I really hate those microtransactions that are infecting the game industry. Those iPhone fanatics aren't willing to spend money on movie tickets, but they're A-OK being nickeled and dimed into bankruptcy over
Candy Crush?
I really don't get it either. I sometimes think those are just so some kid playing it will accidentally hit "buy" on the premium currency and the charges will be buried deep in the phone bill. Yeah, 10 bucks per person for a movie is somehow outrageous, but 10 bucks per play to keep playing "we stole Bejeweled which stole it from something else?" I'm sure there's a laziness issue as well.
The Boxtrolls $17.2 million projection actually marks Laika's biggest domestic opening. Coraline opened at $16.8 million, ParaNorman at $14 million. And while stop motion is a time consuming, painstaking process, these films cost about $60 million to make compared to CG films that more than double or triple that pricetag. I wish people would appreciate these films more than they do, but the sky isn't falling! This is actually a modest win. Factoring in global receipts, they've recouped over half the budget in the first three days. The Boxtrolls is a success!
That's...uh...
good, I guess? It really is a shame these movies are so niche. Especially since they actually marketed the
heck out of this movie on kid's television. While relatively successful due to their low budget and international appeal (I'm sure BT already got it's budget back in the UK, considering the celebrity voice actors they used), stop motion
needs to get more respect than it does. Not by any means saying CGI is a cheap, lazy, any idiot can do it medium. Look at Last Flight of the Champion! But there's something beautiful about what BoxTrolls did. But yeah, glad to see that it made
slightly more money. Seriously disappointing that
none of them managed to open over 20 mil. They really demanded a bigger audience. All of them.
As far as MMW goes, I really hope Disney is looking at the overall picture as far as family movies are concerned this year. They've been down since Lego, which was the last big surprise (monetarily) of the year as far. I'm sure that
horrible Alexander movie's not going to do too well (it better not). As far as low key, low budget family films, they might as
well do Muppet films. There's enough wacky families struggling and stumbling on television.