Muppet fan 123
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2011
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- 3,656
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I hate how movies are labeled as "flop" on it's opening weekend. It's really unfair to films to do that. Can we wait like, three weeks or something and see how much money it's making in the long run instead of projecting everything from just two days at the box office?
Anyway, it makes me happier when I go back and look at Disney's other March movies from past years: First we got Mars Needs Moms, which only made $21 million at the END of it's run. Yes, after four weeks of playing, they completely dropped it because it was mostly screening to empty theaters. Muppets Most Wanted made four million short of that just on it's opening week.
Next we got John Carter, which budget was $250 million (to be honest I have no idea how they were expecting to get that kind of money back in the middle of March) and it only had $30 million in it's opening weekend (especially bad for sci-fi films with that big of a budget). At the end of it's entire run, it only made $73 domestically, MMW is at $50 million domestically right now, and it still has yet to open in many more countries.
Besides Oz: Great and Powerful and Alice in Wonderland (2010 film by Tim Burton) Disney's past few March movies haven't done so well. This makes me feel a lot better about the money, but makes me wonder why they dumped the movie in March. I think that the last movie worked well around Thanksgiving, so they should have gone with that date again for the sequel. That's generally the way it works in Hollywood.
Anyway, it makes me happier when I go back and look at Disney's other March movies from past years: First we got Mars Needs Moms, which only made $21 million at the END of it's run. Yes, after four weeks of playing, they completely dropped it because it was mostly screening to empty theaters. Muppets Most Wanted made four million short of that just on it's opening week.
Next we got John Carter, which budget was $250 million (to be honest I have no idea how they were expecting to get that kind of money back in the middle of March) and it only had $30 million in it's opening weekend (especially bad for sci-fi films with that big of a budget). At the end of it's entire run, it only made $73 domestically, MMW is at $50 million domestically right now, and it still has yet to open in many more countries.
Besides Oz: Great and Powerful and Alice in Wonderland (2010 film by Tim Burton) Disney's past few March movies haven't done so well. This makes me feel a lot better about the money, but makes me wonder why they dumped the movie in March. I think that the last movie worked well around Thanksgiving, so they should have gone with that date again for the sequel. That's generally the way it works in Hollywood.