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Wkd Box Office 10•30-11•01•15 - Bullock & Cooper's burnt brand(s) in crisis?

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xaosslug

Member
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tomatometer:
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93% The Martian
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73% Goosebumps
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92% Bridge of Spies
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51% Hotel Transylvania 2
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29% Burnt
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33% Our Brand Is Crisis
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32% Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse

metacritic:
*click pic(s) for source*

Box Office: ‘Our Brand is Crisis,’ ‘Burnt,’ ‘Scouts Guide’ All Bomb

Illustrating the limits of star power, “Our Brand is Crisis” and “Burnt” were both roundly rejected by audiences despite the presence of Sandra Bullock and Bradley Cooper.

“Our Brand is Crisis,” a political satire about a spin-doctor navigating a Latin American presidential election, is the worst wide release opening of Bullock’s career, sliding in below 1996’s “Two If By Sea” with $4.7 million. It debuted to a dreadful $3.4 million across 2,202 locations. Warner Bros. distributed the $28 million production.

“We’re proud of the movie, we had higher expectations, and we’re obviously disappointed,” said Jeff Goldstein, Warner Bros. distribution executive vice president.

Not that Cooper fared much better playing a down-and-out chef trying to score a comeback. “Burnt” made a meagre $5 million bowing across 2,900 theaters. The Weinstein Company distributed the critically scorched dramedy. It cost roughly $20 million to make and was directed by John Wells (“August: Osage County”)

“It’s a small film and we didn’t spend a ton of money on it, but we were obviously hoping for more,” said Erik Lomis, the Weinstein Company’s distribution chief. “We love Bradley and he worked so hard on it with John Wells. It’s a passion project that hit a tough weekend.”

It wasn’t just star power at play. Both films debuted on Halloween weekend that fell at a particularly rough time on the calendar. The holiday happened to take place on Saturday, traditionally the busiest day for movie-going, so studios were bracing for a weekend that offered up more trick than treat. Their worst fears were realized. Overall ticket sales fell below $75 million, the worst results of the year.

“This is a classic dump,” said Jeff Bock, an analyst with Exhibitor Relations. “You look at the new films being offered up and none of them had a lot of marketing support behind them. The studios knew what they had.”

The weakness of “Our Brand is Crisis” and “Burnt” enabled a group of holdovers to maintain their grip on the top spots at the box office. “The Martian” captured first place with $11.4 million. The Fox adventure story is on pace to be the biggest domestic grossing release of Ridley Scott’s career, having made $182.8 million since debuting in October.

Second and third positions went to Sony’s “Goosebumps” and Dreamworks’ “Bridge of Spies” with $10.2 million and $8.1 million, respectively. “Goosebumps” has made $57.1 million in three weeks, while “Bridge of Spies” has been one of the only adult dramas to connect, earning $45.2 million over the same period.

The top five was rounded out by Sony’s Hotel Transylvania 2″ with $5.8 million and Lionsgate’s “The Last Witch Hunter” with $4.7 million. The pictures have made $156 million and $18.6 million domestically.

“Steve Jobs,” the Universal drama about the Apple founder, sank in its second weekend of wide release. The picture earned $2.6 million, a 65% fall, bringing its domestic total to $14.5 million.

It was also a bad weekend for distribution experiments. Paramount’s “Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse” was brutalized when it kicked off to roughly $1.7 million across 1,509 locations. Its failure comes on the heels of last weekend’s “Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension.” Both pictures are part of an experiment that allows Paramount to debut the films digitally 17 days after it leaves most theaters in return for cutting exhibitors like AMC in on a cut of the home entertainment revenue. Usually they have to wait 90 days between a picture’s theatrical debut and its digital launch. The problem is that many chains refused to show the pictures, believing that they set a dangerous precedent and threatened their theatrical exclusivity. “Scouts Guide” cost roughly $15 million to produce.

In its second weekend, the “Paranormal Activity” sequel fell 58% to $3.4 million, bringing its total to $13.6 million.

“Truth,” a drama about “60 Minutes” controversial report on George W. Bush’s National Guard service, stumbled in its wide release expansion. The Sony Pictures Classics’ release moved from 18 screens to 1,120 venues, earning a dispiriting $900,914 in the process. Its total stands at $1.1 million.

The failure of “Our Brand is Crisis” contributes to an annus horribilis for Warner Bros. The studio scored hits with “San Andreas” and “American Sniper,” but has lost tens of millions on the likes of “Pan,” “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.,” and “Jupiter Ascending.” Its hoping next year, which offers up “Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice” and the Harry Potter spin-off, “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” can help the studio rebound.

Among Oscar contenders in limited release, Focus Features moved “Suffragette” from four theaters to 23, earning $155,000 in the process. The women’s rights drama with Carey Mulligan has made $258,118 in two weeks. Meanwhile A24’s “Room,” a drama about a woman taken hostage, expanded from , while picking up $269,500. It has made $766,702 and will continue to slowly add theaters in the coming weeks.


*click pic for full list/source*


*click pic for full list/source*
 

mreddie

Member
Cool that Martian and Goosebumps have dominated the October box office.

Next weekend is Bond and Peanuts which should turn around the October depression and this month has Mockingjay 2.

Universal fucked up when they stopped promoting Jobs days before the wide release, Paramount's experiment is backfiring only because both movies are garbage. WB...had Pan.
 

Ridley327

Member
Steve Jobs jobbing.

It's crazy how badly Universal has fumbled on this film. They had so much good buildup for it, and they just stopped giving a shit once it went wide. It'll do little to ruin the fantastic year they've had, but considering how well handled just about everything else has been for them, this sticks out like a sore thumb.
 
The Martian and Goosebumps are having long legs. It´s impressive the 2 movies have been in first and second place for 3 weeks, even with new film releases.
 

Sanjuro

Member
It's crazy how badly Universal has fumbled on this film. They had so much good buildup for it, and they just stopped giving a shit once it went wide. It'll do little to ruin the fantastic year they've had, but considering how well handled just about everything else has been for them, this sticks out like a sore thumb.

I think not going wide early hurt them more than anything. I feel like there was a good stretch of time in September where audiences were still heading to the cinemas to see a good portion of the films. Instead they waited too long, despite advertising well the months prior.
 
I just read that Jem hasn't even grossed $2 million in 2 weeks of being released in over 2,400 theaters. Bombing on a $5 million budget.
 

jtb

Banned
Wow, the Steve Jobs release was completely botched.

They should have waited till November to release Jobs. This month wasn't a good time to release it.

First weekend of October would've worked well too. A kind of Oscar season-opener statement film, like Argo and the Social Network.
 
I just read that Jem hasn't even grossed $2 million in 2 weeks of being released in over 2,400 theaters. Bombing on a $5 million budget.

I saw quite a few ads for it too. I mean, that's just anecdotal evidence, but it seemed to have at least a semi-decent marketing push behind it. I saw it as a theatrical trailer for movies over a month ago and also TV commercials.
 
I saw quite a few ads for it too. I mean, that's just anecdotal evidence, but it seemed to have at least a semi-decent marketing push behind it. I saw it as a theatrical trailer for movies over a month ago and also TV commercials.

Outside of linked on here, I've never seen an ad anywhere for JEM
 

kswiston

Member
Copied and updated from the tail end of the last thread:

Worldwide Updates:

The Martian - $428M
Bridge of Spies - $58M
Ant-Man - $514M ($102M in China) <- highlighting international growth, Ant-Man has now made more overseas than any of the Phase 1 films other than the Avengers
Crimson Peak - $62M
The Maze Runner: Scorch Trials - $275M
The Last Witch Hunter - $56M
Inside Out - $846M
Everest - $175M
Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension - $51M
 
I think not going wide early hurt them more than anything. I feel like there was a good stretch of time in September where audiences were still heading to the cinemas to see a good portion of the films. Instead they waited too long, despite advertising well the months prior.
It was a little of both. They spent way too much money on marketing a film only opening in two markets then spent two weeks slowly opening it wide. They should've just opened wide after that one small weekend.
 

mreddie

Member
Copied and updated from the tail end of the last thread:

Worldwide Updates:

Ant-Man - $514M ($102M in China) <- highlighting international growth, Ant-Man has now made more overseas than any of the Phase 1 films other than the Avengers

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kswiston

Member
It was already a record low opening, how much did it make this week?

$290k. Per theatre average was $120 over 3 days. That means, once you remove the distributor cut, the average theatre owner pocketed a cool $20 per day of showing Jem. If the film showed more than once, that's not even enough to pay the attendant.

Funny enough, 4 venues added the film this weekend.
 

Draconian

Member
Universal's handling of Steve Jobs is like a crash course in how to insure a film doesn't do well at the box office.
 
"4TH UPDATE, Sunday, 7:16AM: Refresh for updates. What’s worse than a weekend filled with a South Australian violent robot (Chappie) and a Zac Efron DJ film (We’re Not Your Friends)? How about a Halloween weekend with two star-driven bombs — Bradley Cooper’s Burnt and Sandra Bullock’s Our Brand Is Crisis — topped off by a teenage horror film, Scouts’ Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse at $1.8M that barred its core demo from even entering the auditorium with its R rating? Rentrak reports that the Halloween weekend was the lowest grossing frame to date of 2015 with $73M, down -31% and off another -23% from a year ago. This weekend was lower than the pre Labor Day frame of Aug. 28-30 which made $87.8M and saw the release of the Efron bomb and lower than the March 6-8 weekend of $89.4M where Chappie blew a fuse stateside with a $13.3M weekend."

More at the link

http://deadline.com/2015/11/box-office-sandra-bullock-bradley-cooper-burnt-our-brand-is-crisis-scouts-guide-to-zombie-apocalypse-1201598588/
 
So how much are we looking at for domestic opening weekend on Spectre?

80?

edit: Huh, that'll get used in the PR campaign if it happens: Bond would have made more in its three day than the entirety of the previous weekend's wide releases by itself
 

mreddie

Member
So how much are we looking at for domestic opening weekend on Spectre?

80?

edit: Huh, that'll get used in the PR campaign if it happens: Bond would have made more in its three day than the entirety of the previous weekend's wide releases by itself

Close to it, Peanuts is a worthy rival and might take some people.
 
Universal's handling of Steve Jobs is like a crash course in how to insure a film doesn't do well at the box office.

You're right. I didn't hear any buzz about it releasing and apparently it's good. Fassbender must be pissed.

On another account, why was the Jem adaption made as it was?

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They should have waited till November to release Jobs. This month wasn't a good time to release it.

People that don't care about Jobs aren't going to care about Jobs in November. The mistake Hollywood is making is in thinking that there's an audience for movies about him.
 

kswiston

Member
Current tracking for Spectre is around $80M. Peanuts is expected to do $40M+

Those two films alone could double this weekend's Top 12.

Because John Cho went to the studio and said "I have a great idea for a Jem And The Holograms movie, I need a 100M budget" and the studio said "That sounds great. Here is 5M, make it work".

$100M on Jem would have been about as smart spending $150M on a Peter Pan origin film.
 

Tobor

Member
People that don't care about Jobs aren't going to care about Jobs in November. The mistake Hollywood is making is in thinking that there's an audience for movies about him.

Horseshit. It was a failure of marketing. Universal screwed the pooch.
 
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