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Budget of those times can be a bit different, inflation comes into play as well. It would be interesting to know the budget of other action film's of '97. As for SF, it's the highest grossing film of the series adjusted to inflation crossing TB & GF, a big achievement in terms of revenue imo.
SF released in the current pandemic would have have barely beaten CR’s total. Hence why NTTD is in a difficult situation.
I don’t understand what your point about the Brosnan era versus the Craig era and SF’s billion dollar box office run adds to the conversation about releasing films in the middle of of a pandemic.
It was just a response to your comment on SF & TND budget comparison.
To be honest if NTTD opened now I think it would actually struggle to break even. If it were to make the money suggested above that might be the best they can hope for, it would still be a profit in the region of $250m. Problem now is some big films do need to release before long, if they all wait until 2021/22 there won't be any cinemas to show them in anyway.
https://variety.com/2020/film/asia/tokyo-coronavirus-alert-theater-cluster-1234706910/
In the past week, all cinemas in California and Hong Kong were ordered to close down, and now it seems Tokyo is about to make the same decision too.
I am not saying that they should release the film now, it was merely a response about budget comparison. I am quite aware that it would be really stupid to release it at the moment.
That being said, i really have no idea how theaters are going to survive for an year without earning a single penny.
According to two insiders, with foreign ticket sales expected to account for two-thirds of Tenet’s overall gross, Nolan and Warner executives discussed releasing the film internationally ahead of the North American rollout, a relatively risky strategy in an era of rampant overseas movie piracy, when most major motion pictures arrive in theaters worldwide on the same date. But according to these sources, the filmmaker wanted to help support American theaters in their time of need by sticking to the original plan.
Although recent media accounts have portrayed the filmmaker and studio at loggerheads over that corridor — with Warner reportedly in favor of punting the film down the calendar, and the director digging in to get Tenet in front of audiences as soon as possible — sources close to Nolan say he and Warner Bros. are “in concert” about distributing it in as safe and timely a manner as possible.
https://www.vulture.com/2020/07/is-tenet-coming-out-this-summer.html
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https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/chinas-cinemas-reopen-july-20-1303401
This article fails to note that China reopened their cinemas two times since the nationwide closure in January. Both times cinemas were ordered to close down again within a week due to spikes in Covid-19 cases.
After initially expecting social distancing measures would be "significantly lessened" by late 2020, Cowen's Doug Creutz has "now extended that timeline," which will affect the company's film and theme parks units.
"We had previously assumed that the spread of COVID-19 would be relatively halted, with social distancing requirements significantly lessened by late 2020," Creutz wrote. "We have now extended that timeline out to at least mid-2021; the situation remains very fluid, and we do not rule out the possibility that the impact could last even longer."
Creutz said he expects "no film releases in fiscal year 2020," which for Disney ends in September, and "a modest slate" in fiscal 2021. "We now expect domestic theaters to be largely closed until mid-2021, in part because we don't think studios will be interested in releasing their largest movies into a capacity-constrained footprint."
As far as Disney's theme parks unit goes, Creutz expects the "recovery trajectory to be pushed out at least one year." While Walt Disney World reopened "at limited capacity last weekend," he said he believes "that at best, heavy capacity constraints will prevail until at least mid-2021, and ... there is a meaningful probability that the park could be forced to close again."
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/disney-analyst-downgrade-longer-pandemic-impact-cinemas-closed-1303411
Yep, still scratching my head on that one.
No NTTD delay in Europe and other safe areas of the world suddenly seems much more likely.
https://www.indiewire.com/2020/07/tenet-china-says-runtime-too-long-1234574752/
https://variety.com/2020/film/news/barcelona-movie-theaters-re-close-covid19-1234710456/
https://variety.com/2020/film/news/tenet-delayed-again-christopher-nolan-1234699068/
“We will share a new 2020 release date imminently for Tenet, Christopher Nolan’s wholly original and mind-blowing feature,” said Warner Bros. chairman Toby Emmerich in a statement. “We are not treating Tenet like a traditional global day-and-date release, and our upcoming marketing and distribution plans will reflect that.
:((
Still Tenet if their statements are to go by
Pretty much. Whenever there's a solid plan for re-opening theaters without cities ordering shut-downs, that's when it will happen.
Especially since WB are apparently unwilling to release the film internationally without a domestic release within a 2 weeks gap. So I imagine if this Labour Day weekend release is postponed by 3 weeks, that August 26 release for overseas will also be delayed by 3 weeks.
https://deadline.com/2020/07/uk-exhibitors-expected-delay-reopenings-tenet-shifts-again-1202990751/
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/tenet-tosses-playbook-staggered-rollout-may-be-new-box-office-normal-1303932?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&fbclid=IwAR3dlz4V7_cg8jHcrCK6gAfXXdmlDnFYWWeobyBd3l-9ICE95gvlCXfQUqA
Studio insiders said the espionage epic will go out first overseas, where cinemas have reopened in many European and Asian countries, and have begun to reopen in China.
Warners isn't yet giving exact dates, but sources elsewhere say Tenet hopes to begin opening in international markets in late August before arriving in the U.S. in the first part of September, even if only in select cities. They stress the situation is fluid, however.
“While we in the U.S. think we are the center of the world, we are not. We can’t wait for everything to be perfect,” says one Hollywood studio executive. Another executive adds, “There is a real opportunity here to think outside the box and not be constrained by legacy.”
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/amp/heat-vision/bill-ted-face-music-hit-vod-cinemas-simultaneously-1304065
I can wait till next summer, without complaining or being hugely upset, for Bond and Tenet. Those are two films I definitely want to experience on the big screen. No viewing on demand for me; I want the big screen experience and I'd rather wait for it then risk anybody getting sick.