Mushroom
Gold Member
It will easily make close to a billion dollars within a year of opening.
No, it will not. Not even close.
The toys are already on markdown at most retail establishments, so this is not going to be the merchandising bonanza like many properties have been.
And there is no more "second market" to sell it to.
Traditionally, the path for a movie was pretty simple. Drag it back out of the vault every 10-15 years and show it again. Then eventually show it on TV. But by the early 1980s, two new ways came out. At almost the same time you have premium cable TV and the VCR come out. So a new path emerged.
Show it in the theater, then offer it for sale on videotape. Then to Cable TV, then finally to TV itself. And that was the pattern for years. And under that old model, such was indeed possible as the same movie could be sold multiple times.
But almost all of that is now dead. Forget physical media, that is less than half the industry it was even a decade ago. What was once over $25 billion a year is now under $8 billion and sinking fast. Nobody buys physical media, so no DVD sales.
Forget Premium Cable, Disney owns D+. So it is not going to be paid money by HBO or Showtime or anybody else to show it, they are going to show it themselves. So no money coming in from that potential source. Of course D+ is losing money also, but that is beside the point.
Of course, it will likely someday get shown on broadcast TV. But once again, if it does so Disney is not seeing any money from it. That is because when that happens it will be shown on ABC. And guess who owns ABC? Yep, that's right, Disney!
If this has been a few decades ago, it might have seen that over many years but not in a year. Because if you take a movie like Aladdin, it would have had the rights sold multiple times for various broadcasts. And that is still possible for companies like Sony, as they do not own any broadcast or major streaming services. So when their newest Spider-Man movie is done in the theaters, you will have streaming services (who have replaced video media sales) bidding to distribute it next. And almost nobody shows movies on TV anymore, but there will likely be a few traditional services that would pay for those rights.
But Disney in their desire to own all of those services themselves have essentially locked themselves out of those revenue sources. They are not going to sell it to NBC, or HBO because they are competition to their own services. And in pushing everything they have ever made onto their own streaming service, they have tanked their own physical media sales.
Your claim might have been true, 1-2 decades ago. It is not true in the current era.