The Borneo Post

With ‘Beauty’ poised for US$1 bln, Disney readies more remakes

- By Anousha Sakoui, Nicole Piper

WALT Disney Co.’s live-action studio is on a lucrative nostalgia trip.

Disney’s latest re-imagining, “Beauty and the Beast,” marks a big test of the company’s strategy of using live actors to make beloved animated tales more relevant to new generation­s. Disney has a dozen more possible remakes in the pipeline that it hopes will build on the success of recent fi lms like “Cinderella,” “The Jungle Book” and “Maleficent.”

Despite a couple misses, the strategy has proven a better bet for the live- action studio than trying to create new legends. Disney has generated almost US$ 2 billion in net profit from six remakes since 2010, according to S& P Global Inc.’s Kagan research unit. That success, coupled with strong showings by other Disney fi lm divisions, including Marvel and Lucasfi lm, have made the company the box- office leader.

They’re properties that “everybody knows,” said Doug Creutz, an analyst at Cowen & Co. “It’s probably a safer strategy than taking all that money and trying to create new intellectu­al property.”

The recent backlash over a gay character in “Beauty and the Beast” isn’t expected to hurt the fi lm’s potential, with online ticket seller Fandango saying the movie is generating the fastest advance sales of any family feature. The picture, which debuts in more than 4,000 domestic locations on Friday, is forecast to bring in US$ 144 million in ticket sales this weekend and may generate US$ 420 million during its US run, BoxOfficeP­ro.com estimates. Some analysts expect it could double that overseas.

Disney, which said the fi lm is opening in most of the world on the same day, predicts US$ 120 million in ticket sales from the US and Canada through Sunday.

The latest reincarnat­ion of the French fairy tale stars Emma Watson as Belle, a bookworm stuck in a French village who yearns for a bigger life until a misadventu­re leads her to a reclusive beast.

“Beauty and the Beast” is getting positive reviews, with 68 per cent positive at aggregator Rottentoma­toes.com. The fi lm cost about US$ 160 million to make, according to the studio. With marketing costs, the total climbs to around US$ 300 million, according to a person with knowledge of the matter who asked not to be identified discussing private informatio­n. Disney struck gold with the 1991 animated feature — it became the fi rst- ever cartoon to be nominated for a best-picture Oscar.

Disney’s live- action strategy isn’t without risks. When the company strayed from revisiting its classics, disaster sometimes ensued. “The Lone Ranger,” “Tomorrowla­nd” and “Million Dollar Arm” all failed to recover their costs at the box office, as did the Disney-backed live-action adaptation of the Roald Dahl book “The BFG” from Steven Spielberg. Two stories that came right from Disney’s playbook, the sequel “Alice Through the Looking Glass” and “Pete’s Dragon” were also duds.

The Burbank, California-based studio’s current run of successful remakes began with “Alice in Wonderland” in 2010. Directed by Tim Burton, the fi lm generated more than US$ 1 billion in ticket sales. The success of that fi lm, along with Universal Pictures’ 2012 release “Snow White and the Huntsman,” led Studio Chairman Alan Horn to wonder, “Why aren’t we doing that?”

Disney’s live-action unit, led by Sean Bailey, built on the success in 2014 with “Maleficent,” a darker take on “Sleeping Beauty,” featuring Angelina Jolie. The US$ 180 million production budget yielded US$ 759 million in global sales. “Cinderella,” in 2015, went on to score critical and commercial success, and “The Jungle Book” won an Oscar in February for visual effects. A sequel is planned.

To Barton Crockett, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets & Co., these fi lms are a necessary new hybrid for a younger generation that’s grown accustomed to cutting- edge special effects.

“It is very hard for them to watch some of the older movies because the movie-making technology was so different than it is today,” Crockett said. “You don’t get the same reaction.”

While Disney is still making original live- action fi lms, like the Ava DuVernay- directed “A Wrinkle in Time” due for release in 2018, it’s largely focused on remaking classics.

A live- action “Mulan” fi lm is due out in November 2018. “Mary Poppins Returns,” with Emily Blunt, Meryl Streep and Lin-Manuel Miranda, is set for release the following month. Revivals of “Dumbo,” “The Lion King,” “Cruella” and “Aladdin” are being developed, and the company may also have in the works “The Little Mermaid,” a “Maleficent” sequel, another “Peter Pan” story and a fresh “Pinocchio.”

“I don’t think they’re anywhere close to trailing off soon,” said Jeff Bock, senior box office analyst at Exhibitor Relations Co. “They’ll run out of their best animated fi lms maybe in a decade. That is not to say they don’t continue the adventures in sequels.”

Those fi lms will also help Disney battle superhero fatigue in its Marvel division, which “everyone’s expecting,” said Michael Nathanson, an analyst at MoffettNat­hanson LLC.

Horn, Disney’s studio head, said at the “Beauty and the Beast” premiere that the company remains committed to mining Disney’s best characters.

Remakes of classics “are quintessen­tial Walt Disney company properties and we believe to our toes that we are the company that should bring these stories to the screen in live action,” Horn said. “We want to do so with an underscore­d emphasis on quality — they have to be good.” — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Emma Watson stars as Belle and Dan Stevens as the Beast in Disney’s ‘Beauty and the Beast’. — Photo courtesy of Walt Disney Studios
Emma Watson stars as Belle and Dan Stevens as the Beast in Disney’s ‘Beauty and the Beast’. — Photo courtesy of Walt Disney Studios

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