ST will need to pull in at least twice the budget for anyone to consider this a genuine hit movie--certainly enough to warrant another production.
This thread with all it's ups and downs, bigger budget sequel talk and dead franchise talk is as thrilling as the movie itself.
Well it's all semantics anyway: STID may be "disappointing" but it's not weak at all. Then you have to define disappointing. With Imax and the success of the last movie, you'd think it would have done $100 million over 5 days. Failure or flop would mean it didn't cover cost. A opening flop may have meant a $40-50 million weekend. Clearly that is NOT the case. Considering the movie cost $180-190 million, STID has almost covered that in just over a week at $165 million gross by the end of Sunday. Again the naysayers have failed.
RAMA
Well it's all semantics anyway: STID may be "disappointing" but it's not weak at all. Then you have to define disappointing. With Imax and the success of the last movie, you'd think it would have done $100 million over 5 days. Failure or flop would mean it didn't cover cost. A opening flop may have meant a $40-50 million weekend. Clearly that is NOT the case. Considering the movie cost $180-190 million, STID has almost covered that in just over a week at $165 million gross by the end of Sunday. Again the naysayers have failed.
RAMA
Getting the budget back is not a hit film--it is merely breaking even, and unless that 180-190 million included the promotional costs too, it has a long way to go. Considering most films' earnings slow with each passing week, and ST is not on The Avengers or Batman level of pop culture interest (where 2nd and third huge weeks are possible), there are no guarantees of a success.
ST will need to pull in at least twice the budget for anyone to consider this a genuine hit movie--certainly enough to warrant another production.
Well it's all semantics anyway: STID may be "disappointing" but it's not weak at all. Then you have to define disappointing. With Imax and the success of the last movie, you'd think it would have done $100 million over 5 days. Failure or flop would mean it didn't cover cost. A opening flop may have meant a $40-50 million weekend. Clearly that is NOT the case. Considering the movie cost $180-190 million, STID has almost covered that in just over a week at $165 million gross by the end of Sunday. Again the naysayers have failed.
RAMA
It is disappointing. Even if the film gets to Star Trek 2009 money, it will have sold fewer tickets due to higher ticket prices.
https://twitter.com/ERCboxoffice
"FAST & FURIOUS 6 debuted in the UK with $13.8M--Universal's largest opening ever there."
I honestly don't get the love for this crap.
Trek's opening is very similar to Oz's, which wound up settling around $230 mil domestically (with less competition).
It's going to be close on making back it's budget domestically, and it's foreign numbers are tracking at about half that amount.
Not a major hit by any stretch and this will have implications on Trek III's budget. We're looking at a slash to about $120-130 million. Probably a good thing, maybe they'll focus more on story. Kind of tired of the Enterprise having to face the villian's Super Badass Ship at the end every time.
The audience for Star Trek in 2009 was 60% male and 65% over 25.
They should have put more shirtless Kirk in the movie and trailers to get more females to see the movie.![]()
Star Trek Into Darkness ramped up its global expansion, grossing $40 million across 40 territories this weekend to reach a $80.5 million overseas total. The film's global cume stands at $164.5 million with around half of the overseas marketplace still waiting for the film's release. Russia was the biggest market for the Star Trek reboot's sequel, bringing in $8 million in its opening weekend -a 400% increase from the last film's Russian opening and twice the lifetime gross of its predecessor in the same market. The film also outgrossed the lifetime cumes of the last Star Trek in Colombia, India, Malaysia, Philippines, Peru, Singapore, and Thailand.
Star Trek Into Darkness showed resiliency in its seven hold-over markets, grossing a combined $55.6 million in its second weekend. The U.K. led the pack with a $5.9 million weekend and a $24 million cume. Germany added $3.2 million this weekend to bring its German total to $12.4 million. Australia scored a similar figure, with $3.3 million in the three-day span to reach a $10 million total. Mexico pushed another $1.6 million for a $5.6 million cume. Star Trek Into Darkness will be released in China, Japan, Korea, Brazil, Italy, Spain and France in the coming weeks.
You want FF6 numbers for Trek? You've got to put Kirk and Gaila in a small shuttlcraft and have them chase Cumberbatch (and his Eugenically Enhanced Sidekick Bit*h) all over Known space to the latest hip hop tunes.
You have to have chase scenes, hip hop music, and scantily clad Orion Slave women.
800 million, easy.
Well it's all semantics anyway: STID may be "disappointing" but it's not weak at all. Then you have to define disappointing. With Imax and the success of the last movie, you'd think it would have done $100 million over 5 days. Failure or flop would mean it didn't cover cost. A opening flop may have meant a $40-50 million weekend. Clearly that is NOT the case. Considering the movie cost $180-190 million, STID has almost covered that in just over a week at $165 million gross by the end of Sunday. Again the naysayers have failed.
RAMA
It is disappointing. Even if the film gets to Star Trek 2009 money, it will have sold fewer tickets due to higher ticket prices.
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