Deadline/Variety are sticking with their $120-140M range.
Deadline/Variety are sticking with their $120-140M range.
I wonder if a monster opening will come with the trade-off of truncated legs in comparison to most of the other Disney live-action fairytale stuff.
The Alice films had the worst legs to date, and even those were over 2.85x their opening weekends.
I kind of want that to happen now just to see the salt.That would be insane. Just beating BvS $165m for March record would be insane.
I kind of want that to happen now just to see the salt.
Fantastic 4 made $167 million on a $120 million budget
that's the floor
I think with even a bad R-rated superhero movie, the floor will always be well above the budget. We have all been afraid the big bad R rating... but in reality there is such a massive adult fanbase for this stuff.
Judging by reviews on Beast, it might not have the same legs as the last couple live action adaptations. But, if the opening is as beastly as predicted, it won't really matter.
Eh, reviews won't probably matter as much this time. The film could still end up with a 3X multiplier.
As long as the production and marketing budget for the film is sky high as well.but we generally know the floor for the PG movies is still fairly high.
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Some men want to watch the world burn.167M for Beast. Let the record fall.
Judging by reviews on Beast, it might not have the same legs as the last couple live action adaptations. But, if the opening is as beastly as predicted, it won't really matter.
Except that the thing about Logan/Deadpool that made them large successes to the point of wanting to emulate them were their budgets, not their rating. The takeaway here if you're a company looking to make money shouldn't be that you should/have to make your movies R-rated, it should be that you don't have to make a $150-$200 million superhero movie where the world is at stake in the third act, that you can make a more personal movie at $50-100 million and possibly still make just as much, if not more money in profit. There are tons of comic book characters and stories that can be explored without ever having to touch an R rating.
Edit: In other words, that an R-rated X-Men team movie isn't going to be or do better because it's an R-rated movie. Figure out the story, find a creative who is passionate about telling it, and try to keep the budgets down where you can. If that involves an R-rating, then so be it, but adjust expectations (and budget) accordingly.
Eh, reviews won't probably matter as much this time. The film could still end up with a 3X multiplier.
They become best friends after discovering both their mothers are named Mothma.
First? There have been loads for the past few weeks. It's on 68% on Rotten Tomatoes with 118 reviews.
Reviews have been up for a while.
Turns out I was off the net the day the thread went up and missed it all. Sorry!First? There have been loads for the past few weeks. It's on 68% on Rotten Tomatoes with 118 reviews.
I must truly be out of touch.I have zero interest in the live action Beast movie, but apparently everyone else in the USA wants to see it.
Turns out I was off the net the day the thread went up and missed it all. Sorry!
I don't understand where this hype is coming from either. It looks thoroughly mediocre.
I wonder how long we will have to wait before we know whether or not Power Ranger is a critical dumpster fire. There definitely doesn't seem to be any sort of rush towards early reviews for buzz building purposes.
My wife's friends already have a girls night planned since they saw the original together when they were kids...
I wonder how long we will have to wait before we know whether or not Power Ranger is a critical dumpster fire. There definitely doesn't seem to be any sort of rush towards early reviews for buzz building purposes.
I wonder how long we will have to wait before we know whether or not Power Ranger is a critical dumpster fire. There definitely doesn't seem to be any sort of rush towards early reviews for buzz building purposes.
Power Rangers is riding the same nostalgia wave as ID4 2. Guaranteed success.
I remember thinking that was going to be way bigger than it was.
I almost forgot it even happened until you just mentioned it.
Kswis any tracking on Ghost in The Shell?
I remember thinking that was going to be way bigger than it was.
I almost forgot it even happened until you just mentioned it.
Which is sad since IDR had a better critical reception than Suicide Squad. Squad made a lot more money though, so overall the right call.Caught it on Netflix not too long ago. It's mind numbing just how horrible it is. The characters are flat as a board, they managed to make the somewhat enjoyable characters from the first film a complete nothing, the dialogue is below Battleship level, they managed to suck out all the fun from a big budget popcorn flick.
Will Smith made the right decision to pass.
boxoffice.com has it at $40M OW/$105M total domestic. I haven't seen much else in the way of tracking. It's both not large enough for presales several weeks before release and 5th in the lineup of expensive March films this year. We will probably have to wait another week or so before deadline or variety chime in.
Non-Disney early estimates are pegging Beauty and the Beast between $12M-$14M for tonight, which would blow away recent Disney live action titles, The Jungle Book ($4.2m Thursday, $32M Friday) on its first Thursday and Cinderella ($2.3M Thursday, $23M Friday). That's a great start for a female-skewing film and unlike last year's Batman v. Superman which was frontloaded with a $27.7M Thursday –the best for the month of March– sources' notions are that Beauty will blossom throughout the weekend.
After Batman vs. Superman, The Hunger Games five years ago clocked $19.7M on its first Thursday.
Fandango is reporting that already more than 1,000 showtimes are sold out this weekend across the country from big cities like New York and Los Angeles to small ones from Billings, Montana to Texarkana, Texas. That number is on par to the pre-sales for say, Dark Knight, Avengers and the Twilight sequels at this point in time.
Still that doesn't mean that tickets aren't available for the Bill Condon-directed musical. In the digital age, exhibitors can add showtimes in the blink of the eye, and if you look at say a theater like the Hollywood Arclight on Sunset Blvd, they're showing the movie ten times tonight, but that goes up to 30 showtimes tomorrow. One takeaway from the heartland pre-sales of Beauty and the Beast: The whole uproar among the faith-based over the pic's LeFou homosexual character doesn't seem to be slowing business one bit.
Currently the online ticket seller says that Beauty and the Beast is set to topple one of its biggest March pre-sellers Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice with more than 90% of this weekend's ticket sales on Fandango alone. As previously reported, Beauty is already Fandango's biggest family pre-seller outstripping the advance sales of Finding Dory and Captain America: Civil War.
Deadline/Variety are sticking with their $120-140M range.
boxoffice.com has it at $40M OW/$105M total domestic. I haven't seen much else in the way of tracking. It's both not large enough for presales several weeks before release and 5th in the lineup of expensive March films this year. We will probably have to wait another week or so before deadline or variety chime in.
Variety/Deadline are reporting an expected overseas take of around $120M for Beauty and the Beast this weekend.
They have consistently under-estimated openings these past few weeks. I think they had Logan at $170M WW, and it debuted over $240M. Kong was placed at $110M, and it opened to >$145M. I expect that Beauty and the Beast will follow suit.
$120M overseas seems pretty low for a film that is heading towards at least a $40M opening in China.
Wkd BO 0318-2017 - Giant Gorilla Kills Single White Female
Any guesses as to why they've been underestimating lately? Or is that normal this time of year?