Hollywood calls a wrap on US$3.8B summer, its worst since 2006
Dismal box office, blockbuster void, takes toll on stock of producers, distributors
LOS ANGELES The credits have rolled on Hollywood’s worst summer in a decade, closing out with a dismal Labour Day weekend that was the first in a generation without a big, new movie opening in wide release.
The summer season drew a little more than US$3.8 billion in sales, the first time the season’s tally has dipped below the US$4 billion mark since 2006, according to Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at researcher ComScore Inc. The holiday weekend generated about US$99.5 million in U.S. and Canadian theatres from Friday through Monday, the least since 1998, according to Comscore data.
The last time Hollywood studios didn’t have a big Labour Day release was 1992, and the absence of a new film this weekend put a capstone on what went wrong during the usually prosperous summer season. Studios spread their big budget pictures across the calendar this year, and much of what they did offer from May to September — new instalments of ongoing serials — disappointed fans.
“Some comedies didn’t perform as expected and there were some great movies that didn’t resonate here, although they did better internationally,” Dergarabedian said by phone Sunday. “All it takes are one or two movies to harm the bottom line in a profound way. “
The domestic box office is down about six per cent year to date compared with a year earlier, according to ComScore.
The holdover picture The Hitman’s Bodyguard from Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. led the box office for a third time, generating US$13.4 million through Monday, according to ComScore. It was forecast to generate US$7.1 million from Friday to Sunday and US$9.1 million through the extended holiday weekend, according to analysts at Box Office Mojo.
The lacklustre box office has taken its toll on the stock of film producers and movie distributors.
Stock of Santa Monica, Calif.based Lions Gate has fallen 19.5 per cent so far this year. Torontobased Cineplex Inc., Canada’s biggest exhibition company, has seen its shares slide more than 25 per cent this year. In the U.S., shares of Kansas-based theatre chain AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc., are off 58 per cent in 2017, while shares of Regal Entertainment Group and Cinemark Holdings Inc., are down 25 per cent and 11 per cent, respectively, this year.
The biggest film opening this weekend was a re-release of Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which opened in 901 theatres to celebrate the science fiction film’s 40th anniversary, according to ComScore. The film was expected to take in US$2.3 million for Friday through Monday.
The weekend also saw the debut of Tulip Fever, a period drama from Weinstein Co. featuring Alicia Vikander, and the novel release of the first two episodes of Marvel Entertainment’s The Inhumans on Imax screens. Among other returning films, Warner Bros.’ Annabelle: Creation returned to place second with US$9.3 million. That puts it on track to be one of the few sequels this summer to beat its predecessor, according to Gitesh Pandya at Box Office Guru.
Dergarabedian is expecting an improvement in the coming months, kicked off by Warner Bros.’ release of It, a horror thriller based on the Stephen King novel. “The good news is we have It this week, and then movies such as The Lego Ninjago Movie, Kingsman: The Golden Circle and Blade Runner 2049 to come,” he said.