Point taken. You always write interesting posts.Speaking as a fan for fans, is a fickle game imo.
It would be like me; not thinking much of these recent Thor films, then going on to suggest that thor fans are enduring bad/sad/harsh times. When clearly there are plenty of 'fans' that are fully enjoying it. So whom is it I presume to speak for? Some class of fans? Or perhaps simply people that feel as I do. And I wouldn't be so bold as to claim this group 'the fans'.
The only 'fans' I would maybe feel bad for are the ones that are seeing their properties be over looked, and perhaps those that are seeing their properties universally mocked. That's a big perhaps on the latter.
But that's me.
I think the answer is that, this question gets it somewhat backwards. Its not that the US audience has gotten less interested in Spider-man, so much that the interest in the first Spider-man film was artificially high. It was really the first modern big budget, high adventure superhero film, with all the modern tricks and techniques of contemporary CGI and special effects.
Basically, Spider-man 1 didn't set a new standard for box office interest; it merely was an unusual peak.
Point taken. You always write interesting posts.

That's an interesting point. It also speaks on the possible fate of all hype machines these days and domestically.Spider-Man like Star Wars and even the first Harry Potter was an event film. So people who wouldn't normally go to a film like that even with great reviews were swept up in the hype. So no matter that sequels were better the franchises never reached the same ticket sales in the U.S.
The difference is unlike those franchises Spider-man's ticket sales have failed to stabilize in the U.S. With a monster opening w/e off the goodwill of Spider-Man 2, Spider-man 3 could have been the stabilizing force and performed better if it was a better movie.
Then the reboot happened and the fall accelerated. For many the reboot was too soon and not welcome so ASM suffered. And it looks like a combination of ASM not being well received enough and the buzz on the quality of ASM2 not being good enough, and maybe even a more crowded comic market place resulted in a failure to reverse the trend.
Estimated US Ticket sales:
Title Est. Tickets / Theaters
Spider-Man 69,484,700 3,876 5/3/02
Spider-Man 2 60,158,700 4,166 6/30/04
Spider-Man 3 48,914,300 4,324 5/4/07
The Amazing Spider-Man 33,680,000 4,318 7/3/12
The Amazing Spider-Man 2 11,508,600 4,324 5/2/14
Sigh what a depressing time to be a Superman fan.
The difference is that while TWS improved significantly following TFA and in April, to boot, TASM2 opened less than the previous movie and it's in the most coveted weekend of the summer. Oh, and Spider-Man is obviously more popular than Cap in the public consciousness.
Where are you getting your info that Ben said officially he would not do a solo Batman movie? I highly doubt WB would sign him if he werent going to carry the mantle in solo films as well.
Ticket sales were just so much higher before, the glory days ^^
-TFA opened in the 60's how could it's sequel do anything but improve.The fast series for example currently faces the opposite problem.
-I was under the impression ASM2 opened higher than ASM1.
-I was under the impression ASM2 opened higher than ASM1.
Spidey being obviously more popular than cap, I think is an interesting debate.
Faith and commitment.Likewise, if Sony struggles to make a moderate profit with Spider-Man, how are they going to do it in a film about the Sinister Six?
There are some very worried executives at Sony today.
JKKS085 said:Finally the only thing that matters is that no one in their right mind would have pictured, a couple of months ago only that a Captain America film would've been able to go toe to toe with a Spider-Man movie B.O. wise.
That's the difference between a movie underperforming compared to the expectations and the other one overperforming.
Well I consider Cap more popular especially right now with The Avengers. It's like how Box Office Mojo put it: franchise fatigue for Spidey. I get it.The difference is that while TWS improved significantly following TFA and in April, to boot, TASM2 opened less than the previous movie and it's in the most coveted weekend of the summer. Oh, and Spider-Man is obviously more popular than Cap in the public consciousness.
Whats bad is we compare how much movies make now and we think WOW they did gangbusters be we are forgetting, but you pointed out, that Spider Man in 2002 was a huge success with no 3D and much lower ticket sales. I would love to see just how much Avengers would make had it come out with no 3D or IMAX and tickets selling for what they did when Spider Man came out.
Whats bad is we compare how much movies make now and we think WOW they did gangbusters be we are forgetting, but you pointed out, that Spider Man in 2002 was a huge success with no 3D and much lower ticket sales. I would love to see just how much Avengers would make had it come out with no 3D or IMAX and tickets selling for what they did when Spider Man came out.
Whats bad is we compare how much movies make now and we think WOW they did gangbusters be we are forgetting, but you pointed out, that Spider Man in 2002 was a huge success with no 3D and much lower ticket sales. I would love to see just how much Avengers would make had it come out with no 3D or IMAX and tickets selling for what they did when Spider Man came out.
That's hardly the only way to compare the two movies. But if you will, lead in to weekends tend to yield a higher day for day given anticipation(by my guess). I've rarely seen people set up tents after the opening weekend if you see where I'm coming from. However I'll wait till it's said and done before assuming how it does relative to the prior film. Still a lower opening day is hard to account for. Even if it's by a 1 million or so.You are under a wrong impression. After 7 days (which would be the only way to compare the two movies since TASM opened on a Tuesday) projections indicates that TASM 2 should trail 20% behind TASM.
When you say Cap film's I assume you are referring to TFA, given it was the only recent one. Topped off with Avengers.The debate is actually quite simple. Spider-Man is coming from a franchise that is slowly plummetting while Captain America's films are striving. So yeah you could say that when it comes to films Captain America just catch up with Spider-Man when it comes to popularity.
All that being as it is, none of it will help spiderman beat/compete or be 'more popular' than the previous or next avengers film. Which is my point. You're measuring this with antiquity and not with what's in front of us. What's in front of us when it comes to what Casino Royale had going for it? Antiquity and toy sales...Now if we're talking about the global, cultural impact of the character throughout the years and through different medias I don't think there's a debate here. Spider-Man had countless record breaking comic book issues, an insane number of animated TV Shows, an insanly popular film trilogy, it's one of the top selling characters when it comes to merchandising, you have Spider-Man rides in theme parks ...
That's how you measure under or over performing? What we think we know months prior?Finally the only thing that matters is that no one in their right mind would have pictured, a couple of months ago only that a Captain America film would've been able to go toe to toe with a Spider-Man movie B.O. wise. That's the difference between a movie underperforming compared to the expectations and the other one over performing.
The rise of Captain America doesn't necessarily mean that's Spider-man's less popular. That's like me growing an inch height wise but insisting everyone else has shrunk an inch.
Captain America benefited massively from the Avengers movie where as Spider-man hasn't had a cinematic gimmick (not sure what else to call it) as bringing a group of movies together like Marvel did, so it makes sense to me Captain America's doing a lot better recently.
I think a 2.5 multiplier is a very generous prediction given the competition this is going to be going up against soon and the WOM isn't going to help it (might not hurt it either, but it won't help). I'd think a 2.3 or 2.4 multiplier and >$220m is more likely.Based on weekend finals and given a reasonable 2.5 multiplier this film will finish as 230 domestic. Not too bad, not too far off the original and the OS should easily make up the difference.