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The Walt Disney Studios to Hit Industry-First $7B at Global Box Office Today

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THE WALT DISNEY STUDIOS TO HIT INDUSTRY-FIRST $7 BILLION AT GLOBAL BOX OFFICE TODAY
Releases From Disney, Disney Animation, Pixar, Marvel, and Lucasfilm Combine for Industry Record Year

BURBANK, Calif. – December 19, 2016 – Today, The Walt Disney Studios will become the first studio ever to reach the $7 billion threshold at the global box office, setting a new industry record. With a powerful $290 million global debut for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Disney’s year-to-date grosses are $6,988.3 million from Jan. 1 through Dec. 18, 2016, including $2,700.4 million domestically, also an industry record, and $4,287.9 million internationally, a Disney record.

These phenomenal box office results are driven by films from Disney, Walt Disney Animation Studios, Pixar Animation Studios, Marvel Studios, and Lucasfilm, representing the first time that all five of these world-class brands have released films in the same calendar year.

“This historic achievement is possible because all of our film studios are bringing their absolute best to the table, telling great stories of all kinds that resonate with audiences across borders, gender, and generations,” said Alan Horn, Chairman, The Walt Disney Studios. “These films work because each one has not only something for everyone, but everything for someone. It’s our honor to be able to create these experiences for audiences, and we’re thankful to them for continuing to come out to the theater with us.”

Currently, Disney holds five of the top 10 films of the year globally, domestically, and internationally, including the top four global, with three topping $1 billion and a fourth over $960 million, as well as the top three international and the top two domestic. All 12 Disney-produced domestic releases this year earned A-range CinemaScores from audiences, with seven additionally earning critics scores over 90% on RottenTomatoes. Four releases opened above $100 million, more than any other studio in a single calendar year. With Captain America: Civil War’s $179.1 million debut, Disney now holds five of the top six domestic openings in industry history; four are Marvel Cinematic Universe films. With Finding Dory and Zootopia, Disney holds four of the top five animated films of all time. Also this year, both Pixar and Marvel Studios crossed $10 billion in combined lifetime grosses for their films.

Captain America: Civil War (Marvel Studios) is the #1 global and international and #2 domestic film of the year. Released domestically on May 6, its $179.1 million debut is the #5 opening of all time, and it went on to earn $408.1 million domestically and $745.1 million internationally for a global total of $1.15 billion, ranking as the #12 industry release of all time.

Finding Dory (Pixar Animation Studios) is the #1 domestic and #2 global release of 2016. Released on June 17, it posted the biggest animated debut of all time with $135 million and went on to earn $486.3 million to become the #7 industry release of all time domestically. Internationally, it has taken in $541.3 million for a global total of $1.028 billion.

Zootopia (Walt Disney Animation Studios) is the #3 global and #2 international release of the year. It opened to $75 million domestically on March 4, ultimately earning $341.3 million for an outstanding 4.5 domestic multiple. It earned $682.5 million internationally, including $235 million in China where it is the #1 animated release of all time (admissions), for a global total of $1.024 billion. Named among American Film Institute’s top 10 movies of the year, it is Disney’s best reviewed film of the year with 98% on RottenTomatoes.

The Jungle Book (Disney) is the #3 international and #4 global and domestic release of 2016. It debuted in the US/Canada on April 15 with $103 million, going on to earn $364 million domestically, $602.6 million internationally, and $966.6 million globally. It is the biggest Western release of all time in India.

Doctor Strange (Marvel Studios), the second Marvel Cinematic Universe release in 2016, is the #9 film of the year domestically and internationally and the #10 film of the year globally. Still in release and not yet opened in Japan, it debuted domestically on Nov. 4 with $85 million and has earned $226.2 million domestically and $426.6 million internationally for a global total of $652.8 million to date.

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story (Lucasfilm) began its global rollout on Dec. 14, opening domestically Dec. 16 with $155.1 million and a global day-and-date debut of $290 million in five days of release. The film is yet to open in South Korea (Dec. 28) and China (Jan. 6).

Additionally, Disney’s 2016 grosses have been bolstered by Star Wars: The Force Awakens, which debuted in December 2015 and earned $736.6 million of its $2 billion global total during the 2016 calendar year, as well as new release Moana, the second Walt Disney Animation Studios’ release of the year, which opened domestically on Nov. 23, becoming the #2 Thanksgiving debut ever with $82 million and earning $162.9 million to date in the US/Canada. Internationally, it has only opened in approximately 53% of territories, with debuts in Germany, Italy, and Australia over the next week and Brazil, South Korea, and Japan still to come in 2017.

I, for one, welcome our Mickey Mouse overlords
 
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Htown

STOP SHITTING ON MY MOTHER'S HEADSTONE
And this:

All 12 Disney-produced domestic releases this year earned A-range CinemaScores from audiences, with seven additionally earning critics scores over 90% on RottenTomatoes.

is why I have no problem with Disney ruling the box office.

It's not like they're shitting out garbage. They are putting out quality film after quality film.
 

Cheebo

Banned
Goddamn

What's on slate for 2017?

Oh you know, not really anything.

Except little films like
Beauty and the Beast
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales
Cars 3
Thor: Ragnarok

and...



STAR WARS EPISODE VIII

You know the sequel to the #1 highest grossing movie domestically of all time. Only third movie in history to top 2 billion worldwide.
 
Goddamn

What's on slate for 2017?

Grabbed from a Wiki article...

March 17 - Beauty and the Beast will be released.
April 21 - Born in China will be released.
May 5 - Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 will be released.
May 26 - Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales will be released.
June 16 - Cars 3 will be released.
July 7 - Spider-Man: Homecoming will be released.
November 3 - Thor: Ragnarok will be released.
November 22 - Coco will be released.
December 15 - Star Wars: Episode VIII will be released.

Probably not as big a year for them ahead, but Beauty and the Beast, Guardians, Spider-Man, Thor and Star Wars should do well, with Cars 3 and Coco in the "maybe they'll be hits?" range. Pretty sure Pirates will bomb.
 

KonradLaw

Member
Nobody will be able to compete with Disney. Between Marvel, Star Wars and regular Disney stuff (animation and live action) that's just slates like nothing the cinema has ever seen,
 

RedStep

Member
The fact is that you can count on Disney movies being good, unlike every other production house. They may be money machines, but they still care about quality. I don't think that will change any time soon, they know where their money comes from.
 

NOLA_Gaffer

Banned
Episode VIII
Spider-Man
GOTG 2
Cars 3
Beauty and the Beast
Pirates of the Caribbean

Also Coco later in the year.

Goddamn 2018 is crazy for animated films. Wreck-It Ralph 2, Incredibles 2, and Gigantic.

The turnaround time on WIR2 seems so short, but it's probably been in pre-production for longer than we realize.
 
And this:



is why I have no problem with Disney ruling the box office.

It's not like they're shitting out garbage. They are putting out quality film after quality film.

Yep. Disney has finally realized what the rest of Hollywood was too stupid to get. If you put intelligent people who have proven to be qualified but not necessarily gone through the hoops to "prove themselves", you produce great films.
 

mdubs

Banned
I can't dislike this because all the stuff is critically well-received too. They aren't putting out 12 Transformers movies and raking it in
 

pitchfork

Member
Fuckers re-ignited my passion for Star Wars merchandise again!

Currently converting my spare room into a giant toy-box and I couldn't be happier

You got me Mickey.. you got me good
 
Disney has incredibly good brand managers right now too. John Lassiter for Pixar/WDAS, Kathleen Kennedy for Lucasfilm, Kevin Feige for Marvel, these folks know their shit and are remarkably good at steering their ships.
 

Garlador

Member
Merchandise for this adorable piles of bark alone will surpass $1 billion easily next year...

The House of Mouse is firing on all cylinders right now. This has been an excellent year for Disney-released films, even if not all of them were commercial hits (BFG and Pete's Dragon are both still good).

I'm curious to know how much money Moana and Rogue One will finish their runs with, but they're already definite hits.
 
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