Daily Press

‘Chosen’ makes case for TV on big screen

Box-office success highlights potential way for theaters to boost attendance

- By Ryan Faughnder

Are older audiences back? For crowd-pleasing movies, it sure appears so. The solid $12.5 million debut for “80 for Brady” didn’t just come because theater operators agreed to lower ticket prices, though that surely didn’t hurt attendance. (Over 80 for Brady? How about over 50 and thrifty?)

This comes as Sony Pictures’ “A Man Called Otto” has quietly collected $53 million in the U.S. and Canada and after Universal Pictures’ “Ticket to Paradise” pulled in

$68.3 million domestical­ly as part of its $168 million global haul. Seems as if it was a mistake to write off the 55-plus crowd, particular­ly women, especially at a time when studios were putting out barely anything that appealed to older audiences.

Speaking of the cost of going to the movies, AMC Theaters recently unveiled its new pricing program that charges more for middle-seat tickets and less for front-row seats (if you’re in the Stubs loyalty program). Exact pricing details were not disclosed.

Here’s another way theaters might think about boosting attendance and profits. Should studios put more TV shows in theaters?

Theaters were hard-hit last year by a movie shortage that put a damper on the box-office recovery. The solution seems clear: Give theaters more material to play.

But part of the fix might not be so obvious, especially if cinema chains want to bring back patrons who haven’t been in years.

What if putting TV shows in theaters could help make up the difference? Recent data suggests there’s an audience appetite for this alternativ­e programmin­g.

In a survey released late last year by analytics firm the Quorum, 77% of respondent­s indicated interest in seeing TV shows in movie theaters, beating out other categories, including live music, video games and sporting events. Nineteen percent said they would pay more than the average movie ticket price to do so.

Even 28% of people who no longer go to movies said they’d be interested in seeing a TV show as a big-screen experience if it cost the same or more than a normal film ticket, suggesting this could be an opportunit­y to grow business.

The study, commission­ed by the nonprofit Cinema Foundation, surveyed 5,940 people nationally between July 20, 2022, and Aug. 5, 2022. Survey results should always be taken with a grain of salt; actual consumer behavior does not always match survey responses. But there might be enough here to merit some experiment­ation, especially if there’s a chance that it could get non-moviegoers back in the habit.

“We want those people who are sitting on the sidelines to come back to the theater,” said David Herrin, founder of the Quorum, in an interview. “And the hope is that once they come back to the theater for not-film experience­s, they will begin to remember what they love and miss about the theater, and then they will feel even more comfortabl­e about coming back for movies as well.”

It’s not too surprising, nor is it a new idea. Theater chains have been increasing­ly willing to show TV episodes, operas and NFL games. They offer to host esports tournament­s and corporate Zoom meetings. Fathom Events has built an entire business based on the audience demand for content other than new blockbuste­rs.

In the latest example, one of the top 10 movies in U.S. theaters over a recent weekend was the season finale of “The Chosen,” a TV show about the life of Jesus. “The Chosen” isn’t on many people’s radar in Hollywood. The series airs on the free, faith-based, family-friendly service Angel Studios, the successor to VidAngel, a Utahbased company.

Nonetheles­s, Fathom Events’ presentati­on of “The Chosen’s” twoepisode season three finale cracked the domestic charts at No. 9, with

$3.6 million in ticket sales from nearly 2,000 screens

Feb. 3 through Feb. 5. This comes after the season’s first two episodes, released in November, grossed

$8.2 million in three days, nearly matching Searchligh­t Pictures’ “The

Menu” during its opening. Combining its two separate releases, “The Chosen” has taken in $20 million in ticket sales.

If “The Chosen” can compete with wide-release films at the box office, should nonreligio­us hits, like the popular post-apocalypti­c video game adaptation “The Last of Us,” try to do the same?

Maybe.

Travis Clark of Insider recently argued for more TV shows in auditorium­s after seeing “The Last of Us” premiere at the Angelika Film Center in New York. “The Last of Us” is a huge hit for HBO on the small screen, with millions of people tuning in each week. With the show’s clear appeal for coveted appointmen­t viewing, it’s worth asking if it should get the big-screen treatment as well.

Networks and TV studios understand the value of a theatrical presence of some kind.

My colleague Mary McNamara recently wrote about the star-packed premiere for “Poker

Face,” a show that airs on Peacock, at the Hollywood Post 43 American Legion in Los Angeles. HBO has put “Game of Thrones” in theaters. Paramount held theatrical screenings for “Yellowston­e.” Amazon Prime Video gave the first two episodes of “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power” a brief cinematic push.

No box office numbers are available for “Yellowston­e” or the “LOTR” prequel.

I’m still sort of skeptical. For one thing, the success of “The Chosen” is probably a better indicator of the power of mobilizing the faith-based audience than the viability of TV shows in theaters. Plus, there’s a quality problem. People like to talk about their shows as eight-hour movies. They’re usually not, though. How many series boast the kind of production values that are well-served by a 50-foot screen?

IMAX promoted and co-financed a Marvel show, “Inhumans,” as part of an experiment to fill its giant screens in the off-season for blockbuste­rs. It flopped. The cinema technology provider has since had success with special events including livestream­ed concerts.

The desire to have non-movies in movie theaters might smack of a little desperatio­n. But exhibitors do need to adapt and think differentl­y.

“I don’t see it as a retreat at all,” Herrin said. “I see it as an expansion.”

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