattern. There shouldn't be any reason to expect a solo Superman movie to do much better.With official numbers out, Superman has now fallen $17M WW behind Man of Steel for the same timeframe.
That sounds pretty good then if they are following very similar pattern. There shouldn't be any reason to expect a solo Superman movie to do much better.
Superman being in italics and the use of em dashes does very much make it feel like it was written by ChatGPT. There are a few other things about how it's written but those are the two that really stand out.
Has the intelligence of humanity dropped this low? Have you guys ever heard of a quote? Boy, the stupidity.![]()
Smelled like AI to me
Didn't mean to hurt your feelings over a quote, man. It just read a bit sterile, like a press release with flairHas the intelligence of humanity dropped this low? Have you guys ever heard of a quote? Boy, the stupidity.![]()
Hurt my feelings? I'm laughing my ass off. It has quotation marks and says "- via Hollywood Reporter" at the bottom.Didn't mean to hurt your feelings over a quote, man. It just read a bit sterile, like a press release with flair
Easy mistake in 2025.
You're rightHurt my feelings? I'm laughing my ass off. It has quotation marks and says "- via Hollywood Reporter" at the bottom.
I mean if you want to accuse Hollywood Reporter of using AI, go right ahead. However, the people before you were accusing me of using it because they were too dumb to realize it was a qoute. Personally, it reads no different than any articles I've read from before AI was a thing. But, hey, that's just me.You're right
The Holy Quotation Marks and the sacred "via Hollywood Reporter" seal of truth. Clearly, no AI could ever pass such divine authentication
Forgive me for doubting the gospel of modern journalism
Well, it's definitely going to beat MOS domestically, as it only has a couple mil to go to pass it. By how much it passes it is yet to be seen. Of course, the foreign market is going to be a miss by a lot. I'd imagine at least $100M.That sounds pretty good then if they are following very similar pattern. There shouldn't be any reason to expect a solo Superman movie to do much better.
for me it was the weakest display of superman ever? The got beat up the whole movie. While it's ok to have that but you have to have him his hero OP moments.
Movie didn't click with me . Didn't like the tone and the overall structure.
4/10
With official numbers out, Superman has now fallen $17M WW behind Man of Steel for the same timeframe.
Reportedly, the same. $225M.What was the cost between those two.
Reportedly, the same. $225M.
True. MOS cost ~$310M at today's monetary value. Of course, that also means it took ~$925M adjusted for inflation. Even without inflation added, I'm guessing it still beats Superman '25.Its a shame the inflation is not the same