Remember the first Austin Powers movie when Dr. Evil explains his plan is to use a stolen warhead to hold the world ransom for one million dollars, and his second in command quickly interjects, “Don’t you think we should ask for more than a million dollars? A million dollars isn’t exactly a lot of money these days.”
Is that kind of how it is for us every time we hear about the latest blockbuster movie reaching some box office milestone? That number we used to think of as being remarkably significant and rare now seems somewhat ordinary.
Quick note: I say that from the outside looking in. Obviously, to anyone actually working in the film industry (as well as to the worldwide theaters who keep at least a 50% cut of ticket sales) a billion dollars is still an insane amount of money for any one movie.
So, what are we to make of the recent headlines announcing Captain America: Civil War as the first film of 2016 to cross $1 billion worldwide? Cool, but didn’t five movies do that same thing last year? Why is Forbes greeting Civil War’s accomplishment with a “Yeah, but it still won’t make as much as The Avengers” reminder? Wasn’t much of the discussion of Batman v Superman‘s (perceived) financial failures centered around its surprising inability to cross $1 billion worldwide, a milestone everyone had somehow assumed to be easily within that film’s reach? It’s sort of like, “You know how bad that movie is? It didn’t make one billion! Even Jurassic World and Transformers: Age of Extinction did that!”
Inevitably, the goalpost keeps getting pushed back for box office milestones, but when Titanic became the first film to cross $1 billion in 1997 that stood out as being the most impossible of all impossible box office dreams. Now, well, let’s do the numbers:
Including Civil War, only 25 movies have ever crossed $1 billion worldwide (full list at BoxOfficeMojo), but 19 (or 76%) of them have come out since 2008.
Why the explosion of such monumental success?
Short answer: Ever-rising ticket prices. 3D. Imax. The booming international market (insert obligatory reference to economic globalization). China. Hollywood making more blockbusters than ever before. Comic book films (they account for 6 of the top 25, all since 2008).
There are plenty of unfortunate consequences related to this ongoing quest for the box office brass ring (be it $1 billion worldwide or some other once-thought impossibly high figure). These consequences are largely tied to what exactly grossing a billion worldwide does to the mentality of Hollywood executives and their success benchmarks as well as to the related expectations of stockholders and corporate board members.
Furthermore, the super-saturation releases (putting each new blockbuster in as many theaters as humanly possible) and year-round scheduling isn’t leaving much real estate (both on the release calender and in multiplexes) for smaller movies, as DenOfGeek recently profiled in relation to Sing Street.
I’ve previously asked how many movies you thought Disney would have in the year-end top 10 (here’s the link). This is a somewhat similar question: How many movies do you think will cross $1 billion worldwide this year? At the moment, I’m staying conservative and guessing three (Civil War, Finding Dory, Rogue One). You? Or are you disinterested in guessing and more concerned about what this race to the top means for the film industry?