And it's $147 million more than Shazam Fury of the Gods made, which is probably a more apt comparison to the upcoming Blue Beetle film.It only needs to make 280 million to reach profit. That's only 10 million more than 'The Flash' managed...
And it's $147 million more than Shazam Fury of the Gods made, which is probably a more apt comparison to the upcoming Blue Beetle film.It only needs to make 280 million to reach profit. That's only 10 million more than 'The Flash' managed...
It only needs to make 280 million to reach profit. That's only 10 million more than 'The Flash' managed.
I'd love to know where the 120 million budget went because it looks like a cheap TV movie, which is probably where it should have stayed.
I agreeThanks to decades of successful marketing, culminating in this century with the most hard-driven categorization of which character comes from what company, people are not running around completely confused about that. Its quite disingenuous to claim studios spending hundreds of millions on the marketing of their legacy IPs somehow failed to impart that character & company branding to audiences. When modern-day movie goers watched Infinity War, no one was saying, "Why don't they call Superman to fight Thanos?", nor were they expecting the Hulk or Thor to show up in either version of Justice League. When Zod was close to destroying earth's population in Man of Steel, I doubt a single member of the audience uttered, "Superman should call the Avengers to help. Or Spider-Man". It did not happen, because today's audiences know the difference. Its common knowledge--even to those who are not diehard superhero fans, as opposed to it being the "insider" territory of comic book readers--an argument which might have had more weight in the 1970s
It might come as a shock that audiences have responded to the marketing of DC and Marvel's IP to the degree that no one is walking around making statements like the three examples posted above. If someone sees that unmistakable red & white logo, and they say "Another Marvel movie is in the theatres" you can bet they know something about which characters have been in Marvel films at any point in the MCU's history, and its highly unlikely they're thinking Affleck's Batman, Gadot's Wonder Woman or Cavill's Superman appeared in any of that franchise's films. Its not a large, jumbled toybox.
The thing is, they were far into the pipeline before they really started to fail... Covid definitely through a lot of confusion out there (with delays , and failures that at the time might be attributed to fears of catching covid).Just saw the projections for Blue Beetle and I'm wondering how many more of these disasters WB can absorb. Like, is the reboot going to make a difference at this point? Stop making superhero movies, guys.
And I say that as a fan of their recent, much maligned offerings.
I wish there was a way to drive him "out of office"...i mean seriously, the executives who are REALLY successful did so when their salary was low... most CEO's of big companies are simplly treading water, and not doing work worthy of their payIt will just be spun that Zaslav was brilliant and saw the writing on the wall, so it was a good thing he killed Batgirl and the DCEU and started over. They're the old regime's failures, not the new. Bonus time! More stock options!
WB currently has a massive hit with Barbie. That should keep the lights on for a while.
As for the strikes, I've heard from the Honest Trailers guys that the proper studios like WB, Universal and Paramount, actually want to get past the strike and back to making movies as soon as possible, but the streamers, especially Apple and Amazon for whom making movies and TV shows is just a side project, are the ones who put the breaks on any negotiations. Now, again, this information comes from the writers of Honest Trailers, and they couldn't talk about where they got that information from, so take it with a grain of salt.
I've heard the same from multiple industry people on The Letter of the Alphabet Formerly Known as Twitter. I've seen multiple posts wondering why the studios don't just strike a separate deal from the streamers, given that the streamers are more their rivals than their allies.
Also being the crucial word there. The traditional studios still have other outlets, whether they be theatrical, physical media, selling digital copies through different platforms, and even traditional TV. Streaming, for them, is an experiment, and one that after the heights and relevance of the pandemic has cooled way off, to the point that WB and Disney have scrapped a lot of content from their respective streaming services in order to cut losses, and Universal and Paramount may not even have their streaming services for much longer. These studios have realized that it is far more profitable for them to produce content and then licence it out to other services than to produce for their own service.The thing is, "proper studios" are also streamers, and i am surprised Christopher didn't catch that.
No most of them don't think that DC and Marvel all coexist, the confusion tends to be with which characters are at which company. It's just been in the last couple years that I've finally gotten my mom to understand that Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, ect. are DC and Spider-Man, Captain America, Thor, ect. are Marvel. I've had conversations like that not just with my mom, but with non- fans I worked or went to school with. I'm not just talking out of my ass here, I'm basing everything I've said on real interactions I've had with people who know nothing about comic books.Thanks to decades of successful marketing, culminating in this century with the most hard-driven categorization of which character comes from what company, people are not running around completely confused about that. Its quite disingenuous to claim studios spending hundreds of millions on the marketing of their legacy IPs somehow failed to impart that character & company branding to audiences. When modern-day movie goers watched Infinity War, no one was saying, "Why don't they call Superman to fight Thanos?", nor were they expecting the Hulk or Thor to show up in either version of Justice League. When Zod was close to destroying earth's population in Man of Steel, I doubt a single member of the audience uttered, "Superman should call the Avengers to help. Or Spider-Man". It did not happen, because today's audiences know the difference. Its common knowledge--even to those who are not diehard superhero fans, as opposed to it being the "insider" territory of comic book readers--an argument which might have had more weight in the 1970s
It might come as a shock that audiences have responded to the marketing of DC and Marvel's IP to the degree that no one is walking around making statements like the three examples posted above. If someone sees that unmistakable red & white logo, and they say "Another Marvel movie is in the theatres" you can bet they know something about which characters have been in Marvel films at any point in the MCU's history, and its highly unlikely they're thinking Affleck's Batman, Gadot's Wonder Woman or Cavill's Superman appeared in any of that franchise's films. Its not a large, jumbled toybox.
No most of them don't think that DC and Marvel all coexist, the confusion tends to be with which characters are at which company. It's just been in the last couple years that I've finally gotten my mom to understand that Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, ect. are DC and Spider-Man, Captain America, Thor, ect. are Marvel. I've had conversations like that not just with my mom, but with non- fans I worked or went to school with. I'm not just talking out of my ass here, I'm basing everything I've said on real interactions I've had with people who know nothing about comic books.
You'd think people who don't know comics would assume Captain Marvel is owned by Marvel...
That's where the "don't know comics" part comes in.![]()
You'd think people who don't know comics would assume Captain Marvel is owned by Marvel...
No most of them don't think that DC and Marvel all coexist, the confusion tends to be with which characters are at which company. It's just been in the last couple years that I've finally gotten my mom to understand that Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, ect. are DC and Spider-Man, Captain America, Thor, ect. are Marvel. I've had conversations like that not just with my mom, but with non- fans I worked or went to school with. I'm not just talking out of my ass here, I'm basing everything I've said on real interactions I've had with people who know nothing about comic books.
I agree
I think the movies of the past 20 years have mainstreamed comics...or at least the general IP's, so that they are as familiar to the general public as sports teams.
So exactly how big a hit was the Flash? And did it earn additional money, or just views?Also being the crucial word there. The traditional studios still have other outlets, whether they be theatrical, physical media, selling digital copies through different platforms, and even traditional TV. Streaming, for them, is an experiment, and one that after the heights and relevance of the pandemic has cooled way off, to the point that WB and Disney have scrapped a lot of content from their respective streaming services in order to cut losses, and Universal and Paramount may not even have their streaming services for much longer. These studios have realized that it is far more profitable for them to produce content and then licence it out to other services than to produce for their own service.
Also, WB and Disney especially have to consider how streaming their big movies during the pandemic may have "trained" their audience to just wait for their blockbuster movies to hit streaming. A lot of their tentpole movies have not been profitable at the box office, most notably with Disney's Pixar releases (with the slow burning box office of Elemental being an indicator that this problem is in the process of resolving itself) and how big a hit The Flash has become as a digital release this past week.
And, no, Apple and Amazon are not top tier streamers, but they don't need to be. That was my point, they don't view their streaming services as a way to make profit, but to have prestige for the brand. They don't need to return to production any time soon, so they don't have a lot of interest in "entertaining" - as they probably view it - the demands of the workers.
I am hoping she meant SPiderman, but slipped out Superman.
Morpheus 02 covers it well enough:
JD, again, this is not the 70s or 80s, where there was some brand confusion. In this century, the parent companies of DC and Marvel have made their best investment in successful, defining marketing of both company and its IPs to the point next to no one--as in the examples posted the other day--are even wondering why Superman never appeared to fight Thanos, Iron Man was not on call to help with Zod, or Aquaman did not show up to take on Namor. Average people with no great interest in / love for superhero content have been as inundated with the marketing of the company brands as much as the die hard fans, and that has much to with the reason the DCEU and MCU combined for more than 40 movies. That is no accident or "just a trend". That's first class marketing of DC and Marvel to the degree that they've established universes audiences are familiar with, and the characters who exist in each.
This circles back to that familiarity / built fandom is the reason some fans who were heavily invested in the DCEU may write off the remaining two films, as the DC film universe they know (not to be blurred with any other) is coming to an abrupt end, with said fans not just thinking "its all one pot of superhero Gumbo, where established universes which appealed to me doesn't matter."
I'm with JD, complete with similar anecdotal experiences.
It's like some of you don't have family members who aren't in love with this stuff the way we are. Lucky you, seriously, for not having to pause these movies constantly to explain what we here take for granted.
What I found funny was how some of the general moviegoing public, not caught up with industry news, went into Infinity War thinking it was going to end like every other comic book movie they'd ever seen.
Don't you have to pay for it to view it?Morpheus 02 said:So exactly how big a hit was the Flash? And did it earn additional money, or just views?
Don't you have to pay for it to view it?
I'm with JD, complete with similar anecdotal experiences.
It's like some of you don't have family members who aren't in love with this stuff the way we are. Lucky you, seriously, for not having to pause these movies constantly to explain what we here take for granted.
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