Variety posted an article ranking the summer box office success of each of the Big 6 studios.
http://variety.com/2017/film/news/box-office-summer-analysis-winners-losers-studios-1202528167/
This is sort of similar to the franchise report card they did a month or so ago. Cumulatively, the summer box office is down 12%, from the release of Guardians of the Galaxy 2 through to last weekend. So while some studios are doing better than others, not a banner year overall.
Here's a summary of what Variety thought. Read the article for full takeaways. I'm just going to include a sentence or two from each.
Because Variety didn't actually include much in the way of box office numbers, and because not everyone is going to know how these movies did, I have included the domestic gross, worldwide gross, and production budget of each film listed. Keep in mind that Variety is only looking at the Big 6. Plenty of other films were released by smaller distributors.
UNIVERSAL
Summer Offerings: ”The Mummy," ”Despicable Me 3," ”Girls Trip"
Grade: B
Takeaways: ”Girls Trip" must have come as a huge sigh of relief for Universal. After a number of R-rated comedies from competitors failed to connect, the bawdy farce quenched the market's parched, mirthless throat.
WARNER BROS.
Summer Offerings: ”Dunkirk," ”Wonder Woman," ”King Arthur: Legend of the Sword," ”The House," ”Annabelle: Creation," ”Everything, Everything"
Grade: B+
Takeaways: If it left ”King Arthur" well enough alone, it might have graduated from summer with honors. Instead, it will have to settle for just missing the A grade.
DISNEY
Summer Offerings: ”Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2," ”Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides," ”Cars 3"
Grade: A-
Takeaways: While Bob Iger's Magic Kingdom remains the gold standard in Hollywood film, there are signs that some of the studio's beloved franchises are reaching their expiration point. The latest entries in the ”Pirates" and ”Cars" universes slipped below their predecessors (OK, but still, they're the fifth and seventh-highest-grossing movies of the summer on the domestic charts).
SONY
Summer Offerings: ”Spider-Man: Homecoming," ”Rough Night," ”The Dark Tower," ”The Emoji Movie," ”Baby Driver"
Grade: B
Takeaways: Sony is showing signs of life after years in the box office graveyard.
FOX
Summer Offerings: ”Snatched," ”Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul," ”Alien: Covenant," ”Captain Underpants," ”War for the Planet of the Apes"
Grade: B-
Takeaways: Audiences didn't want to join Ridley Scott's latest ill-fated space expedition, with ”Alien: Covenant" a franchise killer
PARAMOUNT
Summer Offerings: ”Baywatch," ”Transformers: The Last Knight"
Grade: C-
Takeaways: It would have been a failing grade for the beleaguered studio, but foreign audiences rescued the latest Transformers sequel from being a complete financial disaster.
http://variety.com/2017/film/news/box-office-summer-analysis-winners-losers-studios-1202528167/
This is sort of similar to the franchise report card they did a month or so ago. Cumulatively, the summer box office is down 12%, from the release of Guardians of the Galaxy 2 through to last weekend. So while some studios are doing better than others, not a banner year overall.
Here's a summary of what Variety thought. Read the article for full takeaways. I'm just going to include a sentence or two from each.
Because Variety didn't actually include much in the way of box office numbers, and because not everyone is going to know how these movies did, I have included the domestic gross, worldwide gross, and production budget of each film listed. Keep in mind that Variety is only looking at the Big 6. Plenty of other films were released by smaller distributors.
UNIVERSAL
Summer Offerings: ”The Mummy," ”Despicable Me 3," ”Girls Trip"
Grade: B
Takeaways: ”Girls Trip" must have come as a huge sigh of relief for Universal. After a number of R-rated comedies from competitors failed to connect, the bawdy farce quenched the market's parched, mirthless throat.
Code:
[B]TITLE DOM GROSS WW GROSS PROD. BUDGET[/B]
Despicable Me 3 $248M $922M $80M
Girls Trip $98M $106M $19M
The Mummy $80M $405M $125M
WARNER BROS.
Summer Offerings: ”Dunkirk," ”Wonder Woman," ”King Arthur: Legend of the Sword," ”The House," ”Annabelle: Creation," ”Everything, Everything"
Grade: B+
Takeaways: If it left ”King Arthur" well enough alone, it might have graduated from summer with honors. Instead, it will have to settle for just missing the A grade.
Code:
[B]TITLE DOM GROSS WW GROSS PROD. BUDGET[/B]
Wonder Woman $402M $798M $149M
Dunkirk $154M $365M $100M
King Arthur $39M $143M $175M
Annabelle Creation* $39M $76M $15M
Everything, Everything $34M $52M $10M
The House $25M $33M $40M
DISNEY
Summer Offerings: ”Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2," ”Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides," ”Cars 3"
Grade: A-
Takeaways: While Bob Iger's Magic Kingdom remains the gold standard in Hollywood film, there are signs that some of the studio's beloved franchises are reaching their expiration point. The latest entries in the ”Pirates" and ”Cars" universes slipped below their predecessors (OK, but still, they're the fifth and seventh-highest-grossing movies of the summer on the domestic charts).
Code:
[B]TITLE DOM GROSS WW GROSS PROD. BUDGET[/B]
Guardians of the Galaxy 2 $389M $862M $200M
Pirates 5 $172M $786M $230M
Cars 3 $148M $299M $175M
SONY
Summer Offerings: ”Spider-Man: Homecoming," ”Rough Night," ”The Dark Tower," ”The Emoji Movie," ”Baby Driver"
Grade: B
Takeaways: Sony is showing signs of life after years in the box office graveyard.
Code:
[B]TITLE DOM GROSS WW GROSS PROD. BUDGET[/B]
Spider-Man Homecoming $307M $703M $175M
Baby Driver $100M $167M $34M
The Emoji Movie $64M $98M $50M
The Dark Tower* $35M $54M $60M
Rough Night $22M $43M $20M
FOX
Summer Offerings: ”Snatched," ”Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Long Haul," ”Alien: Covenant," ”Captain Underpants," ”War for the Planet of the Apes"
Grade: B-
Takeaways: Audiences didn't want to join Ridley Scott's latest ill-fated space expedition, with ”Alien: Covenant" a franchise killer
Code:
[B]TITLE DOM GROSS WW GROSS PROD. BUDGET[/B]
War for the Planent of the Apes $138M $314M $150M
Alien: Covenant $74M $233M $97M
Captain Underpants $73M $94M $38M
Snatched $46M $59M $42M
Diary of a Wimpy Kid 4 $21M $38M $22M
PARAMOUNT
Summer Offerings: ”Baywatch," ”Transformers: The Last Knight"
Grade: C-
Takeaways: It would have been a failing grade for the beleaguered studio, but foreign audiences rescued the latest Transformers sequel from being a complete financial disaster.
Code:
[B]TITLE DOM GROSS WW GROSS PROD. BUDGET[/B]
Transformers 5 $130M $594M $217M
Baywatch $58M $177M $69M