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Seems I struck a nerve.
I don't get why "young Americans" don't het Bond?
I've been to several screenings in Germany and England. And you had groups of teen and twen girls in there. So in Europe NTTD is a "girls night out"-movie aswell as a men's movie.
I know even 20-year-old women who think that Craig is hot.
Maybe it's a Europe vs. America-thing: But I have the feeling, that it's not cool in the US for young people to root for an "old white" movie star. Can that be?
Your subsequent posts explained your position, but the first one struck me as naive initially, not patronizing. I see where you are coming from now and the points are well taken.
I have no doubt that EON is concerned about the domestic numbers, but know that pandemic-era film economics require some patience.
American here. I’ve always been the biggest Bond fan out of my friend group and family. Most people here are very familiar with the brand and can name a few movies but it’s just not considered the same type of can’t miss experience like most Marvel films are these days for most people 35 and below.
I remember growing up in the late 90’s/early 2000’s and there always being a new Bond video game available as well which kept my interest in Bond going strong between movies which is non existent for potential young fans now.
I appreciate that. I'm certainly not trying to undermine anybody who is more knowledgeable on the topic of box office, but perhaps I initially failed to make my general point/suggestion clear.
Cinemas only work one week in advance, unless it is for special pre-bookings. Odeon will be showing NTTD well into November and December.
Same here. Not a single person in my circle of acquaintance expressed any excitement about the film opening and none went to see it. But when Star Wars, Batman or Avengers is about to premiere …my phone blows up all week. And they know I will go with them but am not a huge fan. Bond doesnt generate a fraction of that excitement around here.
I can definitely relate to this. Only one of my close friends is a big Bond fan, but the rest are always talking excitedly about the plethora of Marvel shows and films coming along and show little enthusiasm for Bond. They'll always join me at the cinema and usually enjoy the film, but the interest just isn't there overall.
When you start getting to 4 and 5 years gaps as the new norm (for the sake of “quality”) with nothing in between to stoke interest you are not doing your brand any favors.
Think back to your childhoods. 5 years felt like an entire lifetime. I remember thinking as a young kid “OMG how did they go 6 years without a Bond film between LTK and GE”. To the young mind that large gap is enough time to become a fanboy of something else and never develop the interest many of us did in Bond during our youth.
Agree. I grew up with the Roger Moore Bond and was fed a steady dose. My interest faded a bit during the Brosnan years and it was Casino Royale that rekindled it. But my kids did not develop an affinity to Bond due to the long stretches between films while they were being fed a steady dose of Harry Potter, Star Wars and Marvel, which they are huge fans of. More damaging to Bond, my kids love Jason Bourne and rewatch that whole series at least once a year.
Not that I can speak for all states or provinces, but at the very least my local theatre had Fast 9 playing as late as the Blu-ray release. I suppose those were slightly different circumstances with the simultaneous VOD release and less wide releases overall at that time, but I'm still hoping that means Bond is around for a couple months yet. I plan to see it at least once more but want to space it out a little bit.
Good idea, that’s part of my reasoning too: I saw it only four days back, I’d rather give it a couple weeks before seeing it once more.
It’s because it’s not on streaming. Young Americans don’t like theatres that much.
Anecdotally, Goldeneye on the N64 definitely left a lasting mark on my generation (late 20s).
They’re way too serious and dark for the average 10 year old to enjoy. Therefore there’s been little replacement of the youth that enjoyed the films in the 90s 80s and 70s.
45 days is what I read
Thanks
https://deadline.com/2021/10/no-time-to-die-weekend-box-office-1234852700
No Time to Die will wind up at $60M+ over four days, thanks to the Indigenous Peoples’ Day holiday in the Northeast. A $5M-$6M Monday is in store for the Cary Joji Fukunaga-directed MGM/UAR/Eon feature which is in the space of Spectre‘s Monday ($5.3M) back in 2015, and higher than 2008’s Quantum of Solace ($4.1M) and 2006’s Casino Royale (3.8M). Daniel Craig’s turn in Skyfall saw a huge Monday of $11.3M due to the Veterans Day holiday in 2012 falling on a Sunday.
https://variety.com/2021/film/news/no-time-to-die-box-office-pandemic-analysis-daniel-craig-1235085705