The thing I've noticed that speaks volumes is that most of the Frozen merchandise that hit store shelves didn't come to market until after the film was released. Some a year or longer. That really seems to be the business model. There's a lack of faith that only comes from waiting for the movie to be successful to get any merchandise. And Yes. Disney has been burned before by too much merchandising of flop films. Oh, the Treasure Planet and Home on the Range merchandise they couldn't clear out. I'm still annoyed by the lack of ENG merchandising presence. And it got a DTV sequel and a TV Show!Also, does anyone think it's bad, from a business standpoint, to continue to put so much promotion into a film that's almost two years old? I mean, I barely heard about Big Hero 6 when it came out (I hadn't even heard that it won awards until recently, including an Oscar), because Frozen is still everywhere (they even accompanied their live-action Cinderella film with a Frozen short that people hyped over). Although, even that might be dying down (a lot of the Frozen merchandise we have in store where I work has gone clearance, which may mean that the kids are getting bored of it). Isn't it better, from a business standpoint, to keep trying new things? And hey, since people are into Big Hero 6, maybe that should have gotten more attention than it did.
Not that there wasn't the small amount of Frozen stuff when the movie was released, but most of it only happened because of the success of the film. BH6 didn't make quite as much, but it's one of Disney's most successful films. I was expecting that sort of thing. All I see is the same BanDai toy line. No Pez, no fruit punch... sucks that it can't get the same love Frozen got. And sucks Wreck It Ralph didn't become anything past its release. Wasn't highly successful, but it has a huge fanbase. Also noticed that Inside Out seems to have only bare bones promotions. Thing took in 90 mil opening weekend. I hope that means more Anger toys in the future.