Pinkflower7783
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- Mar 11, 2012
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Id love to be a fly on a wall at Disney right about now.
I completely agree. That's probably why the Muppets print ads look as they do. They over-saturate the characters, make them look squeaky clean and place them against a minimal or white background in order to make them visually pop like the typical CG fare.There is another reason you may have missed Jamie. The Muppets, in no way shape or form, represent the bland generic, impossible to distinguish, CGI crap that kids today seem to lap up. I went to the movies recently and there were trailers for 3 CGI movies and/or sequels and I could not tell you what they were called or tell them apart!!
For me, the movie was absolutely brilliant, and whilst it's definitely far from flawless ("muppet-ladder"...grrrrrr), it built on and improved what Disney delivered in The Muppets. I also know of quite a few non-muppet-fans who are keen to pick this up on Blu and I personally think (and hope!) that is where this film is going to come into it's own!
Well, that may be true, but in the end its all about the budget. If a film makes $600 million at the domestic box office and it has a $700 million budget than it flopped, but if a film makes $10 million at the box office and it had a $1 million budget then time to order the sequel. With that said, this is how the muppet films stand, profit-wise. budgets adjusted to 2014 $, profits are roundedOut of curiosity, here are the domestic Henson/Muppet film grosses adjusted for inflation. It places the performance of MMW right around MCC, but nowhere near the industry-considered "flops" of MFS and EIG. The worst someone could claim is a "middling" performance. Hmmm
TMM $206,769,700
DC $109,861,500
GMC $89,353,200
TM $88,966,500
MTI $61,820,400
MTM $60,492,900
MCC $52,354,200
MMW $51,132,820
FTB $31,304,900
LAB $27,312,700
MFS $26,051,500
EIG $18,306,500
What you've done with the numbers to devise the profit is kind of strange and inaccurate. It also doesn't take into the account the international markets or the advertising budgets. Those are usually kept under wraps. MMW's ad campaign was brilliant because half the ads were tie-in commercials for products. That means Toyota etc paid Disney to advertise MMW as long as the Muppets were seen driving in their car.Well, that may be true, but in the end its all about the budget. If a film makes $600 million at the domestic box office and it has a $700 million budget than it flopped, but if a film makes $10 million at the box office and it had a $1 million budget then time to order the sequel. With that said, this is how the muppet films stand, profit-wise. budgets adjusted to 2014 $, profits are rounded
TMM Gross: $206,769,700 Budget:$25 million Profit:$181 million
DC Gross: $109,861,500 Budget:$41 million Profit:$68 million
GMC Gross: $89,353,200 Budget:$40 million Profit:$49 million
TM Gross: $88,966,500 Budget:$45 million Profit:$43 million
MTI Gross: $61,820,400 Budget:$9 million Profit:$52 million
MTM Gross: $60,492,900 Budget:$25 million Profit:$35 million
MCC Gross: $52,354,200 Budget:$23 million Profit:$29 million
MMW Gross:$51,132,820 Budget:$50 million Profit:$1 million
THIS IS WHEN THE MONEY-MAKERS ARE SEPARATED FROM THE BOMBS
FTB Gross: $31,304,900 Budget:N/A Profit:box office bomb (as listed in many sources)
LAB Gross: $27,312,700 Budget:$51 million Profit:$0,000,000
MFS Gross: $26,051,500 Budget:$38 million Profit: I think I see a moth
EIG Gross:$18,306,500 Budget:$41 million Profit: BOMB
In the end, MMW stands at the bottom of the money-making henson films, so ya it should just be called middling.
Thank you! I was just about to comment on that! And as far as I am concerned, it could be far worse than that. This overreaction to the films performance in the box office makes it sound like it was a direct-to-video scenario! For a April- March film and considering what it was up against, MMW did fantastically.MMW has made over 78 million dollars domestic and worldwide combined.