Shocked it wasn't Lego. Really shocked. Lego Movie blind bag figures disappeared within a couple weeks of the movie's release. I was lucky to get the "Where are my Paaaaaaaaaaaants?" guy when I did.
The whole box office take is desperately low this year, and it's foolish of these studios to not see the big picture, write off films on opening weekend, and refusing to count the international unless the films make triple their US take, like Transformers did. Sure, we're seeing more traffic on August than we usually do, but nothing's even coming close to last years Iron Man 3 take. Then again, they placed all the blockbusters in May, directly competing with themselves, leaving a vacant June. Then again, HTTYD 2 was essentially the only animated movie at the time this year (Oz doesn't count) with no competition from Pixar. That should have been an easy money maker.
We have too many big movies and not enough people wanting to see them or being able to afford every single one that comes out. Meanwhile, 22 Jump Street was the only money making comedy this year. Nothing opened about 20 Mil. There's a big picture problem, sure. No one wants to address it. After all, would you rather spend the over 10 bucks to see a 90 minute film that looks no bigger on the big screen than it does on a phone, or a huge blockbuster that demands a big scale? The comedies will redeem themselves on home video/Netflix/iTunes.
Meanwhile, Family Movies are getting hit pretty hard, with the exception of Lego, Rio (bafflingly enough...even Rio fans hated it), and (even more baffling) that crappy squirrel thing, none of them have been doing that good. And it's for the obvious reason of why spend 50 bucks or more when you can just wait for it to hit Redbox for a buck. Meanwhile, Turbo flopped with an 83 dollar international take, hit international venues like Asia and South America and managed to tack on 200 mil... and it became huge on DVD. The ones that came with the small Turbo figure sold out, even when you can still see some The Croods sets that came with Belt on shelves from time to time.
The industry has to stop thinking of weekend grosses and charts and look at the large scale picture of dailies, home video, streaming, and television rights. Films that never did well become cult hits, and some of the huge blockbusters become forgotten (unless there's a reboot, then everyone says the original is better, even when they hated it before).