I don't know if we can conjure up something more devastating than the DCEU going belly up.
I repeat
Fantastic 4 is a practically dead IP. Other things?
Studio going bankrupt
Studio mergers, which have happened
Studios, no entire companies, being bought up to mitigate future losses, which has also already happened
The DCEU promises (or shows the potential of) enormous tentpole blockbuster films for the next 4-6 years and beyond, with a vast variety of characters, storylines, and endless possibilities that can go in a hundred different directions. It is supposed to rival what Marvel is doing, if not surpass it.
This doesn't change if their shared universe collapses. They switch over to solo installments like their DTV market has for the longest time, and now their filmmakers are even less restrained to make movies, while still aiming to make bank. DC would also have WB Animation to stand on, and it wouldn't have to be "Lego".
More than that, the WB is counting on their various universes (DCEU/Potter/Godzilla-Kong) to stay in the black, with the DCEU probably being the biggest universe at the moment. CBMs are all the rage right now. They need their comic book division to hit home runs, not singles and doubles. The Potter EU seems to be uncertain at best, don't know how much more they can milk out of that series, but they will die trying. Godzilla-Kong feels like "meh" right now. But their comic book movies need to cash in. Soo to use another sports analogy, DCEU collapsing would be like having your #1 draft pick and the future of your sports franchise end up being a bust.
So, are comicbook tv shows, which WB/DC has a massive investment in.
Heck, they're somehow back in the serialized animated market, even outside of Cartoon Network.
I repeat they switch to solo flicks of their DC characters, and let's assume they're all to the quality and around the cost of Suicide Squad, they're still making the money to continue their brand.
I'd be pretty bummed by that particular conversion, but it's NOT "the bigger admission of failure" than what I referenced.
I asked an honest question knowing you were going to give a condescending remark right off the bat.
Your welcome.
You mean the cheap rights grab that was never meant to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with an interconnected cinematic universe where each installment comes with a 250 million plus price tag? K
Exactly. Soak it in. We're still waiting on what's going on with that, right?
So right here you're trying to compare one movie that came in below expectations to a franchise where (ostensibly, given the hypothetical) multiple installments came in below expectations and killed the entire future of the franchise. See how this doesn't add up and your original comment doesn't make sense?
That's a nice way of saying one movie where they lost a lot of money with a franchise of continued diminishing investment that they had no merchandising rights to in the first place (check me up on this, pretty sure Sony would only have movie tie-in merchandising), and was shamed for their hilarious leaked process in "what to do next". Killed that particular franchise's future as well.