I don't see why WB isn't taking a chance and try a spring release for that film (especially considering MOS will be in the can anytime now). The first two weeks of April are pretty light (mostly comedies and thrillers). And coming off a packed March... MOS could seriously make a ton of money with little competition before Oblivion expands on April 19th.
Or if March 2013 wasn't so packed, WB could easily try that Hunger Games spot for MOS, which only has The Croods scheduled for that weekend.
I can't believe of all the movies WB elected to push up when March 1, 2013 became available was Jack the Giant Slayer. MOS would've been perfect for that early March spot. It would've been refreshing after the previous month's chick flicks and R-rated action flicks.
I don't see how Hobbit DOS will finish below all those films. It's certainly going to outgross MoS, Wolverine, AE, and Star Trek.
No 1, will be a battle between IM3, Hunger Games CF and Hobbit DOS.
I'm curious to see how hunger games performs. On one end it's a sequel to a pop book adaptation, on the other, the curiosity has been satisfied, and there are many people that won't simply go based on that reason alone. Moreover unlike twilight it doesn't have that horny girl boy band fuel.
Moreover, the second book isn't all that good, though it is "bigger". And I would argue that lame direction aside, the story really helped that first movie. However, the slick visuals of lawarence will most likely be a better fit here than the last guy.
If Hunger games is the top dog in the third quarter, it will most likely be due to the lack of anything to challenge for the title.
Superman will always be a summer movie, it's a tentpole. March is really a time to release movies that a studio isn't 100% sure about.
Actually, Superman: The Movie was a Christmas release back in 1978 (and the rest were summer releases). Why should studios limit themselves to summer and holiday releases for big budget tentpoles?
March is rapidly becoming a hot spot for big budget movies now, with Disney booking Oz: The Great & Powerful and Maleficent for 2013 and 2014. Summit booked that mid-March 2014 spot for its next franchise, Divergent, so there's more to it than a spot a studio isn't sure of. Even Fox was quick to bag a March 6, 2015 date for its Fantastic Four reboot.
I think if movies continue to flourish in March spots, it'll become a go-to hot spot like May, July, November, and December are now.
Yea-- no, that won't happen. The first movie had appeal to not only the book fans, but casual moviegoers, and it was marketed extremely well. I certainly didn't see the first movie making over $400M domestic, due primarily to fantastic word-of-mouth sustaining it throughout April.
Goodwill from the previous movie and fans of the books will turn out in droves for Catching Fire next year, regardless whether the book itself wasn't well-received. I can see this going $450M domestic and $750M worldwide.
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - $305M domestic, $600M worldwide
For no other reason then that the studios are releasing bigger/better movies during that time. It's ways amazing hot execs are in control of their own bar graphs but are a slave to them at the same time.
Actually, Superman: The Movie was a Christmas release back in 1978 (and the rest were summer releases). Why should studios limit themselves to summer and holiday releases for big budget tentpoles?
March is rapidly becoming a hot spot for big budget movies now, with Disney booking Oz: The Great & Powerful and Maleficent for 2013 and 2014. Summit booked that mid-March 2014 spot for its next franchise, Divergent, so there's more to it than a spot a studio isn't sure of. Even Fox was quick to bag a March 6, 2015 date for its Fantastic Four reboot.
I think if movies continue to flourish in March spots, it'll become a go-to hot spot like May, July, November, and December are now.
April could also become a hot month in the future. In 2014 we get both the Captain America-sequel and Robopocalypse in that month
Yea-- no, that won't happen. The first movie had appeal to not only the book fans, but casual moviegoers, and it was marketed extremely well. I certainly didn't see the first movie making over $400M domestic, due primarily to fantastic word-of-mouth sustaining it throughout April.
Goodwill from the previous movie and fans of the books will turn out in droves for Catching Fire next year, regardless whether the book itself wasn't well-received. I can see this going $450M domestic and $750M worldwide.
Other predictions:
Iron Man 3 - $320M domestic, $750M worldwide
Star Trek: Into Darkness - $375M domestic, $600M worldwide
Fast & Furious 6 - $212M domestic, $650M worldwide
Hangover 3 - $235M domestic, $400M worldwide
Man of Steel - $300M domestic, $650M worldwide
Monsters University - $250M domestic, $800M worldwide
Despicable Me 2 - $235M domestic, $700M worldwide
The Wolverine - $154M domestic, $400M worldwide
Thor: The Dark World - $235M domestic, $650M worldwide
Frozen - $200M domestic, $650M worldwide
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - $305M domestic, $600M worldwide
Honestly, I can't conjure up a solid prediction for Pacific Rim, The Lone Ranger, The Host, 300: Rise of an Empire, RED 2, Kick-Ass 2, Jack the Giant Slayer and Oz: The Great & Powerful. They're all wild cards for me.
Iron Man 3 or The Hobbit: DOS