New animated movie has worst wide release opening ever

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Animated 'Delgo' Has Worst Wide Release Opening Ever


by Jonathan Crow  
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  December 15, 2008



Don't feel too left out if you missed seeing the animated adventure movie "Delgo" this past weekend. No one did. In fact, the movie broke a record for having the worst opening ever for a film in wide release. "Delgo" earned a measly $511,920 this weekend on 2,160 screens, not even breaking the top ten. That's an average of $237 per screen for the three days. If you figure there were five screenings a day, and assume ticket prices are about $8, that comes out to two people in the theater per showing. By comparison, the Golden Globe-nominated drama "Doubt" earned roughly the same amount of money, but it was only in 15 theaters.
This is all too bad because the story of the making of "Delgo" has the makings of a great Hollywood underdog story. 36-year-old entrepreneur Marc Adler decided he wanted to direct and produce a $40 million computer animated kids' flick completely independent of Tinseltown behemoths like Disney and Dreamworks.
Starting in 2001, Adler and his small Atlanta-based animation company Fathom Studios toiled for years on a tight budget. They lined up an impressive, if eclectic, cast of voice actors including Freddie Prinze Jr., Jennifer Love Hewitt, Val Kilmer, Malcolm McDowell, Kelly Ripa, and Anne Bancroft in her final role (she died in 2005). And when Adler couldn't get a Hollywood studio interested in his movie, he raised eyebrows by releasing it himself through distributor-for-hire Freestyle Releasing. It was a huge risk; one that ultimately didn't pay off. There wasn't the sort of marketing budget needed to make a film stand out in the already crowded holiday movie season.
Another problem was the quality of the movie. Or lack thereof. The story -- star-crossed lovers squaring off against an evil queen on a fanciful world divided between a reptilian people who can move rocks with their minds and a sprite-like folk who like dragons -- borrows liberally from "Star Wars," "The Lord of the Rings" and "The Dark Crystal," just without the charm and intelligence. The script required the efforts of six, count 'em, six screenwriters, including Adler. The critics trashed it, giving it a dreadful D average on Yahoo!, which proved to be lethal.
"Delgo" is not the only major wide release bomb of the year. Three of the ten worst openings for films in over 2000 locations came out this year. The raunchy teen sex comedy "College" and the thriller "Deception," starring Hugh Jackson and Ewan MacGregor, both tanked, garnering the sixth and ninth worst openings ever respectively. In both of those cases, the studios dumped the movies with little fanfare rather than spend millions on marketing a stinker.

Here is Box Office Mojo's list of the 50 biggest wide release bombs:
That's crazy. I have never even heard of this movie, and I follow movies quite a bit.
 
I just read this a while ago. I saw the trailer & was like ...:dry: & I agree with you. Never heard of this movie until now. Ooooh, well.:o
 
I've never really even ever heard of this movie.

Just like that horrible kids movie 'Fly me to the moon" about flys.:csad:
 
I saw one trailer...Before the movie went out...And I watch a lot of television...!
 
should have went straight to DVD, lower the budget, no need for all those well known talent... would have saved money that way.
 
Never even heard of this film until a few days ago on a blog site. The marketing for this film was horrible. Doesn't surprise me that it did so poorly.
 
With all of the magazines I get, web sites I visit and TV I watch, I can't believe I had never heard of a movie that made it into that many theaters. Just a terrible job of promoting it.
 
all the promotion in the world couldn't save this movie. the characters look ridiculously bland and the rest of the visuals aren't all that imaginative. this type of CG movie would have been great back in 98 but this is 2008. this film simply cannot compete, visually, with the likes of Kung Fu Panda or Madagascar.
 
I almost got dragged to this. It looks horrible. :csad:
 
I had no desire to watch the trailer, so that's saying something. Sad for the poor guy who spent the last seven years of his life and 40 million dollars of his own money to make it. But what can you do? I guess make a better movie, for starters.
 
I watched the trailer just for the sake of knowing what we're dealing with here lol

Awful...and I'm utterly shocked at how many big names they got for the cast. I mean I'm aware of actors' fondness for voice work and how easy it is for them (in a way) but I'd like to think that actors have standards for the projects they wish to be affiliated with.

Val Kilmer?
Louis Gossett Jr??
Malcolm McDowell???

jeez lol
 
Sadly Kilmer also did the voice of KITT in the new Knight Rider, so he's no stranger to crap work these days.
 
Might've done well as a DTV. Or if the Princess' face didn't look like Littlefoot's.
 
The first time I saw the trailer was a week ago when I was watching Cartoon Network.

When it first came on, I was like, "Must be a new fantasy game." So I kept waiting to see the in-game footage....but it never came.

So then I started thinking, "Must be a new CG animated TV series or special or something."

And then it ended, and I heard those dreaded words, "In theaters......"

I couldn't believe it. How could something that looks this dated be a theatrical release? The animation wouldn't be impressive for PS2 cut scenes, let alone a full blown feature film pushed into that many theaters.

So a couple of nights ago I read the article about the dude who made the film. And I'm extremely indifferent on the whole situation. On one hand, I'm really ecstatic that this guy followed his heart and financed his own film and put it in theaters with his own money. It's like pure indie filmmaking on steroids. On the other hand, I find it hard to be sympathetic to his cause when the result is so god awful.

Here's what makes this even more painful: this film reportedly cost $40 million to make. Let me repeat that: $40 million. Do you realize what you could do for $40 million? Besides the fact that for $40 million you could make several independent, Juno-sized features, you can do some really slick stuff on a $40 million budget. Even high concept stuff with visual effects. Look at Twilight. Look at Cloverfield. Both films were made for less than $40 million.

And this is the best the dude could come up with?

It just goes to show you that money does not a good filmmaker make.
 
Freddie Prinze's New Movie BombsReported by Andy Steven on 12/16/2008
http://www.tnaheadlines.com/-- WWE creative team member Freddie Prinze Jr. is one of the lead voices in the new animated film "Delgo." If you've never heard of it - you're not alone. The movie opened last weekend and broke the record for the worst box office opening in history. BoxOfficeMojo.com writes, "Delgo had by far the worst opening ever for a movie playing at over 2,000 theaters. The computer-animated fantasy scrounged up $511,920 at 2,160 sites, far less than the already record low $916,000 the movie's distributor estimated on Sunday." The movie features voices of Val Kilmer, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Freddie Prinze Jr., Chris Kattan, Burt Reynolds and others. You can check out the movie trailer at YouTube.com.



It's odd that they are calling this Freddie Prinze Jr.'s movie. And when did he become a "WWE creative team member"? That's what he's up to these days?
 
That's just throwning good money after bad.
 
I thought the trailer was bad enough. Judging by what it showed, I'm not sure I'd bother with it if it was on cable one night and I was really bored.
So what's going to happen when it's released on DVD? Will they just give copies away?
 

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