Texarkana Gazette

Ticket rush:

Sales increase bodes well for Hollywood

- By David Germain

LOS ANGELES—The big deal for Hollywood is not the record $10.8 billion that studios took in domestical­ly in 2012. It’s the fact that the number of tickets sold went up for the first time in three years.

Thanks to inflation, revenue generally rises in Hollywood as admission prices climb each year. The real story is told in tickets, whose sales have been on a general decline for a decade, bottoming out in 2011 at 1.29 billion, their lowest level since 1995.

The industry rebounded this year, with ticket sales projected to rise 5.6 percent to 1.36 billion by Dec. 31, according to boxoffice tracker Hollywood. com. That’s still well below the modern peak of 1.6 billion tickets sold in 2002, but in an age of cozy home theater setups and endless entertainm­ent gadgets, studio executives consider it a triumph that they were able to put more butts in cinema seats this year than last.

“It is a victory, ultimately,” said Don Harris, head of distributi­on at Paramount Pictures. “If we deliver the product as an industry that people want, they will want to get out there. Even though you can sit at home and watch something on your large screen in high-def, people want to get out.”

Domestic revenue should finish up nearly 6 percent from 2011’s $10.2 billion and top Hollywood’s previous high of $10.6 billion set in 2009.

The year was led by a pair of superhero sagas, Disney’s “The Avengers” with $623 million domestical­ly and $1.5 billion worldwide and the Warner Bros. Batman finale “The Dark Knight Rises” with $448 million domestical­ly and $1.1 billion worldwide. Sony’s James Bond adventure “Skyfall” is closing in on the $1 billion mark globally, and the list of action and family-film blockbuste­rs includes “The Hunger Games,” “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn—Part Two,” “Ice Age: Continenta­l Drift,” “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted,” “The Amazing Spider-Man” and “Brave.”

Before television, movies were the biggest thing going, with ticket sales estimated as high as 4 billion a year domestical­ly in the 1930s and ‘40s.

Movie-going eroded steadily through the 1970s as people stayed home with their small screens. The rise of videotape in the 1980s further cut into business, followed by DVDs in the ‘90s and big, cheap flat-screen TVs in recent years. Today’s video games, mobile phones and other portable devices also offer easy options to tramping out to a movie theater.

For all of the annoyances of theaters—parking, pricy concession­s, sitting next to strangers texting on their iPhones—cinemas still offer the biggest and best way to see a movie.

“Every home has a kitchen, but you can’t get into a good restaurant on Saturday night,” said Dan Fellman, head of distributi­on for Warner Bros. “People want to escape. That’s the nature of society. The adult population just is not going to sit home seven days a week, even though they have technology in their home that’s certainly an improvemen­t over what it was 10 years ago. People want to get out of the house, and no matter what they throw in the face of theatrical exhibition, it continues to perform at a strong level.”

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