It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
^ Back to Top
The MI6 Community is unofficial and in no way associated or linked with EON Productions, MGM, Sony Pictures, Activision or Ian Fleming Publications. Any views expressed on this website are of the individual members and do not necessarily reflect those of the Community owners. Any video or images displayed in topics on MI6 Community are embedded by users from third party sites and as such MI6 Community and its owners take no responsibility for this material.
James Bond News • James Bond Articles • James Bond Magazine
Comments
Bond can certainly impress again. All it takes is one film. The expectations are more set for Bond though. There is more of a straightjacket. One feels that MI has the opportunity and flexibility to be more creative and still meet or exceed fan expectations.
Bond 24? You mean Bond 23? (Skyfall)
On Jan. 11, 2011, MGM and Eon put out a short announcement that Bond 23 was back on after having been indefinitely delayed. The announcement said Sam Mendes was director and John Logan was one of the writers.
I'm sure the next MI will be impressive either way though. They have tighter control over that operation due to Cruise (and now McQuarrie) on creative. That much is quite clear.
Twice?
U.S.
SPECTRE: $200 million
Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation $195 million.
Global
SPECTRE: $880.7 million
Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation $682.7 million.
SPECTRE made more, clearly. But not double what M:I Rogue Nation made.
Agreed
Wow I didnt know MI was so big these days.
Unfortunately.
I expect both to make somewhere in the ballpark of 750m US. Not to mention Bond has a bigger budget to work with than the Impossible films.
RE: MI vs Bond - a key point to consider is that MI:GP regained a lot of the audience which was lost for MI:3 (which wasn't as successful at the box office). MI:RN then pretty much retained all of that audience 4 years later (the global box office was near identical).
The same can't be said of Bond, with SP losing 34% (even before adjusting for ticket inflation) of the audience in the US (still the biggest single market) and having the distinction of having sold the least number of tickets stateside since LTK. Let that sink in for a minute. Not a good sign because the rate of decline signifies something.
This is why B25 is critical, especially after 4 years.
The $900M gross is well known on this site. However, this is a key metric which is not mentioned when people bandy about that gross.
"If you want to play the “adjusted for domestic inflation” game, and of course you do, then Spectre ends up at 14th out of 25 films, or just below dead center."
Last (just) in terms of ticket sales domestic of all the Brosnan and Craig films to date.
The point we were making specifically was in comparison to the MI series in terms of retention of US gross over the last two films as well as SP's ticket sales in the US market( the largest even if it doesn't have the pull it once had).
The big number to look at in the US: opening weekend.
SP's opening in November beat MI's summer opening by, I believe, 15 million dollars in the US.
The key metric is the weekly decline after opening weekend, which was rather precipitous, as was the overall gross as a % of opening weekend (another key metric to show 'legs'). Big films are increasingly front loaded, but it's still the best ones that show weekly 'holds'. As an example, SW 8-TLJ is collapsing in comparison to TFA, The Avengers or even Jurassic World. Not a good sign and an indication that the film overall wasn't as well received.
As far as Bond not being popular in Asia:
http://variety.com/2015/film/asia/china-box-office-spectre-opening-records-1201642077/
http://indianexpress.com/article/entertainment/hollywood/spectre-earns-rs-31-9-crore-in-opening-weekend-in-india/
Just for some perspective:
Overall China gross:
SP: $83m
MI:RN: $136m
Overall India gross:
SP: $8.3m
MI: RN: $11.3m
I was merely responding to a claim, that I believe belongs to you, that said, in essence, Bond isn't doing well in the Asian markets recently.
These numbers show, once again, that that is, in fact, untrue. Bond continues to be healthy in all markets, lol!
In the end, it's all about a good story.